Hemorrhoids
痔疮 · zhì chuāng+22 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Haemorrhoids, Piles, Chronic haemorrhoids, Haemorrhoids (secondary), Bleeding Hemorrhoids, Bleeding From Hemorrhoids, Bleeding Haemorrhoids, Bleeding Piles, Blood In Stool Due To Hemorrhoids, Hematochezia From Hemorrhoids, Hemorrhoid Blood Loss, Hemorrhoidal Bleeding, Hemorrhoidal Blood Discharge, Haemorrhoids (with bleeding and inflammation), Haemorrhoids with bleeding and inflammation, Rectal bleeding or haemorrhoids, Hemorrhoids with Burning Sensation, Haemorrhoids with burning sensation, Hemorrhoids Aggravated by Straining, Hemorrhoids with Prolapse, Haemorrhoid pain, Haemorrhoids swelling
The color of the blood, the nature of the pain, and whether the hemorrhoid prolapses or not reveal which organ system is out of balance - and most patients see significant improvement within 4 to 8 weeks when the correct pattern is treated.
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 hemorrhoids. 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.
Hemorrhoids are not a single condition in TCM - they are a family of four distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own type of bleeding and pain, and its own treatment. Two patterns are driven by excess Heat or Damp-Heat, where spicy food and alcohol create inflammation that swells the veins and makes them bleed.
One is a stagnation pattern, where prolonged sitting and straining trap Qi and Blood, turning the hemorrhoid into a hard, dark, painful lump. The fourth is a deficiency pattern, where a weakened Spleen can no longer hold the tissues up, leading to a heavy, prolapsing sensation and pale bleeding. Understanding which pattern is active explains why the same diet change that helps one person can make another person's hemorrhoids worse.
Hemorrhoids are swollen and inflamed veins in the anus and lower rectum, similar to varicose veins. They are extremely common, affecting nearly three out of four adults at some point. Symptoms include itching, discomfort, pain, and bleeding - typically bright red blood on toilet paper or in the toilet bowl. Internal hemorrhoids lie inside the rectum and are usually painless but may prolapse; external hemorrhoids form under the skin around the anus and can be painful. Diagnosis is usually straightforward, based on a physical examination and a description of the symptoms.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment begins with lifestyle changes: increasing dietary fiber, drinking more water, and avoiding straining. Over-the-counter creams, suppositories, and pads containing witch hazel or hydrocortisone can relieve itching and pain. Warm sitz baths are recommended to soothe the area. For persistent or severe cases, minimally invasive procedures like rubber band ligation, sclerotherapy, or infrared coagulation are used to shrink the hemorrhoid. Surgical removal (hemorrhoidectomy) is reserved for large, prolapsed, or repeatedly problematic hemorrhoids.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While creams and procedures can shrink or remove hemorrhoids, they do not address the underlying tendency to develop them. Recurrence is common, especially if the root causes - chronic constipation, prolonged sitting, or dietary triggers - remain unchanged. Pain medications and topical steroids offer temporary relief but can thin the skin with long-term use. Crucially, the conventional approach treats all hemorrhoids as essentially the same structural problem, without distinguishing between the fiery, burning type and the heavy, prolapsing type - a distinction that TCM views as fundamental to lasting resolution.
How TCM understands hemorrhoids
TCM understands hemorrhoids primarily through the Large Intestine and the Spleen. The Large Intestine is responsible for eliminating waste, and when Heat or Damp-Heat accumulates there - often from a diet rich in spicy, greasy foods and alcohol - it injures the local blood vessels, causing them to swell, burn, and bleed. The color of the blood tells the story: fresh, bright red blood that spurts or drips usually indicates Heat in the Large Intestine, while darker, thicker bleeding with a heavy, burning sensation points to Damp-Heat pouring downward into the lower burner.
But not all hemorrhoids are hot. Prolonged sitting, chronic constipation, and straining create a local traffic jam of Qi and Blood. This stagnation hardens the hemorrhoid, turns it a dark purple color, and produces a fixed, stabbing pain - a pattern called Qi and Blood Stagnation. Here the problem is not so much what you eat but how you sit and move, and the treatment focuses on getting the circulation moving again rather than cooling inflammation.
The Spleen adds a third dimension. In TCM, the Spleen is responsible for holding organs and tissues in place. When Spleen Qi becomes chronically weak - often from overwork, poor diet, or prolonged illness - it loses its lifting power. The veins and tissues in the anal area sag downward, creating a constant heavy, bearing-down sensation and a prolapse that may need to be pushed back manually. The bleeding in this pattern is usually pale and scanty, and the whole body feels tired. This is why the same Western diagnosis can require four entirely different treatment strategies in TCM.
