Enuresis
遗尿 · yí niào+13 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Bedwetting, Involuntary Urination, Enuresis (bedwetting), Bedwetting (enuresis), Enuresis (bedwetting in children), Nocturnal enuresis (bedwetting), Pediatric Nocturnal Enuresis, Bed-wetting In Kids, Children's Bedwetting, Enuresis In Children, Bedwetting In Children, Childhood Urinary Incontinence, Pediatric Enuresis
Not all bedwetting is the same. The child who sleeps deeply with clear urine and cold feet needs a very different approach than the child who wets during nightmares with dark, smelly urine. TCM identifies the root pattern and treats accordingly - and most children see significant improvement within weeks to a few months of herbs and acupuncture.
About this page · what it is and isn't
What this is. A plain-English synthesis of how classical TCM and modern clinical research describe enuresis. Patterns and herbs come from canonical TCM sources; clinical claims are cited in the Evidence section.
What it isn't. A diagnosis. Me&Qi is an editorial team, not a licensed clinic. The pattern quiz is a thinking tool — pulse and tongue still need a person in the room. Anything in the Safety section should send you to a doctor, not a herb.
Last reviewed Jun 2026.
Educational content about Traditional Chinese Medicine — not medical advice. See a qualified practitioner for diagnosis and treatment.
Bedwetting isn't one condition in TCM - it's a family of four distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and treatment. The most common is Kidney Qi not Firm, where deep sleep and weak Kidney energy allow urine to leak. But bedwetting can also stem from weak Spleen and Lungs, Damp-Heat in the Liver channel, or a restless mind from Heart-Kidney disharmony. Understanding which pattern is present is the key to lasting relief.
Enuresis (bedwetting) is defined as involuntary urination during sleep in children aged five or older, when bladder control is typically established. It is classified as primary if the child has never been consistently dry at night, and secondary if bedwetting returns after at least six months of dryness. The condition is common, affecting about 15% of five-year-olds, and tends to resolve spontaneously over time. In Western medicine, bedwetting is understood as a combination of factors: a small functional bladder capacity, excessive nighttime urine production (often due to low antidiuretic hormone), and difficulty waking from sleep. It is not considered a psychological problem, though stress can trigger secondary enuresis.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment typically begins with behavioral approaches: limiting fluids before bed, voiding before sleep, and using a bedwetting alarm that conditions the child to wake when wetness is detected. If these fail, medication may be considered. Desmopressin (a synthetic hormone) reduces urine production at night, and imipramine (a tricyclic antidepressant) relaxes the bladder and lightens sleep. Both are effective while used, but relapse is common after stopping.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Bedwetting alarms require consistent use over weeks to months and can disrupt family sleep. Medications offer temporary relief but do not address the underlying tendency; once stopped, bedwetting often returns. Desmopressin carries a small risk of water intoxication if the child drinks too much fluid, and imipramine has potential cardiac side effects. Crucially, the conventional approach treats all bedwetting as essentially the same problem, without distinguishing whether the child's pattern is one of cold-deficiency, Qi weakness, or internal heat - distinctions that TCM considers fundamental to lasting correction.
How TCM understands enuresis
In TCM, the Kidneys are the gatekeepers of urine. They govern water metabolism and provide the Qi that holds the bladder shut during sleep. When Kidney Qi is weak - often due to constitutional factors or chronic illness - the gate cannot stay closed, especially during deep sleep when conscious control is off. This is the most common pattern behind bedwetting, typically with clear, copious urine and cold limbs.
The Spleen and Lungs also play a role. The Spleen transforms and transports fluids, while the Lungs help water descend to the bladder. When Qi in both organs is deficient, water metabolism fails and the bladder loses its grip. Children with this pattern are often tired during the day, have poor appetites, and may dribble urine when laughing or coughing.
Less commonly, bedwetting can arise from excess rather than deficiency. Damp-Heat accumulated in the Liver channel - often from rich, greasy foods or bottled-up frustration - can travel downward and irritate the bladder. The urine is dark, scanty, and strong-smelling, and the child may be irritable with a bitter taste in the mouth.
Finally, when the Heart and Kidneys are out of sync, the mind becomes restless during sleep. Vivid dreams or nightmares can trigger bedwetting as the child loses conscious control. This pattern is marked by a red tongue tip, palpitations, and a feeling of heat in the chest, palms, and soles.
「遗尿者,此由膀胱虚冷,不能约于水故也。」
"Enuresis is due to deficiency and cold of the bladder, unable to restrain water."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses enuresis
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner starts by asking about the bedwetting itself - how often it happens, whether the child wakes or sleeps through it, and the color, smell, and volume of the urine. They also explore daytime signs like energy, appetite, mood, and sensitivity to cold. These details, together with tongue and pulse examination, help pinpoint which organ system is out of balance and which pattern is driving the enuresis.
