Diverticulitis
肠痈 · cháng yōng+4 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Diverticular Disease, Diverticular Infection, Inflamed Diverticula, Acute diverticulitis
The quality of your abdominal pain and the condition of your tongue reveal not just the severity of inflammation, but the underlying pattern driving it - and that pattern guides treatment, often leading to faster recovery and fewer recurrences.
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 diverticulitis. 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.
Diverticulitis isn't a single disease in TCM - it's understood as a progression of patterns, each with its own cause, characteristic pain, and treatment. During an acute flare-up, damp-heat and blood stagnation are common; in chronic or recovering phases, underlying deficiencies of Qi, Blood, or Yin can dominate. This page explores the four main TCM patterns behind diverticulitis, so you can understand why your symptoms feel the way they do and what approach might help you heal.
Diverticulitis occurs when small pouches (diverticula) that have formed in the wall of the colon become inflamed or infected. The most common symptom is persistent abdominal pain, usually in the lower left side, alongside fever, nausea, and a change in bowel habits like constipation or diarrhoea. Diagnosis is typically confirmed with a CT scan, which shows inflammation or abscess formation.
Mild cases are often treated with antibiotics and a temporary liquid diet to rest the bowel. More severe cases may require hospitalisation, intravenous antibiotics, or surgery if complications like perforation or abscess develop.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment for acute diverticulitis includes antibiotics to clear the infection, bowel rest with a clear liquid diet, and over-the-counter pain relief. For recurrent or complicated cases, doctors may recommend surgery to remove the affected section of the colon. Long-term management focuses on a high-fibre diet to prevent future attacks, though evidence for this is mixed.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Antibiotics treat the current infection but do not address the underlying susceptibility that allows diverticula to become inflamed in the first place. Recurrence rates are high - up to a third of patients will have another episode within a few years. Dietary advice is generic and does not differentiate between the constitutional types that TCM recognises, such as those prone to damp-heat versus those with chronic Qi deficiency. TCM offers a way to identify and correct these deeper imbalances, potentially reducing the frequency and severity of flare-ups.
How TCM understands diverticulitis
In TCM, diverticulitis is understood as a form of intestinal abscess (肠痈, cháng yōng). The core mechanism begins when damp-heat accumulates in the Large Intestine. This sticky, turbid pathogen arises from a diet too rich in greasy, spicy, or sweet foods, or from external dampness, and it clogs the normal flow of Qi. The result is inflammation, cramping pain, and the classic signs of fever, nausea, and a thick, greasy yellow tongue coating.
If the damp-heat is not cleared, it deepens and combines with stagnant blood, creating a more fixed, intense blockage. This is the stage when an abscess may form - the pain becomes stabbing and tender to touch, and the tongue turns dark red or purple. The body's toxic heat can rise, causing higher fever and agitation. This pattern of Heat and Blood Stagnation requires urgent treatment to prevent perforation.
Not everyone follows this acute route. In people who are constitutionally weak or after repeated episodes, the body's Qi and Blood become depleted. The pain becomes a dull, lingering ache, accompanied by overwhelming fatigue and a pale complexion. Similarly, when Yin is deficient, internal dry heat irritates the bowel, leading to low-grade inflammation, night sweats, and a dry, cracked tongue. These deficiency patterns explain why some people struggle with slow recovery and frequent recurrences.
「肠痈者,少腹肿痞,按之即痛如淋,小便自调,时时发热,自汗出,复恶寒。其脉迟紧者,脓未成,可下之,当有血。脉洪数者,脓已成,不可下也。大黄牡丹汤主之。」
"In intestinal abscess, there is a swelling and fullness in the lower abdomen; pressing on it causes pain like strangury, though urination is normal. There is frequent fever, spontaneous sweating, and aversion to cold. If the pulse is slow and tight, pus has not yet formed and it can be purged; blood will be passed. If the pulse is flooding and rapid, pus has already formed and it should not be purged. Da Huang Mu Dan Pi Tang governs this."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses diverticulitis
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner starts by asking about the location, quality, and timing of your abdominal pain, along with fever, thirst, and bowel habits. Because diverticulitis often follows a clear progression, the stage of the illness provides essential clues to which pattern is dominant. The tongue and pulse are then examined to confirm the diagnosis.