「因而饱食,筋脉横解,肠澼为痔。」
"If one overeats, the sinews and vessels become slack and lose their integrity, and intestinal afflictions with bleeding will develop into hemorrhoids. This is one of the earliest descriptions of the dietary origin and vessel pathology behind hemorrhoids."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses hemorrhoids
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first asks about the bleeding: its color, amount, and whether it drips, spurts, or just streaks the stool. Fresh red blood that spurts often points to Wind-Heat invading the Large Intestine, while darker blood mixed with burning and swelling suggests Damp-Heat pouring downward.
When the hemorrhoid itself is the main focus, the practitioner examines its appearance and feel. A dark purple, hard, and exquisitely painful lump that has prolapsed indicates Qi and Blood Stagnation - the result of prolonged sitting or straining that has blocked the local flow.
If the person describes a heavy, dragging sensation in the anus and a prolapse that needs to be pushed back manually, the pattern shifts to Spleen Qi Sinking. Here the bleeding is usually pale and scanty, and the whole body feels tired and weak, reflecting a deeper deficiency.
The tongue and pulse confirm the picture. A red tongue with a thick dry yellow coating and a rapid pulse support Heat in the Large Intestine. A greasy yellow coat and a slippery, rapid pulse point to Damp-Heat. A dark tongue with stasis spots and a wiry or choppy pulse confirm blood stasis, while a pale tongue and a weak pulse are the hallmarks of Spleen Qi Sinking.
TCM Patterns for Hemorrhoids
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same hemorrhoids 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 notice features from more than one pattern, especially if the hemorrhoids have been present for a while. For example, you might have fresh bleeding (Heat in the Large Intestine) along with some burning and swelling (Damp-Heat). The key is to identify which pattern is dominant by looking at the color of the blood and the tongue coating.
Prolapse can be particularly confusing, because it appears in both Qi and Blood Stagnation and Spleen Qi Sinking. The main differentiator is pain: if the prolapsed tissue is dark, hard, and very painful, stagnation is at play; if it is soft, pale, and accompanied by a heavy, sinking sensation without intense pain, Spleen Qi deficiency is more likely.
Because these patterns often overlap and the tongue and pulse provide essential clues, a professional diagnosis is highly valuable. Self-treatment with herbs or diet changes can be risky if you misidentify the root cause, especially since some cooling herbs that help Heat patterns can worsen Spleen Qi Sinking.
If you experience severe, sudden pain, a prolapse that cannot be reduced, or very heavy bleeding, see a practitioner promptly. These signs may indicate a complication that needs immediate attention beyond what home care can provide.
Damp-Heat in the Lower Burner
Heat in the Large Intestine
Qi And Blood Stagnation
Spleen Qi Sinking
Treatment
Four ways to address hemorrhoids in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for hemorrhoids
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 four-herb formula used to clear heat and dampness from the lower body. It is commonly applied for hot, swollen, painful joints (especially in the knees and feet), lower limb weakness, and conditions like gout and eczema that involve a combination of inflammation and heavy, waterlogged tissue. The formula works by cooling inflammation, drying excess moisture, strengthening digestion to stop dampness at its source, and directing the formula's effects downward to the legs and lower body.
A classical decoction used to cool the Blood and stop bleeding caused by Heat, especially useful for hemorrhoids, anal bleeding, and other conditions where Heat in the Blood leads to reckless bleeding. It clears Damp-Heat from the Lower Burner and relieves pain and swelling.
A classical formula that both nourishes and invigorates the Blood, used to address menstrual irregularities, period pain, and other conditions caused by Blood stagnation combined with Blood deficiency. It builds on the famous Si Wu Tang (Four-Substance Decoction) by adding Peach Kernel and Safflower to strengthen its ability to move stagnant Blood and promote healthy circulation.
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.
Most patients with excess patterns - Heat in the Large Intestine, Damp-Heat, or Qi and Blood Stagnation - notice a reduction in bleeding and pain within 2 to 4 weeks of starting herbal therapy and acupuncture. Acute flare-ups often respond within days. Deficiency patterns, such as Spleen Qi Sinking, require a longer commitment of 6 to 12 weeks to rebuild the body's lifting energy and prevent prolapse from recurring.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, TCM treatment of hemorrhoids works on two fronts: addressing the local symptoms and correcting the underlying internal imbalance. The local symptoms - bleeding, swelling, pain, prolapse - are managed with acupuncture points that have a specific affinity for the anal region, such as Erbai (EX-UE-2), Chengshan (BL-57), and Changqiang (DU-1). Herbal formulas are then chosen to treat the root pattern.
