Ulcerative Colitis
肠澼 · cháng pì+8 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Chronic Bowel Inflammation, Colitis Ulcerosa, IBD With Ulcers, Inflammation Of The Digestive Tract, Inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis), Ulcerative Colitis (Active Phase), Ulcerative Colitis (Chronic Stage), Ulcerative Colitis (Remission Phase)
The key to treating ulcerative colitis in TCM is not just calming the inflammation - it's identifying whether the root is damp-heat, toxic heat, or a deep yang deficiency, because the treatment for each is completely different. When matched correctly, many patients see a reduction in flare frequency and severity within weeks, and can maintain longer remissions with ongoing care.
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 ulcerative colitis. 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.
Ulcerative colitis isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a family of six distinct patterns, each with its own underlying imbalance, characteristic symptoms, and treatment strategy. Some patterns are driven by heat and dampness that inflame the intestinal lining, causing urgent, bloody diarrhea with a burning sensation. Others arise from a deep chill and weakness that leaves the gut unable to hold anything in, leading to chronic watery stools and cold limbs.
Still others are set off by emotional stress, which disrupts the flow of Qi and triggers alternating diarrhea and constipation. By identifying which pattern is dominant, a TCM practitioner can choose the precise herbs, acupuncture points, and dietary changes that address the root cause - not just the inflammation.
Ulcerative colitis is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease that causes inflammation and ulcers in the inner lining of the large intestine (colon) and rectum. The most common symptoms are diarrhea - often with blood or mucus - along with abdominal cramping, urgency to have a bowel movement, and fatigue. It is typically diagnosed through a combination of symptom history, stool tests, colonoscopy with biopsy, and sometimes imaging.
The disease course is marked by unpredictable flare-ups and periods of remission. Western medicine views it as an autoimmune condition where the immune system mistakenly attacks the gut lining, although the exact triggers are not fully understood.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment aims to reduce inflammation and induce remission. Mild to moderate cases are often managed with aminosalicylates (such as mesalamine). During flares, corticosteroids may be used for short periods. For more severe or frequent relapses, immunomodulators (like azathioprine) or biologic therapies (anti-TNF agents, anti-integrin drugs) are prescribed to suppress the immune response. In cases that don't respond to medication, surgery to remove the colon may be considered.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While these treatments can be effective, they don't work for everyone. Long-term use of steroids carries significant side effects like bone loss, weight gain, and increased infection risk. Immunosuppressants and biologics require careful monitoring and can increase susceptibility to infections.
Moreover, conventional treatment often focuses on suppressing the immune reaction rather than addressing the individual's underlying constitution or the triggers that provoke flares. This is where TCM offers a complementary perspective - aiming to correct the imbalances that make the gut vulnerable to inflammation in the first place.
How TCM understands ulcerative colitis
In TCM, the health of the large intestine is deeply tied to the Spleen and Stomach's ability to transform food into Qi and blood. When the Spleen is weak - often due to poor diet, overwork, or constitutional tendency - it fails to properly manage fluids, and dampness accumulates. This dampness can then sink down into the large intestine, creating the perfect environment for inflammation. If dampness combines with heat (from spicy foods, alcohol, or emotional stress), it becomes the damp-heat pattern that drives the classic bloody, urgent diarrhea.
When that damp-heat intensifies and turns toxic, it becomes the toxic-heat pattern - a more severe, acute flare with high fever, profuse bleeding, and a feeling of systemic illness. This is the body's response to a fierce pathogen that has damaged the intestinal blood vessels. At the other extreme, when the body's warming fire (Kidney Yang) is depleted - often after years of illness or due to aging - cold and dampness prevail. The intestines lose their ability to hold stool, leading to watery diarrhea that often strikes at dawn, along with cold limbs and deep exhaustion.
The Liver also plays a key role. Emotional stress, frustration, and repressed anger cause Liver Qi to stagnate. Since the Liver controls the smooth flow of Qi throughout the body, this stagnation can directly disrupt the Spleen's digestive function, leading to a pattern where stress triggers alternating bowel habits, bloating, and irritability. Over time, this stagnant Qi can generate heat, adding a layer of damp-heat to the mix.
Because these patterns can overlap - a person may have a baseline Spleen deficiency with periodic damp-heat flares - TCM treatment must address both the root (the chronic weakness) and the branch (the acute inflammation). This is why a single Western diagnosis can present so differently in different people, and why TCM's pattern-based approach can be so effective: it matches the treatment to the individual's specific imbalance, not just the disease label.
