Indigestion In Children
小儿积滞 · xiǎo ér jī zhì+8 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Food Retention In Children, Ingestion In Children, Pediatric Indigestion, Chronic Indigestion In Children, Chronic Dyspepsia In Pediatric Patients, Long-lasting Digestive Problems In Children, Persistent Indigestion In Kids, Infant Colic and Childhood Indigestion
The sour smell of a child's burp and the coating on their tongue tell us more about their indigestion than any lab test - and point to a treatment that can clear stagnation or strengthen digestion, often within days for acute cases.
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 indigestion in children. 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.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands indigestion in children
In TCM, a child's digestion is governed primarily by the Spleen and Stomach, which together form the engine that transforms food into Qi and blood. This engine is naturally still developing in childhood - it's like a small fire that needs careful tending. When it's overloaded with too much food, or the wrong kinds of food, the fire sputters and food sits undigested. This is the root of most childhood indigestion.
The simplest pattern is Food Stagnation, where a heavy or rich meal simply overwhelms the Stomach. The undigested food ferments, producing sour, foul-smelling gas that rises as belching, and a thick, greasy tongue coating appears. But a child's digestion can also be weak from the start - Spleen Qi Deficiency - where the digestive fire is too low to properly cook food even in normal amounts. Here the child looks pale, tired, and has loose stools with undigested bits.
Sometimes, the stagnant food generates Heat, leading to Stomach Fire with burning pain, thirst, and a red tongue. And in children, emotions like frustration or anxiety can cause Liver Qi to become stuck and push sideways into the Stomach, disrupting its downward movement and causing bloating and belching that flares with stress. Because these four patterns stem from different imbalances, a child's indigestion won't improve until the specific root is addressed - which is exactly what TCM treatment does.
「小儿肠胃嫩弱,饮食不节,则生积滞,腹胀满,嗳气酸腐。」
"In children, the stomach and intestines are tender and weak; if eating and drinking are not regulated, food accumulation arises, with abdominal distention and fullness, and sour, foul belching."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses indigestion in children
Inside the consultation
When a child struggles with indigestion, a TCM practitioner starts by listening carefully to the story: what the child ate, when the trouble began, and what the discomfort feels like. The quality of the stool, the smell of the breath, and the child’s energy level all offer clues. The tongue coating and pulse (or the vein at the index finger in infants) are then checked to confirm which of the four common patterns is at play.
If the problem appears suddenly after a heavy or rich meal, the practitioner suspects Food Stagnation in the Stomach. The child will likely refuse food, complain of a full, distended belly, and burp up a sour, foul smell. The tongue coating is thick and greasy, often white, and the pulse feels slippery and full. This is a pure excess pattern - the digestive system is simply overwhelmed.
When indigestion drags on and the child seems tired, pale, and thin, the picture shifts to Spleen Qi Deficiency. Here the digestive fire is too weak to process food properly. The abdomen may feel bloated but the child often likes gentle pressure on it. Stools are loose and contain undigested bits. The tongue looks pale with a white greasy coat, and the pulse is weak and deep. This pattern is a mix of deficiency and stagnation.
Sometimes the retained food turns into heat, creating a Stomach Fire pattern. The child may have a low-grade fever, a red face, and extremely bad breath. They might be thirsty and restless, and the abdomen feels hot and painful.
The tongue becomes red with a yellow, greasy coating, and the pulse is rapid and slippery. This tells the practitioner that the stagnation has generated internal heat that needs clearing.
In a less common picture, emotional upsets - like a tantrum, fear, or family stress - can cause Liver Qi Stagnation invading the Stomach. The child becomes irritable, sighs or belches frequently, and may point to discomfort in the sides of the abdomen. The tongue coating is thin and white or slightly yellow, and the pulse feels wiry. This pattern reveals that the digestive trouble is tied to the child’s emotional state.
TCM Patterns for Indigestion In Children
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same indigestion in children 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 for a child’s indigestion to overlap two patterns. For example, a child with a weak Spleen may eat a little extra and immediately develop signs of food stagnation. Or food that sits in the stomach too long can generate heat, mixing the Stomach Fire picture with the original stagnation.
These patterns are not rigid boxes - they describe a process that can shift and blend.
To sort through mixed signals, pay attention to what dominates. If the child is mostly tired and pale with loose stools, Spleen Qi Deficiency is the root, even if there are occasional signs of food retention. If the breath is foul and the belly is hot and painful, heat is the more urgent issue.
Noticing what makes the symptoms better - rest, a warm compress, or passing gas - can also point toward one pattern over another.