If the urine is clear and copious, the child sleeps deeply without waking, and there are signs like cold hands and feet, a sore low back, or a pale tongue with a deep, weak pulse, the picture points to Kidney Qi not Firm. The Kidneys are too weak to hold urine, especially during deep sleep when control is naturally looser. This is the most common pattern behind bedwetting.
When bedwetting comes with daytime fatigue, poor appetite, loose stools, and perhaps a little daytime urine dribbling, the practitioner looks to Spleen and Lung Qi Deficiency. The tongue is often pale with a thin white coating and the pulse feels weak. Here, the Spleen and Lungs lack the Qi to manage water, so urine leaks when abdominal pressure changes or during sleep.
If the urine is dark, scanty, and has a strong odor, and the child is irritable, restless, or complains of a bitter taste in the mouth, Damp-Heat in the Liver Channel is likely. The tongue appears red with a greasy yellow coating, and the pulse feels rapid and slippery. In this pattern, heat and dampness travel down the Liver channel and disturb the bladder, causing urgent, smelly urination.
When bedwetting occurs during vivid dreams or restless sleep, and the child has palpitations, difficulty settling at night, or a red tongue tip with a thin, rapid pulse, the diagnosis shifts to Disharmony between Heart and Kidneys. The Heart and Kidneys normally balance each other; when their connection is broken, sleep is disturbed and bladder control fails during dream-filled sleep.
TCM Patterns for Enuresis
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same enuresis can come from several different patterns, each treated differently. The quickest way to find yours is the quiz below.
Find your pattern
Tap any sign that fits how yours feels.
- 1Your signs
- 2What makes it worse
- 3What helps
Which signs match your experience?
It is very common to see a bit of yourself or your child in more than one pattern. Overlaps happen because organ systems work together, and a weakness in one area can gradually affect another. For example, a child with long-standing Kidney deficiency may also develop Spleen Qi weakness and show fatigue alongside cold limbs.
To narrow things down, notice which feature stands out most strongly and what makes the bedwetting better or worse. Deep, unbroken sleep with clear urine and a cold sensation leans toward Kidney Qi not Firm. Daytime tiredness, poor appetite, and pale complexion point toward Spleen and Lung Qi Deficiency. Irritability, dark smelly urine, and a bitter taste suggest Damp-Heat, while restless sleep and vivid dreams with palpitations point to Heart-Kidney disharmony.
Because these patterns can mix and tongue and pulse signs are essential for a precise diagnosis, a professional TCM evaluation is worthwhile, especially if bedwetting persists beyond age five or appears suddenly after a period of dryness. A practitioner can feel the pulse and inspect the tongue to distinguish between patterns that look similar on the surface.
If the bedwetting is accompanied by pain, fever, or a sudden change in behavior, see a healthcare provider promptly. For persistent or troubling cases, TCM offers gentle, individualized support - but self-treatment without a clear pattern can miss the mark, so professional guidance is the safest path.
Kidney Qi not Firm
Damp-Heat in the Liver Channel
Disharmony between Heart and Kidneys
Treatment
Four ways to address enuresis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for enuresis
4 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A classical three-herb formula used to warm the Kidneys and help the Bladder hold urine properly. It is commonly used for frequent urination, bedwetting in children, and nighttime urination caused by coldness and weakness in the lower body.
A foundational formula for strengthening the digestive system and lifting the body's Qi when it has sunk or become depleted. It is commonly used for persistent fatigue, poor appetite, loose stools, and conditions involving organ prolapse (such as rectal or uterine prolapse) caused by weakness of the Spleen and Stomach. It is one of the most widely used formulas in all of Chinese medicine.
A powerful cooling formula used to address conditions caused by excess heat and dampness in the Liver and Gallbladder systems. It is commonly used for red, painful eyes, headaches, ear problems, irritability, urinary difficulties, and skin conditions like shingles, particularly when accompanied by a bitter taste in the mouth, dark urine, and a feeling of heat or inflammation along the sides of the body or in the genital area.
A classical formula for people who have trouble sleeping and feel restless due to overwork or prolonged mental exertion. It nourishes the body's Yin and Blood while calming the mind and clearing low-grade internal heat. Often used for insomnia with palpitations, forgetfulness, night sweats, and a general sense of mental exhaustion.