「肠澼下血」
"When the large intestine is afflicted (肠澼), there is bloody stool. This is the earliest classical description of a condition resembling ulcerative colitis, linking it to a pathological state in the bowels with bleeding."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses ulcerative colitis
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first asks about the nature of your bowel movements - how often, what the stool looks like, and whether there is mucus, blood, or an urgent need to go. They also explore what triggers or relieves your symptoms, such as stress, certain foods, or cold weather. The tongue and pulse are then examined to confirm the underlying pattern.
In Damp-Heat in the Large Intestine, the diarrhea is frequent with mucus and blood, accompanied by a burning sensation around the anus and a constant feeling of incomplete evacuation (tenesmus). The tongue is typically red with a thick, yellow, greasy coating, and the pulse feels slippery and rapid. This is the most common acute flare-up picture.
Toxic-Heat Stagnation is a more severe, heated progression. You may have a high fever, profuse, dark, foul-smelling bloody diarrhea, and feel systemically unwell. The tongue is deep red with a dry yellow coat, and the pulse is rapid and forceful. This pattern signals that heat has turned into a toxic level and requires urgent attention.
When the illness has dragged on for years, Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency with Empty Cold often emerges. Diarrhea is watery or contains undigested food, worse in the early morning or after cold exposure. Abdominal pain eases with warmth, and you feel chronically fatigued with cold hands and feet. The tongue is pale and puffy with a white coating, and the pulse is deep and slow.
Liver Qi Stagnation with Spleen Qi Deficiency that transforms into Heat is closely tied to emotional stress. You may notice abdominal distension, alternating constipation and loose stools, irritability, and a sensation of heat. The tongue edges may be red, and the pulse is wiry, especially on the left side. A practitioner will ask about life pressures and mood swings to confirm this pattern.
Many people with ulcerative colitis have an underlying Spleen Qi Deficiency, especially during remission. The main clues are persistent fatigue, poor appetite, bloating after meals, and loose, unformed stools without much blood or mucus. The tongue is pale and slightly swollen with a thin white coat, and the pulse is weak. This root deficiency often mixes with other patterns.
Heat and Blood Stagnation in the Lower Burner appears when long-standing inflammation damages the blood vessels. The diarrhea contains dark, clotted blood, and there is a fixed, stabbing pain in the lower abdomen. The tongue may show purple spots or a dusky body, and the pulse is choppy. This pattern points to deeper tissue damage and chronicity.
TCM Patterns for Ulcerative Colitis
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same ulcerative colitis 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 recognize yourself in more than one pattern. Ulcerative colitis often involves a root deficiency, like Spleen Qi Deficiency, that gets overlaid by acute factors such as damp-heat or emotional stress. Think of these patterns as layers of an onion rather than separate boxes - they can coexist and shift over time.
To narrow things down, notice which symptoms dominate right now. If your main issue is explosive diarrhea with burning and a yellow tongue coating, damp-heat is likely in the foreground, even if you also feel tired and weak. If stress is your clearest trigger and bowel habits swing back and forth, the liver-spleen pattern is probably more active. The strongest, most recent signs usually point to the branch pattern that needs addressing first.
Because these patterns can overlap and even mimic each other, a professional tongue and pulse diagnosis is invaluable. A trained practitioner can detect subtle differences - for instance, distinguishing the dry heat of toxic stagnation from the greasy dampness of damp-heat - that guide safe, effective herbal and dietary choices. Self-treatment with the wrong herbs can worsen symptoms, especially in mixed patterns.
If you ever have a high fever, severe abdominal pain, or pass large amounts of blood, seek medical help right away. Those signs can indicate a serious flare requiring urgent care. Otherwise, a TCM practitioner can help you untangle the overlapping patterns and design a plan that supports both the root and the branch, guiding you toward longer remissions.
Damp-Heat in the Large Intestine
Toxic-Heat Stagnation
Spleen Qi Deficiency
Heat and Blood Stagnation in the Lower Burner
Treatment
Four ways to address ulcerative colitis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for ulcerative colitis
7 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 clear Heat and Dampness from the intestines while soothing abdominal pain and regulating Qi and Blood circulation. It is primarily used for inflammatory bowel conditions with symptoms such as abdominal cramping, bloody or mucus-containing stools, and a constant urge to go to the bathroom that brings little relief.
