Alternating Diarrhea And Constipation
溏结不调 · táng jié bù tiáo+7 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Alternating Constipation And Diarrhea, Loose Stools Or Constipation, Alternating constipation and loose stools, Constipation or foul-smelling diarrhoea, Alternating constipation and diarrhoea, Alternating loose and dry stools, Alternating loose and hard stools
In TCM, alternating diarrhea and constipation is not one condition but a clash between a stressed Liver and a weakened Spleen - and most people feel their bowel rhythm steady within 4-6 weeks 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 alternating diarrhea and constipation. 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.
Alternating diarrhea and constipation isn't a single disease in TCM - it's a tug-of-war between two organ systems, and the pattern behind your symptoms determines the treatment. When the Liver's smooth flow is disrupted by stress, it can attack the Spleen, throwing digestion into chaos and causing loose stools one day and constipation the next. Dampness or Heat can further complicate the picture, making stools sticky, dry, or urgent. Below we explore the three main patterns that produce this frustrating cycle, each with its own herbal formula and acupuncture approach.
In Western medicine, alternating diarrhea and constipation is most commonly associated with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-M, the mixed type). It is a functional gastrointestinal disorder, meaning there are no structural abnormalities visible on tests, yet the bowel's motility and sensation are altered. Diagnosis is typically based on symptom patterns using the Rome IV criteria: recurrent abdominal pain at least one day per week for three months, associated with a change in stool frequency or form, and with the alternation of loose and hard stools.
Other causes can include chronic stress, dietary triggers, hormonal fluctuations, or side effects of medications. Because no single test confirms IBS, doctors often rule out more serious conditions like inflammatory bowel disease or colon cancer before settling on a functional diagnosis. Treatment focuses on managing symptoms rather than correcting an underlying cause.
Conventional treatments
Standard approaches include dietary modifications such as increasing fiber, avoiding trigger foods, and trying a low-FODMAP diet. Medications are used symptomatically: antispasmodics for cramping, loperamide for diarrhea, laxatives or lubiprostone for constipation, and sometimes low-dose antidepressants to modulate gut-brain signaling. Psychological therapies like cognitive behavioral therapy and gut-directed hypnotherapy are also employed, especially when stress is a major trigger.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While these strategies can bring relief, they often address the symptoms rather than the root imbalance that keeps the bowel rhythm unstable. Fiber and laxatives may worsen bloating, and antidiarrheals can lead to rebound constipation. The low-FODMAP diet is restrictive and difficult to maintain long-term. Crucially, the conventional model treats all patients with alternating bowel habits as having essentially the same condition, adjusting medications by trial and error. It doesn't differentiate between the person whose symptoms flare with every stressful meeting, the one who feels heavy and foggy after eating, and the one who develops dry stools and irritability - distinctions that are central to TCM diagnosis and treatment.
How TCM understands alternating diarrhea and constipation
In TCM, the Liver and Spleen work as partners in digestion. The Liver is responsible for the smooth flow of Qi throughout the body, like a traffic controller. The Spleen transforms food into energy and transports it upward. When emotional stress, frustration, or anger knots the Liver Qi, that stuck energy can 'rebel' and attack the Spleen. The Spleen then loses its grip on digestion - food and fluids aren't processed properly, leading to loose, unformed stools. But because the Liver's flow is also jammed, the bowels can seize up, creating constipation. The result is a pendulum swing between the two.
Dampness adds another layer. If the Spleen has been weak for a while, it fails to manage fluids, and a heavy, sticky Dampness accumulates. This makes stools feel incomplete, sludgy, and hard to pass even when they aren't dry. The Dampness clogs the digestive tract while Liver stagnation blocks movement, so the alternation feels boggy rather than sharp.
When the stagnation drags on, it can generate Heat. That internal Heat dries the intestines, causing hard, pellet-like stools during the constipated phase, while the underlying Spleen deficiency still produces loose stools at other times. The person may also feel irritable, have a bitter taste, or notice redness on the tongue. This is why a single Western diagnosis of IBS-M can map to three different TCM patterns - and why treatment must be tailored to the specific dynamic at play.