Mild, short-lived indigestion after a known dietary slip can often be managed at home with simple, easily digestible foods and gentle abdominal massage. However, if the child has a fever, is in significant pain, or the indigestion keeps returning and affects growth or energy, it is wise to see a TCM professional. Children’s patterns change quickly, and a trained practitioner can read the subtle tongue and pulse signs to catch the shift early.
Because children’s digestive systems are immature, self-treatment with strong herbs is not recommended. A professional can prescribe gentle, age-appropriate formulas that both clear the stagnation and support the Spleen, without disrupting the delicate balance. If you feel unsure which pattern fits, trust that uncertainty - it is a good reason to seek a proper diagnosis and give your child the safest, most effective care.
Food Stagnation in the Stomach
Spleen Qi Deficiency
Stomach Fire (Stomach Heat)
Liver Qi Stagnation invading the Stomach
Treatment
Four ways to address indigestion in children in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for indigestion in children
5 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A gentle, time-tested formula for the uncomfortable, heavy feeling after overeating or consuming rich, greasy foods. It helps break down accumulated food, relieves bloating, acid reflux, nausea, and belching, and restores normal digestive movement. Often described as 'digestive first aid' in Chinese medicine, it works by clearing the blockage rather than masking symptoms.
A classical formula for people with weak digestion who also tend to accumulate undigested food. It strengthens the Spleen and Stomach to restore digestive power while simultaneously clearing food stagnation, relieving bloating, poor appetite, and loose stools.
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 for relieving digestive blockage with internal heat and dampness. It is used when overeating or heavy, greasy foods have led to severe bloating, abdominal pain, constipation or diarrhea with urgency, and dark urine. The formula works by clearing accumulated food, draining heat, and resolving dampness from the intestines.
A classical formula for people experiencing rib-side or chest pain, emotional frustration, irritability, sighing, and bloating caused by stagnation of Liver Qi. It works by smoothing the flow of Liver Qi, relieving tension, and gently moving blood to stop pain. It is one of the most widely used formulas for stress-related digestive and emotional complaints.
For acute Food Stagnation or Stomach Fire, children often improve within 1-3 days of herbal treatment and dietary adjustment. Chronic Spleen Qi Deficiency may need 4-8 weeks of consistent care to rebuild digestive strength. Emotional patterns linked to stress can resolve in 2-4 weeks once the underlying trigger is addressed.
Treatment principles
The overarching principle in treating childhood indigestion is to promote digestion and remove stagnation (消食导滞, xiāo shí dǎo zhì). For excess patterns like Food Stagnation and Stomach Fire, the focus is on clearing the accumulated food and cooling any heat. For deficiency patterns like Spleen Qi Deficiency, the strategy is to strengthen the Spleen while gently moving any lingering stagnation - a balanced approach of tonification and elimination.
When emotions are involved, as in Liver Qi invading the Stomach, calming the Liver and harmonizing the Stomach is key. Because children's bodies are quick to respond but also quick to change, treatment is always gentle and closely monitored.
What to expect from treatment
Most children respond quickly to TCM, especially when the indigestion is acute. You'll likely see improvements in appetite, bowel movements, and energy within the first week. Pediatric tuina sessions are typically given once or twice a week, while herbal formulas are taken daily.
For chronic patterns, consistency is key - missing doses or returning to poor dietary habits can slow progress. Your practitioner will adjust the formula as your child's condition evolves, and will guide you on when to taper treatment.
General dietary guidance
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
*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
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Severe or worsening abdominal pain — Especially if the child is unable to stand, is guarding their belly, or the pain is concentrated in one spot.
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High fever (above 102°F / 39°C) — Especially if accompanied by vomiting, diarrhea, or lethargy.
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Vomiting blood or material that looks like coffee grounds — This may indicate bleeding in the upper digestive tract.
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Signs of dehydration — Such as dry mouth, no tears when crying, sunken eyes, or no urination for 6-8 hours.
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Bloody or black, tarry stools — This can signal internal bleeding and requires immediate evaluation.
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Projectile vomiting in an infant — Especially if it occurs after every feeding, which could indicate pyloric stenosis.
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Unexplained weight loss or failure to gain weight — If indigestion is accompanied by a drop in growth percentiles or loss of appetite for more than a few days.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Indigestion in children is not simply a smaller version of the adult condition - a child's digestive system is still maturing, making it far more vulnerable to food stagnation and spleen deficiency. The most common patterns are Food Stagnation in the Stomach and Spleen Qi Deficiency, often overlapping. Because young children cannot describe their symptoms clearly, diagnosis relies heavily on observation: the smell of the breath, the appearance of the tongue coating, the quality of the stool, and the child's behavior after eating.
