A Traditional Chinese Medicine view of

Low Milk Supply

缺乳 · quē rǔ
+29 other names

Also known as: Absence Of Milk Secretion, Agalactorrhea, Lack Of Lactation, Non-secretion Of Breast Milk, Hypogalactia, Hypogalactorrhea, Inadequate Breastfeeding, Inadequate Lactation, Inadequate Milk Production, Insufficient Breast Milk Production, Insufficient Breastfeeding, Insufficient Lactation, Insufficient Milk Production, Insufficient Milk Syndrome, Lactation Insufficiency, Low Breast Milk Supply, Low Volume Of Breast Milk, Scanty Breast Milk, Inability To Produce Enough Breast Milk, Insufficient Or Absent Lactation After Childbirth, Low Milk Supply After Giving Birth, Absence Of Milk Production, Agalactia, Inability To Lactate, No Milk Secretion, No Feeling Of Distension Of The Breasts, Breastfeeding No Feeling Of Breast Distansion, Feeling Breasts Empty Whilst Breastfeeding, Scanty breast milk after childbirth

Practitioner-reviewed · Updated Jun 2026 · 2 clinical studies

The single most important clue is how your breasts feel. Soft, empty-feeling breasts point toward depleted Qi and Blood; full, tight, painful breasts point toward stuck Liver Qi. Most women see a noticeable increase in milk flow within 2-4 weeks when treatment matches their pattern.

3 Patterns
9 Herbs
3 Formulas
8 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 low milk supply. 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.

Low milk supply after childbirth isn't one problem with one solution - in Traditional Chinese Medicine, it's at least three distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and its own treatment. Whether your breasts feel soft and empty or full and painfully tight tells a TCM practitioner something essential about what's going wrong. This page walks you through those patterns and the herbal formulas, acupuncture points, and dietary shifts that match each one, so you can find an approach that fits your actual experience, not just a generic label.

How TCM understands low milk supply

In TCM, breast milk is understood as a direct transformation of Qi and Blood - the same vital substances that nourished the baby in the womb. After childbirth, the mother's body has already spent enormous reserves, and if she doesn't receive adequate rest and warm, nourishing food, the Spleen and Stomach can't produce enough new Qi and Blood to sustain a full milk supply. This is the most common root: a deep postpartum depletion that leaves the breasts soft, the milk thin, and the mother profoundly tired.

But depletion isn't the only story. The Liver governs the smooth flow of Qi through the whole body, including the breast meridians. Emotional stress, frustration, or unexpressed feelings after birth can cause Liver Qi to stagnate, creating a traffic jam in the chest. The breasts may be full and producing milk, but it can't flow out. This pattern often comes with irritability, sighing, and a sensation of distension or pain.

A less common but important pattern is Blood Stagnation - often after a traumatic delivery or when lochia isn't fully expelled. Stagnant blood obstructs the channels that carry milk to the nipple. The breast pain is sharp and fixed, not just a dull ache, and the tongue often looks dark purple. Recognizing which pattern is dominant - deficiency, stagnation, or stasis - is the first step to choosing the right herbs and acupuncture points.

From the classical texts

「产后乳汁不行,因气血两虚者,宜通乳丹主之。」

"Postpartum absence of milk due to Qi and Blood Deficiency should be treated with Tong Ru Dan."

Fu Qing Zhu Nü Ke (傅青主女科) , Postpartum chapter · More references

How a TCM practitioner diagnoses low milk supply

Inside the consultation

A TCM practitioner starts by asking what your breasts feel like and how your energy has been since the birth. The presence or absence of breast distension is one of the first clues - soft, empty-feeling breasts point toward a very different root cause than full, tight, painful ones.

If the breasts are soft and lack any feeling of fullness, and the milk that does come is thin and watery, this suggests Qi and Blood Deficiency. The mother often looks pale, feels exhausted, and may have a poor appetite. The tongue is pale with a thin white coat, and the pulse feels weak and thready.

When the breasts are distended, hard, and tender, and the milk flow feels blocked despite the fullness, the picture shifts toward Liver Qi Stagnation. Emotional frustration, irritability, or feeling “stuck” after delivery are common. The tongue may look normal or slightly red with a thin yellow coating, and the pulse has a tight, wiry quality.

Less often, a traumatic birth or retained lochia causes Blood Stagnation that obstructs the breast channels. The milk supply is low, and the breast pain is sharp or stabbing rather than a dull ache. The tongue appears dark purple, often with purple spots, and the pulse feels choppy or hesitant.

TCM Patterns for Low Milk Supply

In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same low milk supply 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.

Private · stays in your browser
  1. 1Your signs
  2. 2What makes it worse
  3. 3What helps

Which signs match your experience?