Children with excess patterns like Damp-Heat or Heart-Kidney disharmony often respond within 2-4 weeks of herbal treatment and dietary changes. Deficiency patterns - Kidney Qi not Firm or Spleen-Lung Qi Deficiency - require rebuilding the body's reserves, typically 1-3 months of consistent treatment. Acupuncture (often needle-free methods like laser or acupressure for young children) is usually done weekly. Most children show reduced frequency of wet nights within the first month, with complete dryness achieved over several months.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, TCM treatment aims to restore the body's ability to hold urine during sleep. This always involves strengthening the organs that govern water and the bladder's closing function. For deficiency patterns like Kidney Qi not Firm and Spleen-Lung Qi Deficiency, the focus is on warming and supplementing Qi to astringe leakage - formulas like Suo Quan Wan or Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang are typical. For excess patterns like Damp-Heat in the Liver or Heart-Kidney disharmony, treatment first clears the pathogenic factor (Heat, Dampness) using formulas like Long Dan Xie Gan Tang or Tian Wang Bu Xin Dan before any tonification. Many children present with mixed patterns, so formulas are often customized to address both root and branch.
What to expect from treatment
Herbal treatment is usually given as granules or decoctions, taken daily. Acupuncture or acupressure sessions are typically weekly. For young children, non-invasive methods like laser acupuncture, magnets, or gentle tuina massage are used. Progress is monitored by tracking dry nights. Many children begin to have occasional dry nights within the first 2-4 weeks, with frequency increasing over time. Parents should be patient: rebuilding Kidney or Spleen Qi is a gradual process, and consistency with herbs and lifestyle changes is key.
General dietary guidance
General dietary advice for bedwetting: avoid cold and raw foods (ice cream, cold drinks, raw salads) which weaken the Spleen and Kidney Yang. Limit fluids in the two hours before bedtime, and ensure the child empties the bladder right before sleep. Warm, cooked meals like soups, stews, and congee support digestive Qi. Avoid overly greasy, spicy, or sugary foods that can generate Damp-Heat. A light, early dinner is best.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment can safely complement conventional approaches. If your child is using a bedwetting alarm, continue it while starting herbs and acupuncture - the alarm helps condition waking, while TCM addresses the underlying tendency. If your child is taking desmopressin or imipramine, do not stop these medications abruptly. Work with your prescribing doctor to taper off as TCM takes effect. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and your child's doctor about all treatments being used. There are no known major herb-drug interactions with desmopressin, but imipramine can interact with certain herbs that affect serotonin or cardiac function - a full medication list should be shared with your TCM practitioner.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Safety & special considerations
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Sudden onset of bedwetting after being dry, especially with daytime urgency or pain — May indicate a urinary tract infection requiring prompt medical treatment.
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Bedwetting with fever, back pain, or chills — Could signal a kidney infection (pyelonephritis) that needs urgent antibiotics.
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Blood in the urine — Requires immediate evaluation to rule out infection, stones, or other serious conditions.
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Daytime wetting with loss of sensation or constant dribbling — May point to a spinal cord or neurological problem that needs specialist assessment.
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Excessive thirst, weight loss, and frequent urination day and night — Could be a sign of diabetes mellitus and warrants a medical workup.
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Bedwetting with constipation and leg weakness — May indicate a neurological issue affecting bladder and bowel control.
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Sudden bedwetting in a child over 7 with behavioral changes — While often related to stress, a medical evaluation is important to rule out underlying causes.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Enuresis during pregnancy is uncommon but can occur due to the growing uterus pressing on the bladder combined with Kidney Qi deficiency. Gentle tonification is the preferred approach. Suo Quan Wan, containing Yi Zhi Ren, Wu Yao, and Shan Yao, is generally considered safe in pregnancy when prescribed by an experienced practitioner. However, avoid formulas that strongly move Qi or drain downward, such as Long Dan Xie Gan Tang, which contains bitter-cold herbs that may disturb the pregnancy.
Acupuncture is an excellent alternative during pregnancy. Points like Shenshu BL-23 and Guanyuan REN-4 can be used cautiously, avoiding deep needling on the lower abdomen. Moxibustion on Mingmen DU-4 is safe and warming. Always consult a practitioner familiar with pregnancy contraindications.
For a breastfeeding mother with enuresis, most gentle tonifying herbs like Huang Qi, Bai Zhu, and Shan Yao are safe and may even support milk production. However, bitter and cold herbs such as Long Dan Cao and Huang Qin in Long Dan Xie Gan Tang can pass into breast milk and cause infant diarrhea or colic. If the mother presents with a Damp-Heat pattern, acupuncture is a safer first-line treatment while breastfeeding.
Formulas like Suo Quan Wan are generally compatible with breastfeeding. As always, ensure the prescribing herbalist knows you are nursing to adjust the formula and dosage appropriately.
