Generally speaking, medicines that invigorate blood circulation and eliminate blood stasis will not cause sweating. Sweating may be caused by sweating medicines in the formula, or by the patient’s own qi or yin deficiency, etc. It is recommended to ask the doctor for clarification of the cause. Medicines for activating blood circulation and removing blood stasis, such as peach kernel, safflower, angelica, etc., can promote blood circulation, but generally do not promote sweating. If sweating occurs after taking the medicine, first clarify whether it is used with sweating medicines, such as ephedra, Elsholtzia, etc., and at the same time rule out whether the temperature of the soup is too high, resulting in physiological sweating. In addition, if the person taking the medicine has a deficiency of qi, resulting in insufficient guard qi, the coupling is not solid (often refers to the skin can not consolidate the sweat, the surface of the body sweats abnormally), there may be sweating; if there is a deficiency of yin, resulting in yang qi is over-exuberant, forcing the fluid to go out, there may be sweating, mostly manifested in the night night sweating. If sweating occurs after taking medicines for activating blood circulation and removing blood stasis, it is recommended to ask your doctor to find out the cause and solve the problem in time.