0 selected this step
Breasts soft, without distension or pain Milk is scanty and thin/watery Extreme fatigue and weakness Pale or sallow complexion Dizziness or lightheadedness
Worse with Overexertion and lack of sleep, Skipping meals or poor nutrition, Excessive worry or anxiety, Cold foods and drinks
Better with Adequate rest and sleep, Warm, cooked meals, Gentle warmth on the belly, Consistent, small meals, Reducing unnecessary activity
Breast distension and hardness Milk does not flow despite fullness Chest and rib-side tightness Irritability or depressed mood Frequent sighing
Worse with Emotional stress, Pressure to produce enough milk, Greasy or heavy foods
Better with Relaxation and deep breathing, Warm compress on breasts, Gentle breast massage, Frequent nursing or pumping
Less common

Blood Stagnation

Stabbing, fixed breast pain Dark purple tongue with stasis spots Pain worse at night Dark lochia with clots Breast lumps or hardness
Worse with Emotional stress, Cold foods and drinks, Prolonged sitting or inactivity, Overexertion too soon after birth, Cold environment
Better with Warm compress on breasts, Gentle breast massage, Light walking, Warm, cooked meals, Adequate rest and sleep

Treatment

Four ways to address low milk supply in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.

Formulas traditionally used for low milk supply

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

Tong Ru Dan Promote Lactation Elixir · Qīng dynasty, c. 1827 CE (published posthumously)
Slightly Warm
Tonifies Qi Nourishes Blood Promotes Lactation

A classical postpartum formula designed to boost breast milk production in new mothers whose milk supply is low or absent due to weakness of Qi and Blood after delivery. Rather than forcing milk ducts open, it works by replenishing the mother's Qi and Blood so that breast milk can naturally form and flow. The source text states that after two doses, milk should flow abundantly.

Patterns
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Xia Ru Yong Quan San Promote Lactation Powder · Qīng dynasty (清朝)
Slightly Cool
Courses the Liver and Resolves Constraint Nourishes Blood Promotes Lactation

A classical formula used to promote breast milk production in new mothers whose milk flow is blocked due to emotional stress or Liver Qi stagnation. It works by soothing Liver tension, nourishing Blood (the source of breast milk in TCM), and unblocking the breast channels to restore abundant lactation.

Patterns
Sheng Hua Tang Generation and Transformation Decoction · Qīng dynasty, c. 1636-1684 CE (published posthumously)
Warm
Nourishes Blood and dispels Blood stasis Warms the Channels and Alleviates Pain Invigorates Blood and Dispels Stasis

A classical postpartum recovery formula used to help the body expel residual Blood and tissue (lochia) from the uterus after childbirth, relieve lower abdominal cold pain, and support the formation of new, healthy Blood. It works by gently warming the body and promoting circulation in the uterus, making it one of the most widely used formulas for postpartum care in the Chinese medicine tradition.

Patterns
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Typical timeline for low milk supply

Liver Qi Stagnation often responds fastest - many women notice easier let-down and less breast tension within 1-2 weeks of herbs and acupuncture. Qi and Blood Deficiency takes longer because the body needs to rebuild deep reserves; expect gradual improvement over 4-6 weeks, with full recovery sometimes taking a few months. Blood Stagnation falls in between, usually improving in 3-4 weeks once the stasis clears. Consistent nursing or pumping alongside treatment is essential - the herbs and needles create the conditions for milk, but the breast still needs regular stimulation to signal the body to keep producing.

Treatment principles

Across all patterns, the common goal is to restore the free flow of Qi and Blood to the breasts and to address the root imbalance that is blocking or depleting milk production. For deficiency, treatment focuses on nourishing the Spleen and Stomach to rebuild the raw materials for milk, using formulas like Tong Ru Dan and points such as Zusanli (ST-36). For stagnation, the priority is to smooth Liver Qi and open the breast channels, with formulas like Xia Ru Yong Quan San and points like Taichong (LR-3).

Acupuncture points Shanzhong (REN-17), Rugen (ST-18), and Shaoze (SI-1) are used in almost all cases because they directly influence the breast area and lactation. Herbal formulas are taken daily, usually in the form of decoctions or granules, and are adjusted as your condition changes. The treatment is always safe to combine with breastfeeding, and the herbs are chosen to support both mother and baby.

What to expect from treatment

Most practitioners recommend acupuncture once or twice a week for the first 4-6 weeks, with daily herbal medicine. You may notice easier let-down and a feeling of breast fullness within the first week or two, and a measurable increase in pumped volume often follows shortly after.

If your pattern is primarily deficiency, progress is more gradual - think of it as slowly refilling a deep well - but steady improvement week by week is a realistic expectation when you follow the plan and nurse or pump consistently.