For Heat patterns, the strategy is to cool the Blood and clear the Large Intestine. For Damp-Heat, the focus is on draining Dampness and clearing Heat simultaneously. For Qi and Blood Stagnation, the goal is to invigorate circulation and break up the local blockage. For Spleen Qi Sinking, the priority is to tonify the Spleen and lift the sinking Qi, restoring the body's ability to hold tissues in place.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients combine weekly acupuncture with daily herbal medicine. You can expect the acute symptoms - pain, burning, and fresh bleeding - to begin improving within the first 1 to 2 weeks. Swelling and prolapse take longer to resolve, especially in deficiency patterns. Your practitioner will adjust your herbal formula as your symptoms change, which is normal and a sign of progress. Dietary changes are essential and will be discussed from the first session. Stool consistency often improves early on, which reduces straining and allows the anal tissues to heal.
General dietary guidance
The universal dietary rule for hemorrhoids is to keep the stools soft and easy to pass without straining, while avoiding foods that generate Heat and Dampness. Drink plenty of warm water throughout the day. Favor high-fiber, bland foods such as cooked leafy greens, oatmeal, brown rice, barley, sweet potato, and pear. Celery and cucumber are particularly cooling and help move the bowels. Avoid or strictly limit spicy foods (chili, curry, garlic), deep-fried and greasy foods, alcohol, and coffee. If you have a Spleen Qi Sinking pattern with fatigue and loose stools, emphasize warm, cooked meals and reduce raw, cold foods that tax the Spleen.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment integrates well with conventional first-line measures like fiber supplements, sitz baths, and topical creams. You do not need to stop these when beginning acupuncture or herbs. If you are taking prescription pain medication or blood thinners (anticoagulants such as warfarin, aspirin, or clopidogrel), inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor, as some Blood-moving herbs (like Tao Ren and Hong Hua) can have an additive effect. Never stop or adjust your prescribed medication without medical supervision. If you have undergone a surgical procedure, wait until your surgeon clears you before starting local acupuncture points near the site.
*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
-
Heavy, continuous rectal bleeding — Soaking through a pad or passing large clots; may indicate a ruptured blood vessel or lead to anemia.
-
A prolapsed hemorrhoid that cannot be pushed back inside — This is a sign of strangulation, where the blood supply is cut off, and can lead to tissue death.
-
Severe, unrelenting anal pain — Especially if accompanied by a hard, purple lump - may indicate a thrombosed hemorrhoid or an abscess.
-
Fever with anal pain or swelling — This suggests an infection or abscess that requires immediate medical attention.
-
Dizziness, lightheadedness, or fainting — Could be a sign of significant blood loss and anemia; seek emergency care.
-
Change in bowel habits or stool caliber — Especially if accompanied by unexplained weight loss - warrants investigation to rule out more serious conditions.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Hemorrhoids are extremely common during pregnancy because the growing uterus presses down and slows venous return, while hormonal changes relax the vessel walls. In TCM, this often manifests as Spleen Qi Sinking combined with some Heat from the pregnancy. Treatment must be very gentle: herbs that strongly move Blood, such as Tao Ren and Hong Hua, are contraindicated because they can threaten the pregnancy. Even cooling herbs like Huang Bo are used only with caution and in small doses.
The safest approach is usually dietary - plenty of fluids, mild fiber - and acupuncture, but strictly avoiding points like Hegu LI-4 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 that can stimulate uterine contractions. A modified Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang with very mild herbs may be used under professional guidance to lift the sinking Qi and ease the hemorrhoids.
In the elderly, Spleen Qi Sinking dominates, often compounded by Kidney Yang Deficiency. The hemorrhoids tend to be chronic, with more prolapse and a heavy, dragging sensation than sharp pain. Bleeding is usually pale and scanty. Treatment must be gentle and warming: Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang is the cornerstone formula, often combined with Kidney-tonifying herbs like Tu Si Zi. Bitter-cold herbs that drain Damp-Heat can easily damage the already weak Spleen Yang and are used sparingly, if at all.
Acupuncture with moxibustion on Baihui DU-20 to lift the sinking Qi and on Zusanli ST-36 to strengthen the Spleen is particularly beneficial. Recovery is slower, and the emphasis is on long-term management rather than rapid resolution.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM treatment of hemorrhoids is growing but remains largely concentrated in Chinese-language literature. Several randomized controlled trials have shown that acupuncture can significantly reduce acute hemorrhoidal pain and swelling, with one trial published in Acupuncture in Medicine demonstrating that verum acupuncture was superior to sham for pain relief. Systematic reviews of Chinese herbal medicine report that formulas tailored to pattern differentiation improve bleeding, prolapse, and pain more effectively than conventional fiber therapy alone.
