Paralytic Ileus
肠痹 · cháng bì+8 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Intestinal Atony, Intestinal Ileus, Intestinal Paralysis, Paralyzed Bowels, Postoperative Ileus, Bowel Obstruction After Surgery, Post-surgical Gut Paralysis, Post-operative ileus
A paralyzed bowel after surgery isn't just a waiting game - in TCM, whether it's stuck from Cold, Qi stagnation, or deep Yang deficiency dictates a completely different treatment, and most acute cases respond within 48 hours of targeted herbs and acupuncture.
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 paralytic ileus. 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.
Paralytic ileus is a condition where the normal wave-like contractions of the intestines temporarily stop, preventing the movement of food, fluid, and gas. It most commonly occurs after abdominal surgery but can also result from infections, electrolyte imbalances, or certain medications. The main symptoms are abdominal distension, a feeling of fullness, nausea, and the inability to pass gas or have a bowel movement.
Diagnosis is usually based on physical exam findings - a distended, tympanic abdomen with absent bowel sounds - and confirmed with imaging such as an abdominal X-ray or CT scan that shows dilated loops of bowel without a physical blockage.
Conventional treatments
Standard care focuses on resting the bowel and supporting the body until normal function returns. This typically includes withholding food and drink (NPO), placing a nasogastric tube to suction out stomach contents and relieve pressure, and giving intravenous fluids to maintain hydration and electrolyte balance. In some cases, medications that stimulate bowel motility may be used, but the main approach is watchful waiting.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While conservative management is often effective, it can mean days of discomfort, a prolonged hospital stay, and a passive approach that doesn't actively restore peristalsis. For patients whose ileus drags on, there are few targeted therapies - and the underlying reasons one person recovers in 24 hours while another takes a week are not well addressed. TCM offers a proactive strategy that works directly on the mechanisms of Qi movement, potentially shortening recovery time and addressing the individual's constitutional susceptibility.
How TCM understands paralytic ileus
TCM sees paralytic ileus as a sudden halt in the downward flow of Qi through the Stomach and Large Intestine. After abdominal surgery, physical trauma, or prolonged immobility, the body's normal rhythmic propulsion can stall. The result is a blocked, distended feeling, an inability to pass gas or stool, and a belly that feels tight and full. Rather than a single mechanical problem, TCM recognizes that the cause of this Qi stagnation can vary greatly from person to person.
Cold and Dampness are frequent culprits, especially after surgery when the body is exposed to cold environments or cooling fluids. Cold has a contracting, freezing nature that can literally "shut down" the intestines, while Dampness adds heaviness and stickiness that further obstructs movement.
In other cases, the stagnation is purely from Qi disruption - the surgery itself cuts through channels and jolts the Liver's ability to keep Qi moving smoothly. If the blockage drags on, stagnant Qi can deepen into Blood stasis, causing sharp, fixed pain, or it can transform into intense Heat, drying up fluids and creating a hot, rigid abdomen.
Underlying deficiency also plays a role. A person with weak Spleen and Kidney Yang may have a chronically sluggish bowel even before surgery, and the added stress tips them into full paralysis. This is why the same Western diagnosis of paralytic ileus can show up as five distinct TCM patterns - each with its own tongue, pulse, and treatment strategy.
「肠痹者,数饮而出不得,中气喘争,时发飧泄。」
"Intestinal Bi (chang bi) manifests as frequent drinking without urination, panting and struggling in the middle burner, and intermittent undigested diarrhea."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses paralytic ileus
Inside the consultation
A practitioner first asks about the nature of the distension and bowel sounds. When the primary issue is Large Intestine Qi Stagnation, the abdomen feels bloated and full, with absent bowel sounds and no passage of gas or stool. The pain is often diffuse rather than fixed, and it may come in waves. The tongue coating is thin and white, and the pulse is wiry. This pattern is the most common starting point, especially after abdominal surgery or prolonged immobility.
If the person reports cold‑type abdominal pain that improves with warmth or pressure, and the stools are loose or watery rather than completely absent, Cold‑Dampness in the Lower Burner is likely. This pattern often follows exposure to cold environments or surgical cooling. The tongue appears pale with a thick, white, greasy coating, and the pulse feels deep and slow or tight. The practitioner will ask about chills and the feeling of cold in the abdomen to confirm.
When the condition persists, Qi stagnation can lead to Qi and Blood Stagnation. The pain becomes fixed and sharp, and pressing on the abdomen worsens it. The patient may describe a stabbing sensation. The tongue develops a purplish hue with dark spots, and the pulse becomes wiry and choppy. A history of prolonged immobility or previous abdominal surgery with adhesions supports this pattern. Checking these signs helps differentiate it from simple Qi stagnation.