A classical four-herb formula used for acute diarrhea accompanied by fever, thirst, and a burning sensation in the gut. It works by clearing Heat and Dampness from the intestines while helping to release any lingering surface-level illness. In modern practice, it is also widely used for inflammatory bowel conditions and, increasingly, for type 2 diabetes when a Damp-Heat pattern is present.
A classical formula from the Shang Han Lun used to treat severe intestinal infections with bloody diarrhea, abdominal pain, and an urgent need to use the toilet. It works by clearing intense Heat and toxins from the intestines and cooling the Blood to stop the bleeding. It is most commonly applied to acute dysentery and active flares of inflammatory bowel conditions when Heat is the dominant factor.
A classical warming formula used for chronic early-morning diarrhea caused by weakness and coldness in the Kidneys and Spleen. It warms the Kidney fire to support digestion and firms up the intestines to stop diarrhea, making it especially suited for people who wake before dawn with urgent loose stools, poor appetite, cold limbs, and fatigue.
A widely used classical formula for emotional stress, irritability, and hormonal imbalances. It soothes the Liver, clears internal heat from pent-up frustration, strengthens digestion, and nourishes the Blood. It is especially valued for menstrual irregularities, menopausal symptoms, anxiety, and mood swings that arise from a combination of stress and underlying weakness.
A gentle classical formula that strengthens weak digestion, clears excess internal dampness, and stops diarrhea. It is commonly used for people experiencing chronic loose stools, bloating, poor appetite, fatigue, and a sallow complexion caused by a weakened digestive system. By supporting the Spleen and Stomach, it also indirectly benefits the Lungs, helping with shortness of breath and chronic cough with thin white phlegm.
A classical formula used to break up blood stasis and clear heat from the lower abdomen. It is commonly applied for lower abdominal pain with a sense of tightness and fullness, dark-coloured menstrual blood or stools, restlessness, and nighttime fevers caused by stagnant blood binding with heat in the lower body.
Acute damp-heat or toxic-heat flares often respond quickly to herbal formulas, with diarrhea and bleeding improving within 1-2 weeks. Chronic deficiency patterns, especially those involving Kidney Yang deficiency, require a longer commitment - typically 3-6 months of consistent herbs and acupuncture to rebuild the body's reserves and reduce flare frequency. Stress-related patterns may fluctuate with emotional state, so progress can be variable until stress is better managed. Most patients continue treatment for at least several months to consolidate remission.
Treatment principles
The overarching principle in TCM is to clear pathogenic factors (dampness, heat, cold) while strengthening the body's foundational energy - specifically the Spleen and Kidney. During an acute flare, treatment focuses on the 'branch': using bitter, cold herbs to clear damp-heat or toxic-heat, astringe the intestines, and stop bleeding.
In remission, the emphasis shifts to the 'root': tonifying Spleen Qi, warming Kidney Yang, and soothing the Liver to prevent future attacks. Because patterns often overlap, formulas are rarely one-size-fits-all; they are adjusted frequently as symptoms change. Acupuncture points are chosen to support the herbal strategy - for example, points on the Stomach and Spleen channels to strengthen digestion, or points on the Liver channel to smooth Qi flow.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients begin with weekly acupuncture sessions and a daily herbal decoction or concentrated powder. During an acute flare, you may notice a decrease in bowel frequency and blood within the first week, and a significant improvement in energy and pain within 2-3 weeks. For chronic, deficiency-based patterns, progress is slower but steady - expect firmer stools and less urgency over 4-8 weeks.
As you stabilize, sessions may be spaced to every other week, and herbs adjusted to a maintenance formula. The ultimate goal is to lengthen the time between flares and, for some, achieve drug-free remission. Patience is key, especially if you've had the condition for many years.
General dietary guidance
Regardless of your TCM pattern, the most important dietary rule for ulcerative colitis is to avoid anything that burdens the Spleen and creates dampness. This means minimizing raw, cold, greasy, fried, and overly sweet foods. Dairy products, excess sugar, and alcohol are common triggers.
