The cold or chest infection cleared weeks or months ago — but the cough is still there. It is often dry, or produces a small amount of clear or white phlegm. It worsens at night or when lying down. Antibiotics made no difference the second time around. Asthma inhalers provide limited relief. Classical Chinese Medicine has a specific and often overlooked explanation for post-infectious and chronic dry cough: the source is the stomach, not the lungs.
Why Won’t My Cough Go Away Even Though the Infection Is Gone?
In classical Chinese Medicine, chronic cough that persists after an acute respiratory illness is rarely about the lungs themselves. The most common cause is wei ji shui shang chong fei — stomach accumulated fluid rising upward to compress the lung cavity. This is a mechanical explanation, not a biochemical one.
Here is the mechanism: the stomach sits directly below the diaphragm, which in turn sits below the lungs. When the stomach’s Yang energy is insufficient to metabolise and move ingested fluids, those fluids stagnate and pool in the stomach cavity. As the pool grows, it exerts upward pressure. The diaphragm is pushed upward, compressing the lung base. The lungs — now under chronic mechanical compression from below — produce cough as a reflex to relieve the pressure. The cough is not infected phlegm being expelled. It is the lungs trying to expand against pressure from below.
Why Does the Cough Worsen When Lying Down?
This is the single most diagnostically significant feature. When upright, gravity holds the stomach fluid down and away from the diaphragm. When lying flat, the stomach fluid redistributes and more of it presses upward against the diaphragm and lung base. The cough intensifies because the mechanical pressure on the lungs has increased. This is why many patients need to sleep slightly elevated, and why the cough is often worst in the early hours of the morning after hours of lying flat.
Conventional medicine typically does not identify this mechanism. Tests show no active infection, no asthma, no reflux. The patient is told the cough is “post-viral” and will eventually resolve. In classical Chinese Medicine, treatment targets the stomach fluid accumulation directly with the Lingui (Poria-Cinnamon) formula family, which drains stomach fluid, decompresses the diaphragm, and allows the lungs to expand freely.
What Are the Other Signs That the Stomach Is Causing the Cough?
Key accompanying signs of the stomach-driven cough pattern include: a small amount of clear or white (not yellow or green) phlegm; a slight sloshing or gurgling in the upper abdomen, particularly after drinking; nausea or unsettled stomach in the morning; a tongue with a white, moist, or slightly greasy coating; reduced appetite; and a history of gastric discomfort, bloating, or post-nasal drip alongside the cough. The absence of fever, the absence of yellow or green phlegm, and the absence of improvement with antibiotics all support this pattern.
What Does the Research Say?
| Study | Finding | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Zhong et al., 2015 — Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine | Lingui-based formulas significantly reduced chronic cough duration and severity vs standard treatment in post-infectious cough trial of 80 patients | Directly supports stomach-fluid mechanism |
| Hu et al., 2019 — Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | Acupuncture at stomach and lung-regulating points reduced chronic cough VAS scores by 52% over 6 weeks | Relevant to diaphragm-decompression approach |
| Wieland et al., 2013 — Cochrane Database | Systematic review of Chinese herbal medicine for chronic cough found significant benefit vs placebo, with better results for non-allergic, non-asthmatic presentations | Supports herbal approach for the post-infectious pattern |
What Can I Do at Home to Help a Chronic Cough?
Do’s
- ✔ Sleep with the head and chest elevated — uses gravity to keep stomach fluid away from the lung base
- ✔ Eat smaller meals, particularly in the evening — less food volume means less stomach fluid accumulation overnight
- ✔ Drink warm ginger tea — ginger is a classical warming herb that supports stomach Yang and reduces fluid accumulation
- ✔ Avoid eating within 3 hours of bedtime — reduces stomach contents available to press upward during sleep
- ✔ Keep the abdomen and lower chest warm — cold applied to the stomach region worsens fluid accumulation
Don’ts
- ✘ Drink large amounts of cold water — floods the stomach and worsens upward pressure
- ✘ Take hot showers and inhale steam as a primary treatment — addresses the lung surface but not the underlying stomach mechanism
- ✘ Continue antibiotics without a confirmed bacterial infection — the stomach-fluid pattern is not bacterial
- ✘ Lie flat immediately after eating — maximum risk position for gastric upward pressure
- ✘ Use cough suppressants long-term — the cough is a mechanical response and suppressing it without addressing the cause prolongs the problem
