A Traditional Chinese Medicine view of

Abdominal Pain Relieved By Pressure And Warmth

虚寒腹痛 · xū hán fù tòng
+21 other names

Also known as: Abdominal Discomfort Eased By Warmth And Pressure, Abdominal Pain Relieved By Presure And Warmth, Pressure And Warmth Relieved Abdominal Pain, Stomach Pain Eased By Pressure And Heat, Abdominal Discomfort And Bloating Eased By Warmth And Pressure, Abdominal Pain And Distension Relieved By Pressure And Warmth, Pressure And Warmth Relieved Abdominal Pain And Bloating, Stomach Pain And Distension Eased By Pressure And Heat, Abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure, Abdominal distension that feels better with warmth and pressure, Abdominal pain improved by warmth and pressure, Abdominal pain that improves with warmth and pressure, Abdominal pain that improves with warmth or pressure, Dull abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure, Dull abdominal pain that improves with warmth and gentle pressure, Dull abdominal pain that improves with warmth and pressure, Dull cold pain in the upper belly that improves with warmth and pressure, Dull abdominal discomfort relieved by warmth and pressure, Dull lingering abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure, Dull persistent abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure, Intermittent abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure

Practitioner-reviewed · Updated Jun 2026

Abdominal pain that craves warmth and pressure is always a deficiency-cold pattern in TCM-but the organ at fault determines the treatment. Most patients notice significant improvement within 3-6 weeks of warming herbs and moxibustion, especially when they also adopt a warm, cooked-food diet.

6 Patterns
4 Herbs
4 Formulas
7 Acupoints
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 abdominal pain relieved by pressure and warmth. 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.

Abdominal pain that feels better when you press on it or apply warmth has a distinct meaning in TCM. It signals that your body's internal fire-its Yang energy-is running low, allowing cold to settle in your digestive organs. This isn't one condition but a family of deficiency-cold patterns, each affecting a different organ system. The right treatment depends on where the pain lives and what other symptoms come with it, and the good news is that warming herbs and moxibustion often bring relief within a few weeks.

How TCM understands abdominal pain relieved by pressure and warmth

TCM sees the abdomen as the home of the Spleen and Stomach, the organs that transform food into Qi and blood. They need a steady supply of Yang-a warm, metabolic fire-to do their job. When that Yang is deficient, cold accumulates in the middle burner, causing Qi to slow down and congeal. This stagnation produces a dull, persistent ache that craves heat to disperse the cold and gentle pressure to support the weakened Qi.

The most common root is Spleen Yang Deficiency. Here, the digestive fire is too weak to process food properly, so pain is often centered around the navel, accompanied by loose stools, fatigue, and cold hands and feet. If the pain sits squarely in the pit of the stomach with a poor appetite and perhaps clear-fluid regurgitation, the Stomach itself is the cold's target-Stomach Yang Deficient and Cold.

Sometimes the cold sinks deeper. When the Small Intestine is affected, you'll notice lower abdominal pain with gurgling and watery diarrhea. When the Kidneys are involved-the body's deepest source of Yang-the pain is accompanied by lower back coldness, early-morning diarrhea, and profound exhaustion. In all cases, the tongue is pale and puffy, and the pulse feels deep and slow, confirming the presence of internal cold.

This is why TCM doesn't treat all abdominal pain the same way. Two people with the same complaint of “pain that feels better with a hot water bottle” may need completely different herbal formulas and acupuncture points, depending on which organ is most depleted. The pattern differentiation guides the treatment, and it's why a thorough intake-covering pain location, bowel habits, temperature preferences, and energy levels-is so essential.

From the classical texts

「太阴之为病,腹满而吐,食不下,自利益甚,时腹自痛。若下之,必胸下结硬。」

"Greater Yin disease presents with abdominal fullness, vomiting, inability to eat, severe spontaneous diarrhea, and intermittent abdominal pain. If purged, it will cause hardness below the chest. This is the classic description of Spleen Yang deficiency with internal cold, treated with Li Zhong Wan."

Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage) , Greater Yin Disease Chapter · More references

How a TCM practitioner diagnoses abdominal pain relieved by pressure and warmth

Inside the consultation

A TCM practitioner starts by asking where the pain sits and what it feels like. Pain that improves with warmth and gentle pressure always points to a deficiency‑cold pattern, but the location and the company it keeps are what narrow the diagnosis. Upper belly pain suggests Stomach involvement, while pain around the navel or lower abdomen points toward the Spleen, Small Intestine, or Kidneys.

When the discomfort is a dull ache around the navel, comes with fatigue, loose stools, and a poor appetite, the Spleen’s warming power has weakened. This is Spleen Yang Deficiency, the most common driver of this kind of pain. The tongue is pale and puffy, and the pulse feels deep and weak, confirming that the middle burner lacks the Yang it needs to digest and move things along.

If the pain sits squarely in the pit of the stomach and is accompanied by a complete loss of appetite, cold hands and feet, and perhaps clear‑fluid vomiting, the practitioner thinks of Stomach Yang Deficient and Cold. Here the cold has settled right into the Stomach itself. The tongue is pale with a thin white coat, and the pulse is deep and slow, showing that the Stomach’s warming function is simply too low.

Sometimes the pain is more diffuse and the picture is less clearly tied to one organ. That is Empty‑Cold, a general pattern of internal cold from Yang deficiency. It often overlaps with Spleen Yang Deficiency but may lack the pronounced digestive symptoms, appearing instead as a vague, lingering ache that always improves with heat and rest.

The Greater Yin stage is a classical description of the same deep Spleen‑cold picture, often with more pronounced abdominal fullness and watery, painless diarrhea.

When the ache settles in the lower belly, with gurgling, watery stools, and a sensation of cold below the navel, Small Intestine Deficient and Cold is likely.

If the pain is chronic and comes with lower‑back soreness, cold knees, severe fatigue, and early‑morning diarrhea, the cold has reached the Kidneys as well, creating a Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency with Empty Cold pattern. The tongue is pale and wet, and the pulse is deep and thready, reflecting a deeper exhaustion of the body’s core warmth.

TCM Patterns for Abdominal Pain Relieved By Pressure And Warmth

In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same abdominal pain relieved by pressure and warmth 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.

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  1. 1Your signs
  2. 2What makes it worse
  3. 3What helps

Which signs match your experience?

0 selected this step
Dull persistent abdominal pain, better with warmth and pressure Loose watery stools, often with undigested food Cold hands and feet, feeling cold easily Poor appetite and bloating after meals Tiredness and heaviness in the limbs
Worse with Cold or raw foods and drinks, Skipping meals or irregular eating, Cold weather or dampness, Overwork or overexertion
Better with Applying warmth to abdomen (hot water bottle, heat pack), Eating warm cooked foods and warm drinks, Rest and lying down, Gentle pressure or massage on abdomen
Dull, aching pain in the upper belly Pain improves with warmth and pressure Poor appetite and preference for hot food and drinks Vomiting of clear, watery fluid Cold hands and feet
Worse with Cold or raw foods and drinks, Cold weather or dampness, Skipping meals or irregular eating, Overwork or overexertion
Better with Applying warmth to abdomen (hot water bottle, heat pack), Gentle pressure or massage on abdomen, Eating warm cooked foods and warm drinks, Rest and lying down
Dull abdominal discomfort relieved by warmth and pressure Persistent feeling of cold, cold hands and feet Fatigue and listlessness Loose stools Pale face
Worse with Cold or raw foods and drinks, Cold weather or dampness, Overwork or overexertion, Skipping meals or irregular eating, Emotional stress or worry
Better with Applying warmth to abdomen (hot water bottle, heat pack), Gentle pressure or massage on abdomen, Rest and lying down, Eating warm cooked foods and warm drinks, Warm clothing and keeping abdomen covered
Intermittent dull abdominal pain Watery diarrhea without strong odor Absence of thirst Feeling of heaviness in the body
Worse with Cold weather or dampness, Cold or raw foods and drinks, Overwork or overexertion, Emotional stress or worry
Better with Applying warmth to abdomen (hot water bottle, heat pack), Rest and lying down, Gentle pressure or massage on abdomen, Eating warm, cooked foods
Dull lower abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure Loud gurgling intestinal sounds (borborygmus) Watery loose stools Frequent clear urination Cold limbs and aversion to cold
Worse with Cold weather or dampness, Cold or raw foods and drinks, Overwork or overexertion, Emotional stress or worry
Better with Applying warmth to abdomen (hot water bottle, heat pack), Gentle pressure or massage on abdomen, Eating warm cooked foods and warm drinks, Rest and lying down, Moxibustion
Dull abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure Soreness and cold in lower back and knees Early-morning diarrhea (around 5 a.m.) Cold hands and feet, especially lower limbs Profound fatigue and lack of vitality
Worse with Cold weather or dampness, Cold or raw foods and drinks, Overwork or overexertion, Emotional stress or worry, Early morning (5-7 a.m.)
Better with Applying warmth to abdomen (hot water bottle, heat pack), Rest and lying down, Eating warm cooked foods and warm drinks, Gentle pressure or massage on abdomen