General dietary guidance

Eat warm, cooked meals and avoid cold, raw foods and iced drinks, which can weaken the Spleen's ability to transform food into Qi and Blood. Focus on soups, stews, and easily digestible grains. Foods that gently build blood and fluids include red dates, goji berries, black sesame, walnuts, and dark leafy greens. Adequate hydration is important, but sip warm water or tea rather than large amounts of cold liquid.

Traditional galactagogue foods like oat porridge, barley water, and bone broths are excellent additions. Your practitioner will tailor these recommendations once your specific pattern is identified.

Combining TCM with conventional treatment

TCM works well alongside conventional lactation support. You can absolutely continue working with a lactation consultant, using a hospital-grade pump, or taking prescription galactagogues while receiving acupuncture and herbs. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor about everything you are taking.

If you are on blood-thinning medications, certain Blood-moving herbs like Chuan Xiong may need to be avoided or used cautiously. There are no known serious interactions with domperidone or metoclopramide, but your TCM practitioner should be aware of all medications to ensure safety.

*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:
  • Your baby is not gaining weight or is losing weight — This is the most important sign that milk supply is critically low and requires immediate medical evaluation.
  • Signs of dehydration in your baby (fewer than 4 wet diapers in 24 hours, dark urine, sunken soft spot, excessive sleepiness, dry mouth) — Dehydration can become dangerous quickly in newborns; seek urgent care.
  • Fever (over 100.4°F / 38°C) with a red, hot, painful area on the breast — These are classic signs of mastitis, which may require antibiotics and can worsen rapidly if untreated.
  • Severe, persistent breast pain not relieved by nursing or pumping — Intense pain can indicate an abscess or a blocked duct that needs medical attention.
  • Signs of postpartum depression or anxiety that interfere with caring for yourself or your baby — Thoughts of harming yourself or your baby, panic attacks, or inability to function are emergencies.
  • Heavy vaginal bleeding (soaking more than one pad per hour) or passing large clots — This could indicate retained placental tissue or hemorrhage, which can also affect milk supply.

Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you

Evidence & references

Clinical research on TCM for low milk supply is growing, with the majority of studies conducted in China. Acupuncture has the strongest evidence base: a 2013 Cochrane systematic review concluded that acupuncture appears to be effective for increasing milk production in women with insufficient lactation, though the authors called for larger, higher-quality trials. Subsequent randomized controlled trials have reinforced these findings, often using points like Shanzhong (REN-17), Rugen (ST-18), and Shaoze (SI-1).

Chinese herbal medicine also shows promise. Formulas such as Tong Ru Dan and Xia Ru Yong Quan San have been evaluated in multiple RCTs, demonstrating significant increases in milk volume and improvements in breast fullness compared to placebo or conventional care alone. One recent study combining Jianpi Shugan Tongru formula with dietary therapy showed enhanced prolactin levels and greater infant weight gain. However, many of these trials are small and lack rigorous blinding, so the evidence, while encouraging, should be interpreted with caution.

Key clinical studies

Bottom line for you

This Cochrane systematic review evaluated the effectiveness of acupuncture for increasing milk production in women with insufficient lactation. The review found that acupuncture appears to be beneficial, but the evidence is limited by small sample sizes and risk of bias in the included studies. The authors recommend further large, well-designed trials.

Acupuncture for insufficient lactation

Cheong KB, Zhang JP, Huang Y, Zhang ZJ. Acupuncture for insufficient lactation. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2013, Issue 7. Art. No.: CD006937.

10.1002/14651858.CD006937.pub2
Bottom line for you

This randomized controlled trial investigated a Chinese herbal formula (Jianpi Shugan Tongru) combined with dietary therapy for postpartum low milk supply due to Qi and Blood Deficiency. The combination significantly increased milk volume, improved breast distension, and raised serum prolactin levels compared to dietary therapy alone.

Observation on the therapeutic effect of Jianpi Shugan Tongru formula combined with staged dietary therapy in the treatment of postpartum hypogalactia of Qi and blood deficiency type

Authors not listed. Observation on the therapeutic effect of Jianpi Shugan Tongru formula combined with staged dietary therapy in the treatment of postpartum hypogalactia of Qi and blood deficiency type. Frontiers of Pharmacy (药学前沿), 2023.

https://yxqy.whuznhmedj.com/journal/63.html

Classical text references

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

「王不留行能走血分,乃阳明冲任之药,俗有‘穿山甲、王不留,妇人服了乳长流’之语。」

"Wang Bu Liu Xing can move in the blood aspect and is a Yangming and Chong-Ren herb; as the saying goes, 'With Chuanshanjia and Wangbuliuxing, a woman's milk will flow freely.'"

Ben Cao Gang Mu (本草纲目)
Herb entry: Wang Bu Liu Xing

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for low milk supply.

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