In some febrile illnesses, a Bright Yang Fire in Stomach and Intestines pattern emerges. The abdomen is severely painful and tender to touch, with thirst, a red tongue with a yellow coating, and a rapid, slippery pulse.
In chronically ill or elderly patients, Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency may be the root. The pain is dull, the limbs are cold, and the tongue is pale and swollen with teeth marks.
These patterns require careful differentiation because the treatment approaches are opposite-clearing heat versus warming and tonifying.
TCM Patterns for Paralytic Ileus
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same paralytic ileus 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 see yourself in more than one pattern, because these patterns often overlap or represent different stages of the same underlying problem. For instance, prolonged Qi stagnation can easily lead to blood stasis, so you might notice both bloating and a sharper, more fixed pain. That overlap is normal and does not mean the diagnosis is wrong.
To narrow things down, focus on what makes the discomfort better or worse. If warmth and gentle pressure bring relief, a Cold-Dampness pattern is more likely. If movement or stress worsens the distension, Qi stagnation is prominent. Sharp, localized pain that does not shift suggests blood stasis. Pay attention to your body’s temperature preferences-feeling hot and thirsty points toward heat, while feeling chilled points toward cold or deficiency.
Because tongue and pulse examination is essential to confirm the pattern, a professional TCM diagnosis is strongly recommended. Paralytic ileus can be a serious condition, especially if it develops suddenly after surgery or is accompanied by fever, vomiting, or severe pain. If you experience any of these warning signs, seek immediate medical attention rather than attempting to self-treat.
Even if your symptoms seem mild or mixed, a trained practitioner can detect subtle signs-like a purplish tongue or a deep, weak pulse-that are easy to miss at home. They can then craft a personalized treatment plan, which may include acupuncture, herbal formulas, and dietary advice. Early professional guidance can prevent a temporary stagnation from becoming a chronic, more complex condition.
Large Intestine Qi Stagnation
Qi And Blood Stagnation
Bright Yang Fire in Stomach and Intestines
Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address paralytic ileus in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for paralytic ileus
6 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 that moves stagnant Qi downward and relieves chest and abdominal fullness, bloating, shortness of breath, and poor appetite caused by emotional stress disrupting the Liver's smooth flow of Qi. It combines three strongly Qi-moving herbs with Ginseng to prevent them from depleting the body's vital Qi, making it suitable for people who are not robustly strong.
A classical formula used to relieve abdominal bloating, fullness, and pain caused by Cold and Dampness affecting the digestive system. It works by promoting the smooth flow of Qi in the stomach and intestines, warming the digestive tract, and eliminating excess moisture. It is particularly suited for people whose symptoms worsen in cold weather or after eating cold foods.
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.
A powerful classical formula used to urgently clear severe Heat and blockage from the intestines. It is used for acute conditions involving constipation with strong abdominal pain and distension, high fever, and delirium, where the body needs rapid purging to prevent the illness from worsening. This is a strong-acting formula used only for acute, fully developed excess-Heat conditions and is not suitable for everyday use.
A classical warming and purging formula used for constipation or prolonged diarrhea caused by cold accumulation in the intestines combined with weakness of the Spleen's warming function. It uniquely combines strong warming herbs with purgative herbs to clear the cold blockage without further weakening digestion.
A classical formula that gently warms and supports the Kidneys to restore vitality, fluid balance, and lower body warmth. It is used for people with Kidney weakness who experience lower back soreness, cold legs, frequent urination or difficulty urinating, and general fatigue. Unlike strong warming formulas, it uses a small amount of warming herbs alongside a larger base of nourishing ingredients, working gradually to restore the body's natural balance.
Acute postoperative ileus often resolves in 1-3 days with daily acupuncture and herbs. Excess patterns like Qi stagnation or Cold-Dampness respond quickly; Qi and Blood Stagnation may take 5-10 days. Chronic or deficiency-driven cases (Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency) require 4-12 weeks of consistent treatment to strengthen the digestive system and prevent recurrence.
Treatment principles
All treatment for paralytic ileus aims to restore the downward movement of Qi and reopen the bowels. The common thread is to "move what is stuck" - but the method depends entirely on what is causing the blockage. For excess patterns like Qi stagnation or Cold-Dampness, the focus is on dispersing the obstruction with herbs and acupuncture that strongly promote Qi movement, warm the interior, and expel Cold.
When Heat accumulates, the priority shifts to draining Fire and softening dry stools. When Blood stasis complicates the picture, formulas that invigorate Blood and break up stasis are added.
For deficiency patterns, simply forcing movement would exhaust the patient further. Instead, treatment gently warms and tonifies the Spleen and Kidney Yang, rebuilding the metabolic fire that powers intestinal peristalsis. Acupuncture points like Tianshu ST-25 and Shangjuxu ST-37 are used across patterns to directly stimulate the Large Intestine, while moxibustion is especially valuable for Cold and Yang-deficient types.