In the early, acute stage, damp-heat in the large intestine is typical. The pain may begin around the navel and then settle in the lower right abdomen, with a feeling of fullness and heaviness. The practitioner will look for a thick, greasy yellow tongue coating and a slippery, rapid pulse, along with fever, nausea, and either constipation or loose, sticky stools.
If the pain becomes fixed, stabbing, and intensely tender to touch, the pattern has shifted to heat and blood stagnation in the lower burner. This often signals that an abscess is forming. The tongue appears dark red, possibly with purple spots, and the pulse feels wiry or hesitant. The fever may be higher, and the person often looks more acutely unwell.
In someone who is constitutionally weak or has had repeated episodes, qi and blood deficiency can predominate. Here the pain is usually dull and lingering, with marked fatigue, a pale puffy face, and a tongue that is pale with teeth marks. The pulse is weak and thin.
In recovery, empty-heat from yin deficiency may bring low-grade afternoon fever, night sweats, a dry mouth, and a red tongue with little coating.
TCM Patterns for Diverticulitis
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same diverticulitis 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 yourself in more than one pattern, because these patterns often represent different stages of the same condition. You might notice damp-heat symptoms during a flare-up and then feel completely drained afterward, fitting a deficiency pattern. This overlap is a normal part of how the body moves through illness and recovery.
To narrow things down, focus on the quality of the pain and your energy level. A sharp, fixed pain with a high fever points toward heat and stagnation, while a dull ache with profound fatigue and a pale tongue suggests deficiency. If you have both acute signs and an underlying sense of weakness, the picture is mixed and needs careful balancing.
Because diverticulitis can become serious quickly, never rely on self-assessment if you have severe abdominal pain, persistent fever, or signs of infection. TCM patterns are helpful for understanding the underlying imbalance, but they do not replace urgent medical evaluation. Seek emergency care immediately for acute, intense symptoms.
A qualified TCM practitioner can examine your tongue and pulse to clarify which pattern is primary and prescribe herbs accordingly. Even when patterns overlap, a professional can tailor treatment to your unique presentation. If you are in recovery and feeling run-down, TCM can help rebuild your energy safely under expert guidance.
Damp-Heat in the Large Intestine
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Empty-Heat caused by Yin Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address diverticulitis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for diverticulitis
5 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 used to treat intestinal abscesses (similar to acute appendicitis) and lower abdominal infections caused by a buildup of heat, dampness, and blood stagnation. It works by purging heat downward through the bowels, breaking up blood stasis, and reducing swelling and inflammation in the lower abdomen.
A classical three-herb formula from the Jin Gui Yao Lue used to drain pus, reduce internal abscesses, and warm the body's Yang when it has become weakened. Originally designed for intestinal abscess (appendicitis) that has already formed pus in a person with underlying cold and deficiency, it is now also widely used for chronic pelvic inflammatory disease, ulcerative colitis, and certain stubborn skin conditions like eczema.
A classical formula that strengthens the Spleen and nourishes the Heart to address fatigue, poor appetite, insomnia, forgetfulness, palpitations, and anxiety caused by weakness of both the Heart and Spleen. It is also widely used for bleeding disorders such as heavy or prolonged menstrual periods, easy bruising, or blood in the stool that result from the Spleen being too weak to keep blood in its proper channels.
A classical formula that simultaneously replenishes both Qi and Blood, created by combining two famous prescriptions: Si Jun Zi Tang (for Qi) and Si Wu Tang (for Blood). It is commonly used for people who feel chronically tired, look pale or sallow, have a poor appetite, experience dizziness or heart palpitations, and feel generally run down due to dual deficiency of Qi and Blood.
