Stomach Churning
胃中嘈杂 · wèi zhōng cáo zá+4 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Churning Feeling In The Stomach, Gastrointestinal Agitation, Rumbling In The Stomach, Churning or unsettled feeling in the stomach
That gnawing, churning feeling isn’t just ‘indigestion’ - in TCM it reveals whether your Stomach needs cooling, strengthening, or soothing, and most people find significant relief within 3-6 weeks of targeted 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 stomach churning. 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.
That gnawing, unsettled, rumbling feeling in your stomach isn't just random indigestion - in Traditional Chinese Medicine, it’s a signal that your Stomach Qi is out of balance. Unlike Western medicine, which often treats stomach churning as a single symptom, TCM identifies several distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and solution.
Whether it flares up with stress, after eating, or when you’re tired, the pattern tells us exactly how to bring your digestion back to calm. This page walks you through the six most common patterns so you can understand what your body is trying to say.
In conventional medicine, stomach churning - often described as a gnawing, rumbling, or unsettled sensation in the upper abdomen - is not a diagnosis on its own. It’s a symptom commonly linked to functional dyspepsia, gastritis, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), or irritable bowel syndrome. The feeling may be accompanied by bloating, belching, nausea, or a hollow hunger-like ache.
Diagnosis typically focuses on ruling out structural problems like ulcers or inflammation through endoscopy, and may include breath tests for H. pylori or gastric emptying studies. When no organic cause is found, it’s often labeled as “functional” and managed symptomatically.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment usually targets acid reduction with antacids, H2 blockers, or proton pump inhibitors (PPIs). Prokinetic drugs may be prescribed to speed stomach emptying, and dietary advice often includes avoiding trigger foods like caffeine, alcohol, and spicy meals. Stress management and cognitive behavioral therapy may be recommended when stress is a clear contributor.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While acid-suppressing medications can soothe the lining, they don’t address why the stomach is churning in the first place - especially when stress, weak digestion, or emotional factors are the real drivers. Many people with functional dyspepsia find only partial relief, and long-term PPI use carries its own concerns. TCM offers a more nuanced lens, differentiating between patterns like Liver Qi stagnation, Spleen deficiency, or Stomach Heat, and tailoring treatment to the underlying imbalance rather than just masking the sensation.
How TCM understands stomach churning
In TCM, the Stomach is meant to send Qi downward, guiding food and fluids through the digestive tract. When that downward movement is disrupted, Qi rebels upward, creating a churning, unsettled feeling in the upper abdomen. This is why belching, nausea, and a sense of fullness so often accompany the churning - they’re all signs of Stomach Qi rising the wrong way.
But what causes the rebellion? Often, it’s not the Stomach’s fault alone.
The Liver is responsible for the smooth flow of Qi throughout the body, and when stress or frustration knots up Liver Qi, it can lash sideways and attack the Stomach, forcing Qi upward. Other times, the Stomach itself is weak - from poor diet, overwork, or chronic illness - and simply lacks the energy to push things down. Heat, cold, dampness, or a lack of nourishing Yin fluids can also agitate the Stomach and trigger the same churning sensation.
This is why one person’s stomach churning feels like a burning, hungry gnaw and another’s feels like a heavy, bloated turbulence. TCM doesn’t treat the churning in isolation; it reads the whole pattern - your tongue, pulse, emotions, and other symptoms - to identify which organ system is out of tune and whether the problem is one of excess (too much heat or stuck Qi) or deficiency (not enough Qi or moisture).
「嘈杂,是痰因火动,令人心嘈,似饥非饥,似痛非痛,有懊恼不宁之状。」
"Noisy stomach (churning) arises when phlegm is agitated by fire, causing a sensation in the epigastrium that resembles hunger but is not true hunger, resembles pain but is not true pain, and creates a vexing, restless state."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses stomach churning
Inside the consultation
A practitioner begins by listening closely to how you describe the churning and what else is happening in your body. They ask about triggers-stress, food, time of day-and whether it feels like a gnawing hunger, a turbulent bubbling, or a sour, rising sensation. The answers quickly narrow the field among the possible patterns.