What to expect from treatment
In acute postoperative cases, many patients notice the first signs of bowel movement - rumbling sounds, passing gas - within 24 to 48 hours of starting herbs and acupuncture. Excess patterns (Qi stagnation, Cold-Dampness) tend to respond the fastest, often resolving within a few days. Patterns involving deeper deficiency or Blood stasis may require one to three weeks of consistent treatment to fully restore normal function.
Acupuncture is typically given once or twice daily during the acute phase, while herbal decoctions are taken in divided doses. As the bowels begin to move, the focus shifts from strong moving formulas to gentler, digestive-strengthening support to prevent recurrence. Chronic or recurrent ileus linked to Yang deficiency may need several months of weekly treatment to rebuild the body's reserves.
General dietary guidance
During the acute phase, you will likely be advised to avoid all solid foods. Once the bowels begin to function and your doctor clears you to eat, start with warm, easily digestible liquids and soft foods. Congee (rice porridge), clear broths, and well-cooked vegetables are ideal. These gently nourish the Spleen and Stomach without burdening them.
Avoid cold, raw, greasy, or heavily spiced foods for at least one to two weeks after recovery. Cold foods introduce the very Cold pathogen that can re-trigger stagnation, while greasy and hard-to-digest items create Dampness and overwork the digestive fire. Small, frequent meals are better than large ones, and drinking warm water or ginger tea throughout the day helps keep Qi moving smoothly.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment for paralytic ileus is designed to complement standard medical care, not replace it. Herbal decoctions and acupuncture can be safely used alongside conventional measures like nasogastric decompression, IV fluids, and electrolyte management. If you are NPO (nothing by mouth), discuss with your medical team whether herbs can be administered via the NG tube after clamping, or withheld until oral intake resumes.
Always inform both your surgeon and your TCM practitioner about all treatments you are receiving. Some herbs that strongly move the bowels, such as Da Huang (rhubarb), may influence fluid and electrolyte balance - your TCM practitioner will adjust the formula accordingly. Never stop or alter prescribed medications without consulting your doctor.
*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, constant abdominal pain that does not come and go — May indicate a mechanical obstruction or perforation rather than simple ileus
-
Fever over 100.4°F (38°C) with abdominal swelling — Could signal infection or peritonitis requiring immediate antibiotics and surgical evaluation
-
Vomiting, especially if vomit is green, brown, or looks like coffee grounds — Suggests a complete blockage or bleeding in the upper digestive tract
-
Complete inability to pass gas or stool for more than 3-4 days after surgery — Prolonged ileus may need re-evaluation to rule out mechanical causes or complications
-
Rapid heart rate, confusion, or feeling faint along with abdominal symptoms — Could be signs of sepsis or severe dehydration from fluid shifts in the bowel
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Paralytic ileus during pregnancy is a medical emergency that requires hospital care. TCM treatment must be extremely cautious. Strong Qi-moving and blood-invigorating herbs - such as Da Huang, Mang Xiao, Tao Ren, and Zhi Shi - are contraindicated because they may stimulate uterine contractions and threaten the pregnancy.
If herbal treatment is considered, the focus shifts to very gentle Qi regulation. Si Mo Tang may be adapted by removing or reducing strong herbs and adding safe, mild movers like Chen Pi. Acupuncture is often preferred, but points like Hegu LI-4 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 must be avoided. Moxibustion on Zusanli ST-36 and Guanyuan REN-4 can gently support Yang and encourage bowel movement without endangering the fetus.
During breastfeeding, the priority is to avoid herbs that pass into breast milk and affect the infant. Bitter-cold purgatives like Da Huang can cause infant diarrhoea. Strong aromatic Qi-movers like Mu Xiang may alter the taste of milk and cause digestive upset in the baby. Treatment should rely on milder formulas - Si Mo Tang with reduced dosage or modifications - and acupuncture as a safer alternative.
Points such as Tianshu ST-25 and Shangjuxu ST-37 are effective and safe. If the mother has a Cold-Dampness pattern, warm herbs like Gan Jiang and Zhi Fu Zi may be used in small doses, but monitor the infant for any signs of heat or restlessness. Always coordinate with a lactation-aware TCM practitioner.
In children, paralytic ileus most often follows abdominal surgery or severe infection. The most common patterns are Large Intestine Qi Stagnation and Cold-Dampness, as children’s Spleen and Stomach are still developing and easily injured by cold or surgical stress. Diagnosis relies heavily on observation - a silent, distended belly, absence of flatus, and irritability - since young children cannot describe their symptoms precisely.
Herbal dosages are reduced to one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose, depending on age and weight. Si Mo Tang is frequently used for Qi stagnation, while Hou Po Wen Zhong Tang can be adapted for Cold-Dampness. Acupuncture is well-tolerated, with gentle needling or laser acupuncture on points like Zusanli ST-36 and Tianshu ST-25. Moxibustion on the umbilicus is also a gentle, effective option.