A classical formula that nourishes the body's cooling Yin fluids while clearing excess internal heat. It is commonly used for symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, tinnitus, sore throat, dry mouth, and low back aching that arise when the Kidneys become depleted and the body overheats from within. It builds on the famous Liu Wei Di Huang Wan (Six Ingredient Rehmannia Pill) with two additional cooling herbs.
Acute damp-heat patterns often respond quickly: fever and pain can start to ease within 3-5 days of herbal treatment, with full resolution in 1-2 weeks. When blood stagnation and abscess are present, recovery may take 2-4 weeks. Chronic deficiency patterns require more patience - rebuilding Qi, Blood, or Yin typically takes 1-3 months, but the goal is lasting resilience and fewer flare-ups.
Treatment principles
Treatment of diverticulitis in TCM follows the stage of the illness. In the acute phase, the priority is to clear damp-heat and toxic heat, move stagnant blood, and reduce abscess formation. This is achieved with cooling, detoxifying herbs that also gently unblock the bowels. As the acute inflammation subsides, treatment shifts to support the body's recovery - tonifying Qi, nourishing Blood, or enriching Yin, depending on the underlying deficiency.
Acupuncture is used throughout to regulate intestinal Qi, relieve pain, and strengthen the Spleen and Stomach. Because patterns often overlap - for example, damp-heat with underlying Qi deficiency - formulas and point prescriptions are carefully customised to address both the branch (current symptoms) and the root (constitutional weakness).
What to expect from treatment
During an acute episode, you may have acupuncture 1-2 times per week and take a strong herbal decoction daily. Pain and fever often begin to improve within the first few days. Once the acute stage passes, treatment frequency reduces to weekly or biweekly sessions, with gentler herbal formulas taken for several weeks to months to prevent recurrence.
Progress is typically steady but not always linear - you may have a good week followed by a minor setback, especially if dietary slips occur. Your practitioner will monitor your tongue and pulse to adjust the formula as your pattern shifts from excess to deficiency.
General dietary guidance
During any active diverticulitis, the bowel needs rest. Favour warm, easily digested, bland foods like rice congee, well-cooked vegetables, and clear broths. Avoid all greasy, fried, spicy, and raw foods, as well as dairy, sugar, and alcohol, which create dampness and heat. Drink warm water or mild herbal teas throughout the day.
Once the acute phase has passed, continue to eat mostly cooked foods and avoid overeating. If your pattern is damp-heat, limit damp-producing foods like rich meats, refined flour, and excess sweets. If you tend toward Qi deficiency, include small amounts of easily digested protein and warming spices like ginger to support the Spleen.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement conventional treatment for diverticulitis. If you are taking antibiotics, herbs can be used concurrently to reduce inflammation and support the immune response. Always keep your doctor informed about any herbs or supplements you are using. If you are on blood-thinning medications (e.g., warfarin, aspirin), be aware that some blood-moving herbs, such as Dang Gui and Da Huang, may increase bleeding risk - your TCM practitioner can choose safer alternatives.
If surgery is being considered, acupuncture and herbs can be used pre-operatively to strengthen the body and post-operatively to speed healing. Never stop prescribed medications without consulting your doctor.
*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
-
Severe, constant abdominal pain that worsens with movement — Could indicate peritonitis or a perforated bowel.
-
High fever (above 101°F or 38.3°C) with chills — Signs of a spreading infection that may require intravenous antibiotics.
-
Inability to pass gas or stool, with abdominal swelling — May suggest a bowel obstruction.
-
Rigid, board-like abdomen that is extremely tender to touch — A classic sign of peritonitis - a surgical emergency.
-
Vomiting that prevents you from keeping down fluids — Risk of dehydration and may indicate a serious blockage.