If the churning flares with frustration or emotional upset and comes with rib-side tension, sighing, or irritability, Rebellious Liver Qi is the likely picture. The tongue may look normal but the pulse often feels wiry, like a guitar string, reflecting the constrained energy pushing upward against the Stomach.
When churning is accompanied by constant belching, nausea, or a sense of fullness that won’t descend, Rebellious Stomach Qi is the direct diagnosis. The key distinction is that the Stomach itself has lost its downward rhythm, often from overeating or irregular meals, and the tongue coating may appear slightly thick.
A dull, persistent churning that worsens with fatigue or after meals, along with poor appetite and loose stools, points to Spleen and Stomach Qi Deficiency. Here the digestive engine is simply underpowered. The tongue is pale and puffy, and the pulse is weak, signaling that the system lacks the strength to move food smoothly.
If the churning feels like a hungry, gnawing emptiness with a dry mouth and throat, especially in the evening, Stomach Yin Deficiency is the culprit. The tongue appears red with little or no coating, and the pulse is thin and rapid, revealing that the Stomach’s lubricating fluids are depleted.
TCM Patterns for Stomach Churning
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same stomach churning 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 common to see yourself in more than one description, because these patterns often overlap. For instance, long-standing Spleen Qi deficiency can generate dampness, and emotional stress can create Liver Qi rebellion on top of a weak digestive base. The goal is to identify which pattern is currently the loudest.
To clarify, ask yourself what makes the churning better or worse. Does it ease with rest and gentle warmth, suggesting a deficiency? Or does it spike after spicy food or alcohol, hinting at heat? Noticing whether you feel irritable and tense or simply exhausted can help you lean toward Liver involvement or Spleen weakness.
Two less common but possible patterns-Stomach Fire and Damp-Heat in the Stomach-bring intense thirst, constipation, or a sticky yellow tongue coating and a heavy, bloated sensation. If these severe signs appear, or if your symptoms are sudden and unrelenting, self-assessment is not enough.
Because the tongue and pulse provide objective confirmation that you cannot see at home, a professional diagnosis is invaluable when the picture is mixed. If the churning disrupts your daily life, causes weight loss, or is accompanied by sharp pain, see a qualified TCM practitioner promptly rather than guessing.
Rebellious Liver Qi
Rebellious Stomach Qi
Stomach Yin Deficiency
Stomach Fire (Stomach Heat)
Damp-Heat in the Stomach
Treatment
Four ways to address stomach churning in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for stomach churning
8 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A classical formula for people experiencing rib-side or chest pain, emotional frustration, irritability, sighing, and bloating caused by stagnation of Liver Qi. It works by smoothing the flow of Liver Qi, relieving tension, and gently moving blood to stop pain. It is one of the most widely used formulas for stress-related digestive and emotional complaints.
A classical formula for persistent belching, hiccups, nausea, or a sensation of fullness and hardness in the upper abdomen. It works by calming upward-surging Qi in the Stomach, dissolving phlegm, and gently strengthening the digestive system. Originally designed for digestive disturbances arising after illness, it remains one of the most widely used formulas for stubborn reflux and belching.
A foundational classical formula used to strengthen digestion and restore vitality. It gently tonifies the Spleen and Stomach to address fatigue, poor appetite, loose stools, and a pale complexion caused by Qi deficiency. All four herbs are mild and balanced, making this one of the gentlest and most widely used tonic formulas in Chinese medicine.
A classical formula designed to deeply nourish and moisten the Liver and Kidneys while gently restoring the smooth flow of Liver Qi. It is used for people experiencing rib-side or chest pain, acid reflux, bitter taste in the mouth, dry throat, and emotional tension that arise when the body's fluids and blood become depleted, leaving the Liver dry and unable to function smoothly.
A remarkably simple two-herb classical formula used to relieve muscle cramps, spasms, and cramping pain throughout the body. It works by nourishing the Blood and Yin fluids that keep muscles and tendons supple, while directly relaxing tense, spasming tissues. Originally created to treat leg cramps so effectively that it earned the nickname 'Cast Away the Walking Stick Decoction.'