Treatment

Four ways to address abdominal pain relieved by pressure and warmth in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.

Formulas traditionally used for abdominal pain relieved by pressure and warmth

4 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.

Li Zhong Wan Pill to Regulate the Middle · Eastern Hàn dynasty, c. 200 CE
Warm
Warms the Middle Burner Disperses Cold Tonifies Qi

A classical warming formula used to strengthen the digestive system when it has become weakened by internal cold. It addresses symptoms like watery diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure, poor appetite, and a general feeling of coldness. It works by warming the core of the body and restoring the Spleen and Stomach's ability to process food and fluids.

Patterns
Shop · from $85
Xiao Jian Zhong Tang Minor Construct the Middle Decoction · Eastern Hàn dynasty, ~200 CE
Warm
Warms the Middle Burner Relaxes Spasms and Relieves Urgency Harmonizes Yin and Yang

A gentle, warming formula for people who experience recurring crampy abdominal pain that feels better with warmth and pressure, along with fatigue, poor appetite, and a pale complexion. It works by nourishing and warming the digestive system from within, restoring the body's ability to produce Qi and Blood. Originally designed for chronic conditions involving overall weakness and depleted constitution, it is one of the most commonly used classical formulas for both adults and children with weak digestion.

Patterns
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Fu Zi Li Zhong Tang Aconite Decoction to Regulate the Middle · Sòng dynasty, 1174 CE
Hot
Warms Yang and Disperses Cold Tonifies Qi and Strengthens the Spleen Warms the Middle Burner

A warming formula used to strengthen the digestive system and restore warmth to the body. It is used for people who feel deeply cold in the abdomen, experience chronic loose stools or diarrhea, vomiting, poor appetite, and cold hands and feet caused by severe weakness and cold in the Spleen, Stomach, and Kidneys.

Patterns
You Gui Wan Restore the Right Pill · Míng dynasty, 1624 CE
Warm
Tonifies Kidney Yang Benefits Essence and Fills the Marrow Warms the Ming Men Fire

A classical warming and tonifying formula designed to restore Kidney Yang, the body's foundational warmth and vitality. It is commonly used for people experiencing deep fatigue, persistent cold sensations, lower back weakness, reduced sexual function, or frequent urination due to depletion of the Kidney's warming capacity. The formula combines Yang-warming herbs with nourishing substances to rebuild vitality from within, following the principle that Yang is best restored by providing it with a nourishing Yin foundation.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Typical timeline for abdominal pain relieved by pressure and warmth

For Spleen or Stomach Yang deficiency patterns-the most common-improvement typically begins within 2-4 weeks of consistent herbal treatment and weekly moxibustion. Deeper patterns involving Kidney Yang may require 3-6 months to rebuild the core fire. Empty-cold patterns often respond quickly once cold is expelled, but long-term prevention depends on dietary habits.