-
Blood in your stool or black, tarry stools — Could signal bleeding from the inflamed diverticulum or another serious condition.
-
Confusion, dizziness, or fainting — May indicate sepsis or significant blood loss.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the growing uterus can shift the bowel and mask or alter the typical pain location of diverticulitis. TCM treatment must be extremely cautious because many of the key herbs for Damp-Heat and Blood stasis patterns - such as Da Huang (rhubarb), Tao Ren (peach kernel), and Mu Dan Pi (moutan) - are contraindicated in pregnancy due to their strong downward-moving and blood-activating effects. Acupuncture becomes a safer frontline option, with points like Zusanli ST-36 and Tianshu ST-25 used gently, avoiding any points on the lower abdomen that might stimulate uterine contractions.
If herbal medicine is necessary, a qualified practitioner will modify formulas drastically, substituting mild, pregnancy-safe herbs like Huang Qin (scutellaria) and Bai Zhu (atractylodes) to gently clear Heat and support the Spleen without endangering the pregnancy. Self-treatment with any purgative or blood-moving formula is absolutely forbidden.
Many of the bitter-cold herbs used to clear Damp-Heat, such as Huang Lian (coptis) and Da Huang (rhubarb), can pass into breast milk and cause infant diarrhea or digestive upset. A nursing mother with diverticulitis should avoid these strong herbs. Instead, a practitioner will favor milder Heat-clearing alternatives like Jin Yin Hua (honeysuckle) and Lian Qiao (forsythia), which are less likely to affect the baby. Acupuncture is also an excellent option during breastfeeding, as it poses no risk to the infant.
It is also important to support the mother’s fluid and Blood, as lactation drains Yin and Blood. A pattern of Yin Deficiency with Empty-Heat may become more prominent, so formulas that nourish Yin while gently clearing Heat - such as a modified Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan with reduced bitter herbs - can address the infection while protecting milk supply and quality.
Diverticulitis is rare in children, but when it occurs it usually presents as an acute, forceful Damp-Heat or Heat-and-Blood-stasis pattern. Children’s digestion is immature, so a sudden dietary indiscretion or a febrile illness can rapidly generate intense Heat in the intestines. The pain is often severe, with high fever and a red tongue with a thick yellow coat. Herbal dosages must be significantly reduced - typically to one-third or one-half of the adult dose, depending on the child’s age and weight.
Because children cannot always articulate their symptoms clearly, a TCM practitioner relies heavily on the tongue, pulse (which is naturally rapid in children), and abdominal palpation. Acupuncture may be replaced by acupressure or pediatric tui na massage on the abdomen and back Shu points to gently move Qi and clear Heat without needles. Any sign of a surgical abdomen requires immediate Western medical evaluation.
In older adults, diverticulitis often occurs against a background of Qi and Blood Deficiency or Yin Deficiency. The acute Damp-Heat flare-up may be less dramatic, with only a low-grade fever and a dull, persistent ache rather than sharp pain. The tongue is often pale or red with little coating, and the pulse is weak and thready. Treatment must prioritize supporting the body’s vital resources while gently clearing the local Heat and stagnation. Harsh purgatives like Da Huang are used with extreme caution, if at all, and at reduced dosages.
Polypharmacy is a real concern, so herbal formulas should be kept simple and monitored for interactions with Western medications. Acupuncture is an excellent, gentle modality for pain relief and bowel regulation in the elderly. Recovery is often slower, and a longer course of Spleen- and Kidney-tonifying herbs may be needed after the acute infection clears to prevent recurrence.
Evidence & references
High-quality, English-language clinical trials on TCM for diverticulitis are scarce. Most evidence comes from Chinese-language studies that report good results using modified Da Huang Mu Dan Pi Tang and acupuncture for acute episodes, but these are often small and lack rigorous blinding or placebo controls. A few systematic reviews on acupuncture for acute abdominal pain suggest a potential benefit in reducing pain and shortening hospital stays, though the studies are heterogeneous and the quality is generally low to moderate.