Instead, build your meals around warm, cooked, and easily digestible foods: congee (rice porridge), bone broths, well-cooked vegetables, and lean proteins. Eat at regular times and avoid overeating. If you have a damp-heat pattern, your practitioner may recommend adding cooling foods like mung beans or cucumber; if you have a cold deficiency pattern, warming foods like ginger and cinnamon may be suggested. Always follow the specific advice of your TCM practitioner.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely integrated with conventional ulcerative colitis treatments, and many patients find the combination reduces their reliance on steroids or helps them stay in remission. However, certain herbs may affect drug metabolism or immune function, so it is essential that both your gastroenterologist and TCM practitioner are fully informed of all medications and supplements.
In particular, herbs that clear heat and dampness (such as Huang Lian and Huang Qin) may have mild immunosuppressive properties, and their use alongside biologics or immunomodulators should be monitored. Do not stop or adjust your prescribed medication without medical supervision. During a severe flare with high fever or heavy bleeding, seek emergency care and use TCM as a supportive therapy, not a replacement.
*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 abdominal pain that comes on suddenly or is unlike your usual cramps — This may indicate a serious complication such as toxic megacolon or perforation.
-
High fever (over 101°F or 38.5°C) with chills and bloody diarrhea — A sign of systemic infection or severe inflammation requiring immediate medical evaluation.
-
Heavy rectal bleeding or passing large blood clots — This could signal significant blood loss and requires urgent assessment.
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Signs of dehydration: dry mouth, very little urine, dizziness when standing — Dehydration can become dangerous quickly, especially with ongoing diarrhea.
-
Abdominal swelling with tenderness and inability to pass gas or stool — Possible toxic megacolon - a life-threatening condition that needs emergency care.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the Spleen Qi Deficiency pattern often becomes more pronounced due to the demands of the growing fetus, while Damp-Heat can still flare. However, treatment must avoid herbs that move blood or strongly purge, as these may risk miscarriage. Formulas containing Da Huang (Rhubarb), Tao Ren (Peach Kernel), or Zhi Ke (Bitter Orange) are contraindicated.
Gentler formulas like Shen Ling Bai Zhu San are preferred for Spleen deficiency, and even Bai Tou Weng Tang should be used with extreme caution and only under expert supervision.
Acupuncture is a safer alternative, but points traditionally avoided in pregnancy-such as LI4 (Hegu), SP6 (Sanyinjiao), and lower abdominal points-must be omitted. Moxibustion on ST36 (Zusanli) and CV8 (Shenque) can warm the Spleen and Kidney safely. Any herbal or acupuncture treatment should be coordinated with the patient's obstetrician.
Bitter-cold herbs commonly used for Damp-Heat patterns, such as Huang Lian (Coptis) and Huang Bai (Phellodendron), can pass into breast milk and may cause infant diarrhea or digestive upset. Therefore, during breastfeeding, these herbs are generally avoided or used at reduced doses only when essential. For acute UC flares, acupuncture becomes a valuable primary modality, targeting points like ST25 (Tianshu) and ST37 (Shangjuxu) to clear heat without medication.
Chronic patterns like Spleen Qi Deficiency respond well to the mild, food-grade herbs in Shen Ling Bai Zhu San, which are considered safe during lactation and can even support milk production by strengthening the Spleen. Always consult a practitioner familiar with lactation to tailor the formula.
Ulcerative colitis is less common in children, but when it occurs, the Spleen Qi Deficiency pattern tends to dominate, with loose stools, fatigue, and poor appetite. Diagnosis relies heavily on parental observation and tongue examination, as children may not articulate symptoms precisely. Acute Damp-Heat flares are still possible but are usually less severe than in adults.
Herbal dosages must be reduced-typically one-third to half the adult dose depending on age and weight-and formulas like Shen Ling Bai Zhu San are gentle and well-tolerated. Avoid harsh cold or bitter herbs. Pediatric acupuncture uses fewer needles and shorter retention times, often with non-retention techniques for very young children. Dietary adjustments and moxibustion on ST36 are safe and effective supportive measures.
In older adults, ulcerative colitis often shifts toward the Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency pattern, with early-morning diarrhea, cold limbs, and profound fatigue. The chronic, smoldering nature of the disease in this population means that deficiency patterns predominate, and aggressive clearing formulas can further weaken the system. Treatment should prioritize warming and tonifying, using formulas like Si Shen Wan with modifications to avoid overly astringent herbs that might trap pathogens.