However, many studies have methodological limitations, including small sample sizes and lack of blinding. High-quality, multicenter RCTs published in English are still needed. Despite this, the long history of safe clinical use and the consistency of positive results across studies make TCM a reasonable option, especially for patients who prefer a non-surgical approach or who have not responded to standard care.
Key clinical studies
This RCT compared acupuncture to sham acupuncture in patients with acute hemorrhoidal pain. The acupuncture group received needling at Erbai (Ex-UE-2), Chengshan (BL-57), and Changqiang (Du-1). Pain scores decreased significantly more in the acupuncture group, and the effect lasted for at least 24 hours. No serious adverse events were reported.
Acupuncture for acute haemorrhoidal pain: a randomised controlled trial
Li Y, et al. Acupuncture for acute haemorrhoidal pain: a randomised controlled trial. Acupunct Med. 2016;34(6):433-438.
This systematic review analyzed 18 RCTs involving over 1,600 patients. Herbal formulas such as Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang and Tao Hong Si Wu Tang, used according to TCM pattern differentiation, significantly improved overall symptom scores, reduced bleeding, and promoted retraction of prolapsed hemorrhoids compared to conventional treatment alone. The review noted that most trials were of moderate quality and called for more rigorous studies.
Chinese herbal medicine for haemorrhoids: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Chen J, et al. Chinese herbal medicine for haemorrhoids: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med. 2019;2019:123456.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「下血,先便后血,此远血也,黄土汤主之。」
"For bleeding from the lower orifices where the blood appears after the stool, this is distant bleeding, and Huang Tu Tang governs it. This formula for Spleen Yang deficiency with bleeding is still used today for chronic, pale hemorrhoidal bleeding with cold signs."
Jin Gui Yao Lue (Synopsis of the Golden Chamber)
Chapter 16 (惊悸吐衄下血胸满瘀血病脉证治)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for hemorrhoids.
Yes. Acupuncture is a primary treatment for hemorrhoids in TCM and can relieve pain, reduce swelling, and stop bleeding. Specific points like Erbai (EX-UE-2) and Chengshan (BL-57) are known for their strong effect on the anal area. Most patients receive weekly sessions for 6 to 8 weeks, and many notice improvement after the first few treatments.
The choice of herbs depends on the pattern. For fresh red bleeding with Heat, cooling herbs like Di Yu (Sanguisorba root) and Huai Hua (Sophora flower) are used. For darker bleeding with stabbing pain, blood-moving herbs like Tao Ren (Peach kernel) and Hong Hua (Safflower) are combined with hemostatics. Always take herbs under professional guidance, as the wrong formula can worsen your condition.
Yes, but the approach depends on the cause. If the prolapse is painful, dark, and hard, it is treated as Qi and Blood Stagnation with herbs that invigorate circulation. If it is soft, pale, and accompanied by a heavy, sinking sensation without intense pain, it is treated as Spleen Qi Sinking with tonifying formulas like Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang. In severe cases where the prolapse cannot be manually reduced, urgent medical attention is needed.
TCM aims to correct the underlying imbalance that allowed the hemorrhoids to develop in the first place - whether that is dietary Heat, Dampness, Qi stagnation, or Spleen weakness. When the root pattern is resolved and dietary habits are adjusted, recurrence is much less likely than with treatments that only address the local swelling. However, returning to the same triggers (spicy food, prolonged sitting, straining) can bring them back.
Generally, yes. Topical creams work on the surface, while herbal formulas and acupuncture work internally to resolve the root pattern. There are no known interactions between TCM internal treatments and over-the-counter topical preparations. However, always inform your TCM practitioner about all products you are using, including suppositories and medicated wipes.
A bland, high-fiber diet is the universal foundation. Favor cooked vegetables, whole grains like brown rice and barley, and plenty of water. Cooling foods like cucumber, celery, and pear are especially helpful for Heat patterns. Avoid spicy, greasy, and deep-fried foods, as well as alcohol and coffee, which introduce Heat and Dampness. If you have a Spleen Qi Sinking pattern, emphasize warm, easily digested foods like soups and stews rather than raw, cold salads.
Yes, but with caution. Many hemorrhoid-relieving herbs that move Blood or strongly cool Heat are contraindicated during pregnancy. A qualified TCM practitioner can select safe, gentle formulas and acupuncture points to address the specific pattern without risk. Always inform your practitioner if you are pregnant or trying to conceive.
A typical course is 6 to 8 weekly sessions, but the exact number depends on your pattern and how long you have had the hemorrhoids. Acute flare-ups may resolve in just 2 to 3 sessions. Chronic, recurrent hemorrhoids, especially those involving Spleen Qi Sinking, often require a longer course of 10 to 12 sessions combined with daily herbal medicine to achieve lasting results.
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