Despite the limited formal evidence, TCM is widely used in China as an adjunctive treatment for diverticulitis, especially in the non-surgical management of early-stage cases. The classical formulas have a long history of clinical use, and their anti-inflammatory and microcirculation-improving effects have been demonstrated in laboratory studies. More well-designed RCTs are needed to bring this traditional knowledge into the evidence-based mainstream.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「肠痈之为病,其身甲错,腹皮急,按之濡,如肿状,腹无积聚,身无热,脉数,此为肠内有痈脓,薏苡附子败酱散主之。」
"In intestinal abscess disease, the body’s skin is dry and scaly, the abdominal skin is tense but feels soft on pressure as if swollen, yet there is no fixed mass, and the body has no heat, but the pulse is rapid. This indicates there is pus inside the intestine. Yi Yi Fu Zi Bai Jiang San governs this."
Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essentials from the Golden Cabinet)
Chapter on Intestinal Abscess and Sores
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for diverticulitis.
TCM can be very effective for mild to moderate acute diverticulitis, particularly when the pattern is damp-heat. Herbal formulas like Da Huang Mu Dan Pi Tang are designed to clear heat and reduce inflammation. However, if you have a high fever, severe pain, or signs of a systemic infection, antibiotics or hospital care are essential. Never delay conventional treatment for a serious infection. TCM works best as a complementary approach - or as the primary treatment only under the close supervision of a practitioner experienced in acute care.
In acute cases, many patients notice a reduction in pain and fever within a few days. Full resolution of the acute episode may take one to two weeks. If an abscess is present, herbs that move blood and reduce masses are used, and improvement may take two to four weeks. Chronic, recurring diverticulitis with underlying deficiency often requires one to three months of consistent herbal therapy to rebuild the body's reserves and reduce the tendency to flare up.
Yes, acupuncture can be safely used during a flare-up and is often very helpful for pain relief. Points on the abdomen, such as Tianshu ST-25, and on the legs, like Zusanli ST-36 and Shangjuxu ST-37, are commonly chosen to regulate the Large Intestine and clear damp-heat. Your practitioner will use gentle needling and avoid deep insertion over inflamed areas. Many patients find that acupuncture combined with herbs speeds up recovery.
Yes, this is one of TCM's strengths. Once the acute episode is resolved, treatment shifts to correcting the underlying imbalance that allowed the inflammation to develop. For someone with a damp-heat constitution, dietary changes and periodic herbal formulas help keep the bowel clear. For those with Qi and Blood deficiency, tonifying herbs and acupuncture strengthen digestion and tissue repair. By addressing the root cause, TCM aims to reduce the frequency and severity of recurrences over the long term.
During an acute episode, the diet should be very light and easy to digest - congee, steamed vegetables, and mung bean soup are ideal. Avoid all greasy, fried, spicy, and rich foods, as well as alcohol and raw cold foods, which can worsen damp-heat. Between attacks, the focus shifts to your underlying pattern: those with damp-heat should continue to avoid damp-producing foods like dairy and sugar; those with deficiency should eat warm, cooked meals that support the Spleen, such as soups and stews with ginger and rice.
Yes, TCM and antibiotics can usually be combined safely. Herbs can support the body's own healing and reduce inflammation while the antibiotic clears the infection. However, always inform both your doctor and your TCM practitioner about all medications and supplements you are taking. Some herbs, particularly blood-movers like Dang Gui or Da Huang, may interact with anticoagulants or affect bowel movements, so your practitioner may adjust the formula accordingly.
Continue exploring
Where to go next from here.
Bring this to a practitioner
Use Save / Print at the top to take your quiz results and matched patterns into a TCM consultation.
Browse all conditions
Search the full TCM condition library by symptom, body region, or pattern.
See all conditionsVisit our store
Quality-controlled herbs and formulas that match what you've read about above.
Shop herbs & formulas