Enuresis is primarily a pediatric concern, and TCM tailors its approach to the child’s delicate physiology. The most common patterns in children are Kidney Qi not Firm and Spleen-Lung Qi Deficiency. Children’s Kidneys are still maturing, and their Spleen is easily overwhelmed by improper diet. Treatment therefore emphasizes gentle warming and astringing, with dosages scaled down-typically one-half to two-thirds of the adult dose, depending on age and weight.
Many children fear acupuncture needles, so pediatric tui na (massage) and acupressure are often used instead. Techniques on the lower back, abdomen, and points like Zusanli ST-36 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 can strengthen the Spleen and Kidney. Ear seeds on bladder and kidney points are another child-friendly option. Behavioral strategies-limiting fluids two hours before bed, voiding before sleep, and waking the child to urinate once at night-are essential companions to TCM treatment.
Parents should also watch for emotional factors. A child who is scolded for bedwetting may develop anxiety, which worsens the condition. TCM treats the whole child, and a calm, supportive environment is part of the therapy.
In the elderly, enuresis often stems from a deep Kidney Qi and Yang deficiency, sometimes combined with Spleen Qi sinking. The treatment principles remain similar-warm and astringe-but the pace of recovery is slower. Herbal formulas like Suo Quan Wan are used at lower doses, typically two-thirds of the standard adult dose, to avoid overburdening a weakened digestive system.
Polypharmacy is a concern in geriatric patients. Many elderly take medications for hypertension, diabetes, or other conditions that can affect urination. A TCM practitioner must review all medications to avoid interactions. Acupuncture is a valuable adjunct, as it carries no drug interaction risk. Moxibustion on Guanyuan REN-4 and Shenshu BL-23 is particularly comforting and effective for the cold-deficiency pattern common in older adults.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for nocturnal enuresis is growing, with the strongest evidence for acupuncture. A 2020 systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials found that acupuncture significantly reduced the frequency of bedwetting episodes in children compared to sham acupuncture or behavioral therapy alone. The safety profile was favorable, with minimal side effects.
Chinese herbal medicine, particularly formulas like Suo Quan Wan and Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang, has shown promise in several Chinese-language RCTs. A meta-analysis of Chinese herbal treatments reported that combination therapy (herbs plus behavioral modification) outperformed behavioral therapy alone. However, many of these studies have methodological limitations, and high-quality, English-language trials are still needed to confirm these findings.
Overall, the existing evidence supports TCM as a reasonable option for pediatric enuresis, especially when conventional treatments are not tolerated or desired. More rigorous, large-scale studies would strengthen the evidence base.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「凡治小便不禁者,古方多用固涩,此固宜然。然固涩之剂,不过固其门户,此亦治标之意,而非塞源之道也。」
"In treating urinary incontinence, ancient formulas often use astringents, which is appropriate. However, astringent formulas merely secure the gate; this treats the branch but not the root."
Jing Yue Quan Shu (Jingyue's Complete Works)
Volume 33, Impairment of Urination (癃闭)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for enuresis.
Yes, acupuncture is very safe for children when performed by a qualified practitioner. For young children or those afraid of needles, non-invasive methods like laser acupuncture, acupressure, or magnetic pellets on ear points are often used. These are gentle and well-tolerated; many children find the sessions relaxing.
Most children see a reduction in wet nights within 2-4 weeks of starting herbs and weekly acupuncture or acupressure. Complete resolution typically takes 1-3 months, depending on the pattern. Deficiency patterns that require building Kidney or Spleen Qi may need a longer course, while excess patterns like Damp-Heat often clear more quickly.
Absolutely. The alarm helps condition the child to wake to a full bladder, while TCM works on the underlying imbalance that causes the deep sleep or bladder weakness. Using both together can speed progress and reduce the chance of relapse after the alarm is discontinued.
Diet plays a supportive role. General advice includes avoiding cold, raw foods and limiting fluids in the two hours before bed. Your practitioner will give more specific guidance based on your child's pattern - for example, avoiding heating foods if Damp-Heat is present, or emphasizing warming, easily digested meals for a Spleen deficiency.
Yes. The Kidney Qi not Firm pattern is often associated with unusually deep sleep from which the child cannot wake to the bladder's signal. Herbs that warm and astringe Kidney Qi can gradually help the child become more aware of the need to urinate, without causing restless sleep.
Because TCM aims to correct the root imbalance, relapse is less likely than with medication, which only suppresses the symptom. However, if triggers like a prolonged illness, significant stress, or poor diet weaken the body again, occasional wet nights may recur. A short follow-up course of herbs can usually restore dryness.
Yes, when prescribed by a licensed TCM practitioner, pediatric herbal formulas are safe and dosed appropriately for the child's age and weight. Always inform your practitioner of any medications your child is taking, and do not use over-the-counter herbal products without professional guidance.
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