In the elderly, paralytic ileus often stems from deficiency rather than excess. Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency is a dominant pattern, as aging naturally depletes the body’s warming and propelling forces. The bowel becomes cold and sluggish, and recovery is slower than in younger patients. Treatment must emphasize gentle warming and tonification rather than strong purgation.
Herbal formulas like Wen Pi Tang or Jin Gui Shen Qi Wan are appropriate, but dosages should start at about two-thirds of the standard adult dose and be adjusted carefully. Polypharmacy is a real concern - many older patients take multiple medications, so TCM treatment must be coordinated with their physician. Acupuncture and moxibustion are excellent, low-risk interventions that can be used daily to stimulate bowel function without drug interactions.
Evidence & references
Evidence for TCM treatment of paralytic ileus is growing, particularly from Chinese-language studies. A randomized controlled trial published in a Chinese medical journal in 2022 demonstrated that integrated treatment with Da Cheng Qi Tang enemas significantly reduced time to first bowel movement and shortened hospital stay compared to standard care alone. Acupuncture, especially at points like Zusanli ST-36 and Tianshu ST-25, has also shown benefit in promoting postoperative gastrointestinal recovery.
However, the overall quality of evidence remains moderate. Many studies have small sample sizes, and blinding is difficult with herbal enemas or acupuncture. More high-quality, multicenter RCTs with rigorous methodology are needed to confirm these findings and establish standardized TCM protocols for paralytic ileus.
Key clinical studies
This RCT evaluated the addition of Da Cheng Qi Tang enema to standard Western medical care in patients with critical paralytic ileus. The integrated treatment group experienced significantly faster recovery of bowel sounds, first flatus, and first defecation, as well as reduced hospital stay and lower rates of surgical intervention.
Clinical Observation of Treatment Efficacy in Critical Paralytic Ileus Disease with Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Author(s) not fully retrieved. Clinical Observation of Treatment Efficacy in Critical Paralytic Ileus Disease with Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine, 2022.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35139487Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「阳明病,脉迟,虽汗出不恶寒者,其身必重,短气,腹满而喘,有潮热者,此外欲解,可攻里也。手足濈然汗出者,此大便已硬也,大承气汤主之。」
"In Yangming disease with a slow pulse, sweating without aversion to cold, a heavy body, shortness of breath, abdominal fullness and panting, and tidal fever - if the exterior is about to resolve, one may attack the interior. If the hands and feet sweat continuously, the stool has hardened. Da Cheng Qi Tang governs."
Shang Han Lun
Line 208 (Da Cheng Qi Tang pattern)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for paralytic ileus.
Yes, acupuncture is one of the most direct ways TCM stimulates bowel function. Points like Tianshu ST-25 and Shangjuxu ST-37 have a specific effect on the Large Intestine, promoting peristalsis. Many hospitals now include acupuncture as part of enhanced recovery after surgery protocols because it can reduce the time to first bowel movement and help patients avoid prolonged ileus.
In acute cases, many people notice rumbling sounds and the passage of gas within 24 to 48 hours of starting herbal treatment. The specific formula depends on your pattern - for example, a Cold-Dampness blockage responds to warming, dispersing herbs, while a Heat pattern needs cooling, purging herbs. Your practitioner will adjust the formula daily based on your progress.
TCM can generally be integrated with standard post-surgical care, including the use of a nasogastric tube. Herbal decoctions may sometimes be administered through the tube (after clamping, as directed by your medical team) or held until oral intake resumes. Always coordinate with your surgeon and TCM practitioner to ensure the timing and method are appropriate for your situation.
Absolutely. In fact, this is exactly the stage where TCM excels. The absence of bowel sounds and gas indicates severe Qi stagnation, and strong moving formulas combined with acupuncture are designed to break through that blockage. However, if you also have severe pain, fever, or vomiting, seek urgent medical evaluation - these may signal a mechanical obstruction that requires immediate intervention.
If your ileus is linked to a constitutional weakness - such as Spleen and Kidney Yang Deficiency - strengthening your digestive system with herbs and acupuncture for several weeks before a planned surgery may reduce the risk. For patients who tend toward Qi stagnation, pre-operative acupuncture and stress-reduction techniques can also help keep Qi flowing smoothly through the surgical period. Discuss a pre-habilitation plan with your TCM practitioner well in advance of any scheduled procedure.
Yes, diet plays a supportive role. Once you are cleared to eat, focus on warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest, like congee, soups, and steamed vegetables. Cold drinks, raw salads, and greasy or fried foods can reintroduce Cold and Dampness, which may trigger another episode of sluggishness. Your practitioner may also recommend specific foods based on your pattern, such as ginger tea for Cold types or pear for Heat types.
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