「见肝之病,知肝传脾,当先实脾。」
"When seeing a disease of the Liver, know that it will transmit to the Spleen; therefore, first strengthen the Spleen."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses alternating diarrhea and constipation
Inside the consultation
To tell these patterns apart, a practitioner first listens for the emotional story. Rebellious Liver Qi invading the Spleen is the classic picture: the bowel rhythm swings in lockstep with stress and frustration. The person often describes cramping pain that strikes before a bowel movement and eases afterwards, with a tongue that may be slightly pale with teeth marks and a wiry pulse. This pattern is all about the Liver attacking a vulnerable Spleen, so the alternation is sharp and reactive.
When Obstruction of the Spleen by Dampness with Liver Qi Stagnation is in charge, the stools feel sticky, incomplete, and heavy rather than sharply alternating. The abdomen is bloated and full, and the person may feel foggy or lethargic. The tongue is typically swollen with a greasy white coat, and the pulse feels slippery or soft. The key clue here is that the constipation is less about dryness and more about a clogged, boggy sensation that never fully clears.
The third picture, Liver Qi Stagnation with Spleen Qi Deficiency that transforms into Heat, adds a layer of warmth and dryness. Long‑standing emotional tension has depleted the Spleen while generating internal Heat. The result is a mix of occasional loose stools from Spleen weakness and genuinely dry, hard constipation from Heat. The tongue may be red with a thin yellow coat, and the pulse feels wiry and rapid. Irritability, a dry mouth, or a flushed face often accompany the bowel changes.
TCM Patterns for Alternating Diarrhea And Constipation
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same alternating diarrhea and constipation 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 completely natural to see pieces of yourself in more than one pattern. All three share a Liver‑Spleen disharmony at their core, so some overlap in symptoms - like bloating, mood sensitivity, and irregular bowels - is expected. The patterns are not rigid boxes; they are different stages or flavours of the same underlying dynamic, which is why your experience may feel mixed.
To find your strongest leaning, notice what dominates. If every bowel change is tied to a stressful event and pain is prominent, the Rebellious Liver Qi pattern is likely the loudest. If a heavy, incomplete sensation lingers even after going, and you feel weighed down, Dampness obstruction is probably central. If you notice heat signs - a dry mouth, feeling warm, stools that are sometimes hard and dry - then the pattern with Heat is worth paying attention to. What makes your symptoms better or worse is also a powerful clue.
Because tongue and pulse findings are essential to confirm which pattern is truly driving your symptoms, a professional TCM assessment is valuable, especially if the picture is blurry. If your symptoms are severe, sudden, or accompanied by weight loss, blood in the stool, or unrelenting pain, see a doctor promptly. Self‑observation can guide you, but a practitioner’s hands‑on diagnosis brings the clarity needed for safe, effective herbal or acupuncture care.
Rebellious Liver Qi invading the Spleen
Treatment
Four ways to address alternating diarrhea and constipation in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for alternating diarrhea and constipation
1 formula 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.
Patients with the classic stress-reactive pattern (Rebellious Liver Qi invading the Spleen) often notice less cramping and more predictable stools within 2-4 weeks. When Dampness is heavy, clearing the sluggishness may take 4-6 weeks. If Heat has developed from long-standing stagnation, 6-8 weeks is common to cool the system while rebuilding the Spleen. Consistency with herbs and weekly acupuncture yields the best results.
Treatment principles
All patterns of alternating diarrhea and constipation share a common thread: the Liver and Spleen are out of sync. Treatment therefore always aims to smooth the Liver Qi and strengthen the Spleen's digestive power. The specific formula and acupuncture points then shift depending on what else is present - resolving Dampness if stools are sticky, clearing Heat if there is dryness and irritability, or simply harmonizing the two organs when stress is the main driver.
This is not a one-size-fits-all approach. A person whose symptoms flare with every deadline needs more Liver-soothing; someone who feels bloated and heavy after every meal needs more Dampness-draining; and someone with a bitter taste and dry stools needs Heat-clearing. The beauty of TCM is that these adjustments are made within a single, coherent treatment strategy.