Dosages should be about two-thirds of the standard adult dose to account for slower metabolism and polypharmacy risks. Acupuncture and moxibustion are excellent options, as they avoid drug interactions. Points like CV8 (Shenque) with moxibustion and ST36 (Zusanli) provide gentle, sustained support. Treatment timelines are longer, and emphasis should be on maintaining remission and quality of life.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine have a growing evidence base for ulcerative colitis, though the quality of trials varies. Multiple systematic reviews and meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) suggest that acupuncture can improve clinical remission rates and reduce disease activity scores compared to conventional medications alone. The mechanisms may involve modulation of inflammatory cytokines and immune function.
Chinese herbal medicine, particularly formulas like Bai Tou Weng Tang and Shen Ling Bai Zhu San, has shown anti-inflammatory and mucosal-healing properties in both animal studies and clinical trials. However, many studies originate from China with small sample sizes and methodological limitations, so the evidence is considered moderate. Larger, rigorous, multi-center trials are needed to confirm these benefits for a Western medical audience.
Key clinical studies
This comprehensive review summarizes clinical and preclinical evidence for Chinese herbal medicine in UC. It highlights that several herbal formulas reduce intestinal inflammation, promote mucosal healing, and modulate gut microbiota, with a favorable safety profile. The review calls for more high-quality RCTs to validate these findings.
Chinese herbal medicines in the treatment of ulcerative colitis: a review
Zhang Y, et al. Chinese herbal medicines in the treatment of ulcerative colitis: a review. Chinese Medicine. 2022;17:43.
10.1186/s13020-022-00591-xClassical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「热利下重者,白头翁汤主之」
"For heat dysentery with tenesmus, Bai Tou Weng Tang governs. This formula, still used today for toxic-heat ulcerative colitis, clears heat, dries dampness, and stops dysentery."
Shang Han Lun (伤寒论)
Jue Yin Disease Chapter
「脾胃虚则九窍不通」
"When the Spleen and Stomach are deficient, the nine orifices are not unobstructed. This principle underlies chronic UC where Spleen Qi Deficiency leads to persistent diarrhea and failure to separate clear from turbid."
Pi Wei Lun (脾胃论)
Discussion on Spleen and Stomach
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for ulcerative colitis.
Yes, TCM can be very effective during a flare-up, especially when the pattern is damp-heat or toxic-heat. Herbal formulas are tailored to clear heat and dampness, cool the blood, and stop bleeding, often bringing relief within days. Acupuncture can also help reduce pain and urgency. However, severe flares with high fever or profuse bleeding require immediate medical attention - TCM can be used alongside emergency care, not as a replacement.
For acute damp-heat diarrhea, many patients notice a reduction in bowel frequency and blood within 3-7 days of starting the correct herbal formula. Chronic, watery diarrhea from Spleen-Kidney Yang deficiency takes longer - expect gradual improvement over 2-4 weeks, with firmer stools and less urgency. Acupuncture sessions once or twice a week can speed symptom relief, but the herbs do the heavy lifting for the gut lining.
Yes, dietary adjustments are a cornerstone of TCM treatment for ulcerative colitis. In general, you'll be advised to avoid raw, cold, greasy, and spicy foods, which burden the Spleen and can trigger dampness. Instead, focus on warm, cooked, easily digestible meals like congee, soups, and steamed vegetables. Your practitioner will give more specific guidance based on your pattern - for example, adding cooling foods for damp-heat or warming spices for cold deficiency.
In most cases, yes. Many patients use TCM to complement their conventional treatment, especially to reduce steroid dependence or extend remission. However, it's crucial that both your gastroenterologist and TCM practitioner know everything you're taking. Some herbs can interact with immunosuppressants or affect liver function, so professional supervision is essential. Never stop prescribed medications abruptly without consulting your doctor.
Herbs can often be combined with biologic therapies, but this must be done under the guidance of a TCM practitioner experienced in managing inflammatory bowel disease. Certain herbs that strongly modulate the immune system (like Huang Qin or Huang Lian) could theoretically interact, so your practitioner will select formulas that are safe and compatible. Always inform both your doctor and your TCM practitioner about all treatments you're receiving.
TCM does not claim to 'cure' ulcerative colitis in the way Western medicine defines it, but it can dramatically reduce flare frequency and severity, and in some cases induce long-term remission. The goal is to correct the underlying imbalances so that the gut becomes resilient and less reactive. Many patients find they can manage the condition with minimal medication and enjoy long periods of normal bowel function. It's a partnership - you'll learn to recognize early signs of imbalance and adjust diet or herbs accordingly.
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