A classical formula used to clear excess heat from the Stomach that flares upward, causing toothache, swollen or bleeding gums, mouth sores, bad breath, and facial flushing. It works by draining Stomach Fire while cooling the Blood to address the inflammation and pain in the mouth and face.
A foundational classical formula for digestive problems involving a mix of symptoms that seem contradictory, such as feeling both hot and cold in the stomach area, or having nausea alongside loose stools. It addresses a stuffed, blocked sensation in the upper stomach (without sharp pain), nausea, gurgling intestines, and diarrhea by restoring normal digestive movement and rebalancing the body's internal temperature regulation. It is one of the most widely used formulas for chronic gastritis, acid reflux, and functional indigestion in traditional Chinese medicine.
A classical formula for treating acute digestive upsets caused by a combination of Dampness and Heat lodging in the Stomach and intestines. It addresses simultaneous vomiting and diarrhea, a feeling of fullness and stuffiness in the chest and upper abdomen, irritability, and dark scanty urine, particularly during hot and humid seasons.
Acute churning from stress or a dietary slip often calms within a few days of herbal treatment and one or two acupuncture sessions. Excess patterns like Liver Qi invading the Stomach or Stomach Fire typically respond in 2-4 weeks. Deficiency patterns - where the Stomach’s Qi or Yin has been depleted over time - usually need 4-8 weeks of consistent care to rebuild reserves and restore normal downward movement. We adjust your formula as your symptoms evolve, so you’re never on the same herbs indefinitely.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the central goal is the same: restore the Stomach’s natural downward movement so Qi no longer rebels upward and creates that churning sensation. How we achieve this depends entirely on what’s blocking the descent.
If Liver Qi is the culprit, we soothe and spread it. If the Spleen is too weak to support digestion, we strengthen it. If heat or dampness is agitating the Stomach, we clear it. If the Stomach’s Yin fluids have dried up, we moisten and nourish.
Treatment almost always combines acupuncture to immediately redirect Qi flow with a tailored herbal formula to correct the deeper imbalance. Points like Zhongwan (REN-12) and Zusanli (ST-36) are staples, but additional points are chosen based on whether we need to calm the Liver, drain dampness, or tonify deficiency. The beauty of this approach is that it treats the whole person, not just the stomach.
What to expect from treatment
Most people begin with weekly acupuncture sessions and a daily herbal formula, often a concentrated powder or tea. You may notice the churning soften after the first few treatments, but lasting change typically requires four to eight weeks of consistent care.
As your symptoms shift, your practitioner will modify your herbal prescription - perhaps reducing bitter, cooling herbs once heat clears or adding more nourishing ingredients as deficiency fills in. Between sessions, dietary adjustments and simple self-massage techniques help maintain the calm. We encourage you to track your symptoms so you can see the gradual improvement, which can be very motivating.
General dietary guidance
Favour warm, cooked foods that are easy on the Stomach - think congee, soups, steamed vegetables, and well-cooked grains. Eat at regular times, chew thoroughly, and stop when you’re about 80% full.
Avoid ice-cold drinks, raw salads, greasy fried foods, and excessive spicy or pungent ingredients, all of which can disrupt Stomach Qi. A cup of warm ginger tea between meals can gently support downward movement, but specific foods to add or avoid depend on your pattern and will be discussed in your consultation.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM works well alongside conventional care for stomach churning. If you’re taking PPIs, H2 blockers, or prokinetics, continue them as prescribed and let both your doctor and TCM practitioner know. Herbs are generally safe, but we may time them an hour apart from medications to avoid any absorption interference.
As your digestion strengthens, some patients find they need less medication over time - but any reduction must be supervised by your prescribing physician. If you take blood thinners, always inform your TCM practitioner, as some herbs can affect clotting.
*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, severe abdominal pain that is unlike any previous episode — Could indicate a perforated ulcer, pancreatitis, or other acute emergency.
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Vomiting blood or material that looks like coffee grounds — Suggests active bleeding in the upper digestive tract.
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Black, tarry stools — A sign of digested blood from a stomach or duodenal bleed.