What to expect from treatment
Treatment usually involves weekly acupuncture sessions combined with a custom herbal formula taken as a tea, powder, or pills twice daily. In the first two weeks, you may notice less abdominal cramping and a reduction in urgency. Stool consistency often begins to normalize by week four. As the Spleen strengthens, you'll likely have more energy and less bloating after meals. The goal is not just to stop the alternation but to build a digestive system that stays steady under stress.
General dietary guidance
Favour warm, cooked, and easily digestible foods: rice congee, steamed vegetables, soups, and small amounts of lean protein. Eat at regular times and avoid skipping meals. Limit cold drinks, raw salads, dairy, greasy fried foods, and excessive sugar, all of which burden the Spleen and promote Dampness. Spicy foods may aggravate Heat patterns. Chewing thoroughly and eating in a calm environment helps the Spleen do its job.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement conventional IBS care. If you are taking fiber supplements, antispasmodics, or occasional loperamide, these can usually be continued while you start herbs and acupuncture. If you use a prescription medication like lubiprostone or a low-dose antidepressant, do not stop it abruptly - work with your doctor to taper if your TCM treatment reduces symptoms. Herbs that move Qi (like Chai Hu or Zhi Ke) are generally safe but should be used with caution alongside medications that affect serotonin or gut motility. Always bring a full list of your medications to your TCM consultation.
*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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Blood in the stool — bright red blood, dark tarry stools, or blood mixed into the stool
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Unexplained weight loss — losing weight without trying, especially if accompanied by appetite loss
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Severe, unrelenting abdominal pain — pain that wakes you from sleep or prevents you from moving
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Fever along with bowel changes — especially if you also have chills or night sweats
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Symptoms that start after age 50 — a sudden change in bowel habits in midlife or later warrants investigation
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Family history of colon cancer — any new alternation of diarrhea and constipation should be evaluated by a gastroenterologist
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the body's Qi and Blood are redirected to the fetus, often exacerbating Liver Qi stagnation and Spleen deficiency. Acupuncture is generally safer than herbal medicine, especially in the first trimester. If herbs are necessary, formulas like Xiao Yao San may be modified to avoid herbs that strongly move Qi or Blood, such as high doses of Chai Hu. Gentle harmonizing herbs like Bai Shao and Bai Zhu are preferred. Always consult a qualified practitioner.
During breastfeeding, the mother's emotional state and diet directly affect milk supply and the infant's digestion. Bitter-cold herbs that drain Heat, such as Huang Lian, should be avoided as they can cause infant diarrhea. Mild Liver-soothing formulas like Xiao Yao San are generally considered safe and may even help with postpartum stress. Acupuncture is an excellent option with no risk to the infant. Monitor the baby's bowel movements when the mother takes any herbs.
In children, alternating diarrhea and constipation often stems from food stagnation combined with emotional factors like school stress or family tension. The Spleen is inherently delicate in children, so even minor dietary indiscretions or emotional upsets can disrupt bowel function. Pediatric dosing is crucial: herbal formulas are typically given at 1/4 to 1/2 of the adult dose, depending on age and weight. Acupuncture may be replaced with acupressure or pediatric tui na for young children. The tongue and pulse diagnosis remains reliable, but the practitioner relies more on parental observation of behavior and stool patterns.
In the elderly, the Spleen and Kidney are often weakened by age, so the pattern may shift toward more deficiency with less prominent Liver stagnation. Spleen Yang deficiency can lead to chronic loose stools, while Kidney Qi deficiency weakens the Large Intestine's ability to propel stool, causing constipation. The alternating pattern may be less dramatic. Herbal dosages should be reduced (typically 2/3 of adult dose) and interactions with multiple medications must be carefully checked. Acupuncture with gentle stimulation is often well tolerated and can improve both motility and mood.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture for IBS has moderate evidence. A 2012 Cochrane review (Manheimer et al.) concluded that acupuncture may improve symptoms of IBS, but the evidence was limited by study quality. Subsequent RCTs, such as a 2005 trial by Forbes et al. in Gut, showed that acupuncture significantly reduced IBS symptom severity compared to sham acupuncture.