Treatment dosages must be adjusted carefully. For herbal formulas, a typical pediatric dose is one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose, depending on age and weight. Child-friendly preparations like granules, syrups, or mild decoctions are preferred.
Acupuncture points are needled very lightly or substituted with acupressure, and the extra point Sifeng (EX-UE-10) is a classic choice for pediatric food accumulation. Gentle abdominal massage and dietary adjustments are often the first line of defense, with herbs used for more stubborn cases.
Evidence & references
Clinical research on TCM for pediatric indigestion is growing, though large-scale, English-language randomized controlled trials remain scarce. Chinese-language studies consistently report that herbal formulas such as Bao He Wan and Jian Pi Wan significantly improve symptoms of food stagnation and spleen deficiency, with response rates often exceeding 85%. Acupuncture and tuina (pediatric massage) have also shown benefit in reducing bloating, pain, and bowel irregularities.
One systematic review of Chinese herbal medicine for functional dyspepsia in children noted positive effects but highlighted methodological limitations in many trials, including small sample sizes and lack of blinding. While the evidence is promising, more rigorous, multicenter studies are needed to confirm these findings and bring TCM treatments into mainstream pediatric guidelines. In practice, the long history of safe use and the low risk of side effects make TCM a widely accepted option for parents seeking natural digestive support for their children.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「食积者,因乳食过饱,停滞中脘,腹胀作痛,嗳腐吞酸。」
"Food accumulation is due to overfeeding of milk or food, causing stagnation in the middle epigastrium, with abdominal distention and pain, sour belching, and acid regurgitation."
Xiao Er Yao Zheng Zhi Jue (Key to Therapeutics of Children's Diseases)
Discussion on Shi Ji (Food Stagnation)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for indigestion in children.
Yes, when practiced by a qualified professional, TCM is very safe for children. Herbal formulas are specifically designed for pediatric use - doses are adjusted for a child's age and weight, and the herbs chosen are gentle. Pediatric tuina (therapeutic massage) is a completely non-invasive, drug-free therapy that many children enjoy. Always ensure your practitioner is licensed and experienced in treating children.
Most pediatric formulas are prepared as decoctions (teas) or powders that can be mixed with a little warm water or milk. They often have a mildly sweet or earthy taste, but some herbs are bitter. Practitioners may add a small amount of honey or rock sugar to improve palatability, and many pharmacies offer concentrated granules that can be hidden in a spoonful of applesauce or yogurt. The taste is usually well-tolerated, especially when the child feels the difference in their tummy.
The best way is to see a TCM practitioner who will examine your child's tongue, feel their pulse, and ask about specific symptoms. But you can get clues at home: sudden indigestion after a heavy meal with sour burps and a thick tongue coating points to Food Stagnation. Chronic bloating and loose stools with a pale, tired child suggests Spleen Qi Deficiency.
Burning pain and foul breath with a red tongue indicates Stomach Fire. If symptoms flare during tantrums or stress, with rib-side bloating, it may be Liver Qi invading the Stomach. Our pattern quiz can also help guide you.
Absolutely. TCM can work alongside conventional care. Herbal formulas are generally gentle and do not interfere with common medications, but you should always inform both your pediatrician and your TCM practitioner about everything your child is taking. Do not stop any prescribed medication without consulting your doctor. If your child is on any daily medication, bring the full list to your TCM consultation.
For acute Food Stagnation or Stomach Fire, children often improve within 1-3 days of herbal treatment and dietary adjustment. Chronic Spleen Qi Deficiency may need 4-8 weeks of consistent care to rebuild digestive strength. Emotional patterns linked to stress can resolve in 2-4 weeks once the underlying trigger is addressed. Your practitioner will give you a more personalized timeline after the first visit.
Across all patterns, it's wise to avoid overfeeding and to limit greasy, fried, sugary, or very cold foods and drinks, as these are hard on a young digestive system. Large meals late at night are especially taxing. Instead, offer warm, soft, easily digestible foods like congee, steamed vegetables, and soups.
Small, frequent meals are better than three large ones. Specific foods to favor or avoid will depend on your child's pattern - your practitioner will guide you.
Pediatric acupuncture uses very fine, shallow needles and is often done quickly, but many practitioners prefer non-needle techniques like pediatric tuina (massage), acupressure, or laser acupuncture for young children. These are painless and can be just as effective. Older children who are comfortable with needles may receive gentle acupuncture. The approach is always tailored to the child's comfort level.
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