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Unexplained weight loss of more than a few pounds — May signal a more serious underlying condition such as cancer or malabsorption.
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Difficulty swallowing or a sensation that food gets stuck — Could indicate a stricture, mass, or motility disorder needing immediate investigation.
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Chest pain, especially if it radiates to the arm, jaw, or back — Stomach churning can sometimes be confused with cardiac pain; always rule out heart attack.
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Persistent vomiting that prevents you from keeping any fluids down — Risk of dehydration and electrolyte imbalance requires urgent medical attention.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Stomach churning is extremely common in early pregnancy, often as part of morning sickness. The dominant pattern is Rebellious Stomach Qi, sometimes with underlying Spleen deficiency or Liver Qi stagnation. However, several classical anti-rebellious herbs are traditionally avoided during pregnancy - notably Ban Xia (半夏) and Xuan Fu Hua (旋覆花), which can be too forceful in descending Qi.
Safer alternatives include Chen Pi (陈皮), Sha Ren (砂仁), and Zi Su Ye (紫苏叶), which gently harmonise the Stomach without risking the pregnancy. Acupuncture is an excellent option, but points like Hegu LI-4, Sanyinjiao SP-6, and lower abdominal points should be strictly avoided. Treatment should focus on gentle, nourishing strategies to settle the Stomach while protecting the fetus.
During breastfeeding, the same patterns apply, but herb selection must consider the infant. Bitter-cold herbs like Huang Lian (黄连) can pass through breast milk and cause infant diarrhoea or digestive upset. For Stomach Heat patterns, milder alternatives like Zhu Ru (竹茹) or Lu Gen (芦根) are preferred.
Strong Qi-moving or purgative herbs should be avoided to protect milk supply and the baby’s digestion. Gentle Spleen-strengthening herbs such as Bai Zhu (白术) and Fu Ling (茯苓) are safe and can even support milk production by improving the mother’s digestive Qi. Acupuncture remains safe when appropriate points are selected.
In children, stomach churning most often stems from food stagnation or a constitutionally weak Spleen. The Rebellious Stomach Qi pattern is common after overeating or consuming cold, raw foods, while Spleen Qi deficiency is seen in picky eaters with poor growth.
Children cannot always articulate the churning sensation, so parents should watch for restlessness, frequent swallowing, or a sour smell on the breath. Paediatric dosages of herbal formulas are typically one-quarter to one-half the adult dose, and acupressure or gentle paediatric tuina often replaces needling. A simple, warm diet and regular mealtimes are foundational.
In the elderly, Spleen and Stomach Qi deficiency and Stomach Yin deficiency are the predominant patterns behind stomach churning. The digestive fire naturally wanes with age, so churning often feels hollow and is accompanied by fatigue and poor appetite. Treatment must be gentle - strong Qi-moving or descending formulas can deplete an already weakened system.
Herb dosages are typically reduced to two-thirds of standard adult doses. Polypharmacy is a concern, so herbal formulas should be reviewed for interactions with Western medications. Acupuncture is well-tolerated and can be a safer first-line approach, with points like Zusanli ST-36 and Zhongwan REN-12 gently stimulated to support digestive function over a longer treatment course.
Evidence & references
Clinical research on TCM for stomach churning is largely embedded within studies on functional dyspepsia, a Western diagnosis that includes epigastric discomfort, postprandial fullness, and nausea. Multiple randomised controlled trials have shown that Chinese herbal formulas - particularly Ban Xia Xie Xin Tang and Chai Hu Shu Gan San - improve symptom scores for dyspepsia compared to placebo or prokinetic drugs. Acupuncture also has moderate evidence for functional dyspepsia, with meta-analyses reporting significant improvements in symptom relief and quality of life.
However, the quality of many trials is limited by small sample sizes and lack of blinding. Most high-quality studies originate from China, and English-language RCTs remain sparse. The evidence base is promising but would benefit from larger, multicentre trials with rigorous methodology to confirm which specific TCM patterns and formulas are most effective for the churning sensation itself.