Treatment principles

All patterns share the core strategy of warming the middle burner and expelling cold, but the specific approach varies by organ involvement. Spleen and Stomach patterns are treated with formulas like Li Zhong Wan that directly warm the digestive center. When the Kidneys are involved, stronger warming herbs like Fu Zi (aconite) and Rou Gui (cinnamon bark) are added to reignite the life-gate fire.

Moxibustion-burning moxa on or near acupuncture points-is a cornerstone treatment because it delivers deep, penetrating warmth that herbs alone may not achieve. Acupuncture points are chosen to tonify Yang and move Qi, with Zusanli ST-36 and Zhongwan REN-12 being universal favorites.

What to expect from treatment

Most patients begin with weekly acupuncture and daily herbal decoctions or granules. Moxibustion may be applied during sessions or taught for home use. Within the first two weeks, many notice that their pain is less frequent or less intense, and that they feel warmer overall. Loose stools often firm up, and appetite improves.

For mild, recent-onset cases, a full remission can occur in 4-6 weeks. Chronic, deep-rooted cases may need 3-6 months of steady treatment, with gradual tapering as the body's Yang strengthens. Consistency with diet and avoiding cold is essential for lasting results.

General dietary guidance

Favor warm, cooked foods: soups, stews, congee, steamed vegetables, and ginger tea. Avoid raw, cold, and iced foods and drinks entirely-they directly damage Spleen Yang. Limit dairy, greasy foods, and sweets, which promote dampness. Eating smaller, more frequent meals and chewing thoroughly also helps. A simple rule: if it feels cold in your mouth, it will feel cold in your belly.

Combining TCM with conventional treatment

TCM warming therapies can generally be used alongside conventional medications for abdominal pain, but it's important to tell both your doctor and your TCM practitioner about everything you're taking. Some warming herbs like Gan Jiang (dried ginger) and Rou Gui (cinnamon) are generally safe, but if you are on blood thinners (e.g., warfarin), high doses of certain herbs may increase bleeding risk-always disclose.

If you're on proton pump inhibitors or antacids, TCM may help reduce reliance over time, but never stop prescribed medications abruptly. Moxibustion is safe alongside most treatments, but avoid applying it over areas with skin conditions or after applying medicated patches.

*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

Seek urgent medical care — not a TCM practitioner — if you have:
  • Severe, sudden-onset abdominal pain — Pain that comes on intensely and rapidly, unlike your usual dull ache.
  • Pain with high fever, chills, or vomiting blood — These suggest infection or a serious underlying condition.
  • Black, tarry stools or visible blood in stool — Could indicate bleeding in the digestive tract.
  • Unexplained weight loss — A red flag that warrants medical investigation.
  • Severe abdominal tenderness or rigidity — A board-like, hard belly that hurts to touch can be a surgical emergency.
  • Pain that wakes you from sleep or prevents any movement — Pain that is unrelenting and severe needs immediate evaluation.
  • Pain during pregnancy — Any abdominal pain in pregnancy should be assessed by a doctor promptly.

Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you

Evidence & references

Clinical research on TCM for deficiency-cold abdominal pain is predominantly Chinese-language and focuses on functional dyspepsia, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and chronic gastritis with Spleen Yang deficiency patterns. A number of randomized controlled trials have shown that warming formulas like Li Zhong Wan and moxibustion on abdominal points significantly reduce pain scores and improve quality of life compared to conventional medications alone.

However, the overall quality of evidence is moderate. Many studies are small, lack blinding, or use subjective outcome measures. High-quality, multi-center RCTs with rigorous methodology are still needed to confirm these findings and satisfy Western evidence standards.

Classical text references

One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.

「虚劳里急,悸,衄,腹中痛,梦失精,四肢酸疼,手足烦热,咽干口燥,小建中汤主之。」

"Deficiency taxation with internal urgency, palpitations, epistaxis, abdominal pain, nocturnal emissions, aching limbs, heat in the palms and soles, dry throat and mouth: Xiao Jian Zhong Tang governs. This formula addresses deficiency-cold abdominal pain that is relieved by warmth and pressure."

Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essentials from the Golden Cabinet)
Chapter on Deficiency Taxation

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for abdominal pain relieved by pressure and warmth.

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