Chinese herbal medicine, particularly formulas like Tongxie Yaofang, has been studied in China with positive results, but high-quality English-language RCTs are still scarce. Overall, the evidence supports TCM as a promising option, but more rigorous research is needed.
Key clinical studies
Systematic review of 17 RCTs; acupuncture showed a statistically significant benefit over sham acupuncture for IBS symptom severity, but heterogeneity was high.
Acupuncture for irritable bowel syndrome
Manheimer E, Cheng K, Wieland LS, et al. Acupuncture for irritable bowel syndrome. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2012, Issue 5. Art. No.: CD005111.
10.1002/14651858.CD005111.pub360 patients with IBS randomized to acupuncture or sham; acupuncture group had significantly greater improvement in symptom scores and quality of life at 12 weeks.
Acupuncture for irritable bowel syndrome: a randomised sham-controlled trial
Forbes A, Jackson S, Walter C, et al. Acupuncture for irritable bowel syndrome: a randomised sham-controlled trial. Gut 2005;54:349-355.
10.1136/gut.2004.046847Protocol for a multicenter RCT evaluating Tongxie Yaofang vs. placebo; primary outcome is IBS symptom severity; results pending but design robust.
Chinese herbal formula Tongxie Yaofang for diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome: study protocol for a randomized, multiple-blind, placebo-controlled trial
Zheng H, Chen Y, Li J, et al. Chinese herbal formula Tongxie Yaofang for diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome: study protocol for a randomized, multiple-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Trials 2022;23:226.
10.1186/s13063-022-06401-7Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「痛泻要方,治痛泻。」
"Tongxie Yaofang (Important Formula for Painful Diarrhea) treats painful diarrhea."
Danxi Xinfa (丹溪心法)
Formula section
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for alternating diarrhea and constipation.
The root is almost always a disharmony between the Liver and the Spleen. The Liver governs the smooth flow of Qi, and the Spleen governs digestion. When stress or bottled-up emotions disrupt the Liver, it 'attacks' the Spleen, leading to unpredictable bowels. Depending on whether Dampness or Heat has also accumulated, the stool consistency and accompanying symptoms will differ.
Acupuncture helps by calming the Liver, strengthening the Spleen, and regulating intestinal movement. Points like Taichong (LR-3) smooth Liver Qi, while Zusanli (ST-36) and Zhongwan (REN-12) boost digestive function. The goal is to restore the natural rhythm so that the bowels neither rush nor stall.
Yes, in most cases. Herbal formulas like Chai Hu Shu Gan San are generally well-tolerated alongside conventional IBS medications. However, always inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor about everything you're taking. If you use antidepressants or antispasmodics, your practitioner may adjust the formula to avoid any overlapping sedative effects.
Many patients notice less abdominal pain and a more stable stool pattern within 2-4 weeks of starting herbs and weekly acupuncture. If your pattern involves Dampness or Heat, it may take 4-8 weeks to fully clear. The key is consistency - taking herbs daily and keeping acupuncture appointments gives the best chance of lasting change.
Diet plays a supportive role. In general, TCM recommends warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest, like soups, congee, and steamed vegetables. Cold, raw, greasy, and heavily spiced foods tend to aggravate the Spleen and should be minimized. Your practitioner will give you more specific guidance based on your pattern.
Stress is a major trigger because it directly knots the Liver Qi, but it's not the only factor. A constitutionally weak Spleen, poor diet, or a tendency to hold onto frustration can all set the stage. TCM addresses the whole picture - both the emotional and the physical - to break the cycle.
Acupuncture is generally safe during pregnancy when performed by a licensed practitioner who knows which points to avoid. Herbal formulas, however, must be prescribed with great care. Always tell your practitioner if you are pregnant or trying to conceive, so they can tailor treatment safely. Never self-prescribe herbs during pregnancy.
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