Key clinical studies
A meta-analysis of 28 RCTs found that Chinese herbal formulas, including Ban Xia Xie Xin Tang and Chai Hu Shu Gan San, significantly improved overall symptom scores for functional dyspepsia, including epigastric churning and bloating, compared with placebo or prokinetic drugs. The effect was consistent across multiple outcome measures, though trial quality was generally moderate.
Chinese herbal medicine for functional dyspepsia: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Zhang S, et al. Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. 2015;30(5):845-855.
This meta-analysis of 20 RCTs concluded that acupuncture was significantly more effective than sham acupuncture or medication in reducing dyspepsia symptom scores, including epigastric discomfort and nausea. The benefits were maintained at follow-up, and adverse events were minimal.
Acupuncture for functional dyspepsia: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Lan L, et al. Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics. 2014;40(8):873-888.
In a double-blind RCT, 120 patients with functional dyspepsia received modified Ban Xia Xie Xin Tang or placebo for 4 weeks. The herbal group showed significantly greater improvement in postprandial fullness, epigastric churning, and belching, with a responder rate of 78% versus 42% in the placebo group.
Efficacy of modified Ban Xia Xie Xin Tang for functional dyspepsia: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial
Li J, et al. Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine. 2018;24(7):502-508.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「嘈杂一证,有火嘈,有痰嘈,有酸水浸心而嘈。大抵食已即饥,或虽食不饱者,火嘈也;胸中痞闷,似饥非饥者,痰嘈也。」
"The condition of stomach churning includes fire churning, phlegm churning, and churning from acid water soaking the heart. Generally, if hunger returns soon after eating or you feel unsatisfied after meals, it is fire churning; if there is a stuffy sensation in the chest with a false hunger, it is phlegm churning."
Jingyue Quanshu (景岳全书)
Chapter on Noisy Stomach (嘈杂)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for stomach churning.
Patients describe it in many ways - a gnawing hollow sensation that mimics hunger, a rumbling restlessness, or a sour, rising turbulence. In TCM, these different qualities point to different patterns. A burning churning with thirst suggests Stomach Heat, while a dull, empty gnawing that’s worse after meals often signals Spleen Qi deficiency. The exact sensation is a key clue your practitioner uses to identify the root imbalance.
Many people feel a noticeable settling during or shortly after an acupuncture session, especially when the churning is triggered by stress or emotional tension. Points like Neiguan (PC-6) and Zusanli (ST-36) are particularly effective at redirecting rebellious Qi downward. However, lasting relief usually builds over several sessions as the underlying pattern is corrected.
You don’t have to overhaul everything overnight. The most important universal shift is to eat warm, cooked foods and avoid ice-cold drinks, greasy fried foods, and excessive raw salads - all of which challenge a struggling Stomach. Small, regular meals are far easier on your digestion than large, infrequent ones. Your practitioner will give you more specific advice based on your pattern, but even these simple changes often reduce churning within days.
Absolutely. In TCM, the Liver is highly sensitive to emotional strain, and when it becomes congested, its Qi often surges sideways into the Stomach. This is one of the most common causes of stomach churning - you may notice it flares during arguments, deadlines, or when you’re holding in frustration. Treatment focuses on smoothing Liver Qi and settling the Stomach, and many patients find their digestion calms as their stress levels improve.
You may notice a gentle calming of the churning within a few days, but herbs work cumulatively to rebalance your system. For excess patterns, significant improvement often comes within two weeks. For deficiency patterns, where we’re rebuilding Stomach Qi or Yin, expect a more gradual shift over four to six weeks. Your practitioner will check your progress and adjust the formula as your symptoms change.
In most cases, yes. Many patients use herbs alongside PPIs or antacids without issue. However, always tell both your TCM practitioner and your doctor about everything you’re taking. Some herbs may affect how quickly your stomach empties or how medications are absorbed, so we may recommend spacing them apart by an hour or two. Never stop a prescribed medication without consulting your doctor.
Usually, it’s a functional digestive imbalance and not dangerous. But if you also have unexplained weight loss, difficulty swallowing, vomiting blood, or black tarry stools, those are red flags that need immediate medical investigation. Please see our Safety section below for a full list of warning signs.
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