Irritable Bowel Syndrome
肠郁 · cháng yù+14 other namesHide other names
Also known as: IBS, Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), Irritable Bowel Syndrome (Diarrhea-Predominant), Irritable bowel syndrome (diarrhoea-predominant), Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D), Irritable bowel syndrome (diarrhoea-predominant with heat signs), Irritable bowel syndrome (diarrhea type), Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) - diarrhoea-predominant type, Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) with diarrhoea predominance, Irritable Bowel Syndrome (Constipation-Predominant), Irritable Bowel Syndrome (Mixed Type), Irritable Bowel Syndrome (Damp-Heat Type), Post-infectious Irritable Bowel Syndrome, Post-infectious irritable bowel
IBS isn't one problem - the type of bowel symptom, the trigger, and the accompanying sensations map to distinct TCM patterns, each with a specific herbal formula and acupuncture strategy. Most patients begin to feel a shift in their gut rhythm and emotional reactivity within 4 to 8 weeks of consistent treatment.
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 irritable bowel syndrome. 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.
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a family of six distinct patterns, each with its own root cause, its own telltale bowel habit, and its own treatment. The common thread is a disharmony between the Liver and the Spleen, where emotional stress disrupts digestion, but the way that disharmony plays out varies dramatically from person to person.
You might experience urgent, cramping diarrhea when you're upset, or early-morning loose stools with deep exhaustion, or stubborn constipation with irritability - and each of these points to a different underlying imbalance. TCM doesn't just manage the bowel symptom; it works backwards to correct the pattern that's driving the whole picture.
Irritable Bowel Syndrome is a chronic functional gastrointestinal disorder defined by recurrent abdominal pain associated with a change in stool frequency or form. The pain is often relieved by defecation, and the altered bowel habit may be diarrhea-predominant (IBS-D), constipation-predominant (IBS-C), or mixed. Diagnosis is made using the Rome IV criteria, which require symptoms to be present for at least six months, with no alarm features such as blood in the stool or unintended weight loss.
Conventional testing - colonoscopy, blood work, imaging - typically shows no structural or biochemical abnormality. The condition affects roughly 10-15% of the global population, with women diagnosed more often than men, and it significantly impacts quality of life through pain, urgency, bloating, and unpredictable bowel habits.
Conventional treatments
First-line management usually involves dietary adjustments such as a low-FODMAP diet, increased soluble fiber, and avoiding trigger foods. Medications target the predominant symptom: antispasmodics for cramping, loperamide for diarrhea, laxatives or lubiprostone for constipation. When pain is prominent, low-dose tricyclic antidepressants or SSRIs are used for their neuromodulating effects. Psychological therapies like cognitive behavioral therapy and gut-directed hypnotherapy are also recommended for moderate to severe cases.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Current treatments largely suppress symptoms rather than address the underlying susceptibility. Many patients cycle through diets and medications without lasting relief, and side effects - constipation from antidiarrheals, bloating from fiber, fatigue from neuromodulators - can be burdensome.
The conventional model treats IBS as a single diagnostic label, yet two people with IBS-D may have completely different triggers and internal landscapes. This is precisely where TCM's pattern-based approach offers a complementary path, by identifying and treating the specific disharmony that produces each person's unique symptom profile.
How TCM understands irritable bowel syndrome
In TCM, IBS is understood primarily as a disorder of the Liver and Spleen. The Liver is responsible for the smooth, free flow of Qi throughout the body, and it is especially sensitive to emotional strain. When stress, frustration, or worry build up, the Liver Qi stagnates and then surges sideways to attack the Spleen. The Spleen governs the transformation of food into energy and the transportation of fluids - so when it is bullied by the Liver, its work is disrupted.
This is why so many people with IBS notice their symptoms flare with emotional upset: the Liver-Spleen axis is directly wired to your mood.
But the story doesn't end there. Chronic Liver Qi stagnation can generate Heat, which dries fluids and causes constipation, or it can combine with Dampness to create a sticky, burning diarrhea. On the other hand, if the Spleen's yang energy becomes weak from overwork, cold foods, or long-standing illness, it fails to warm the intestines, leading to chronic loose stools and a feeling of cold.
In some cases, the Kidney yang - the body's foundational fire - becomes depleted, producing a classic early-morning diarrhea that leaves you exhausted. This is why one Western diagnosis of IBS can have so many different TCM faces.
A TCM practitioner listens carefully to the quality of your symptoms. Is the diarrhea urgent and burning, or painless and watery? Does the pain move around or stay fixed? Are you more irritable or more fatigued? The tongue and pulse offer further clues - a red tongue with yellow coat points to Heat, while a pale, puffy tongue with teeth marks signals deficiency.
By matching your unique picture to one of the six core patterns, treatment can be precisely targeted, not just to calm the bowel, but to restore the organ relationships that allowed the problem to develop in the first place.
「凡遇怒气便作泄泻者,必先以怒时挟食,致伤脾胃,故但有所犯,即随触而发,此肝脾二脏之病也。盖以肝木克土,脾气受伤而然。」
"Whenever diarrhea is triggered by anger, it must be because anger was accompanied by eating, damaging the Spleen and Stomach. Thus, any offense will provoke an attack; this is a disease of the Liver and Spleen, as the Liver Wood overcomes the Earth, injuring Spleen Qi."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses irritable bowel syndrome
Inside the consultation
A practitioner begins by asking about your bowel rhythm, pain character, and emotional triggers. Irritable Bowel Syndrome in Chinese medicine is seen as a disharmony between the Liver and Spleen, so the first clues come from whether stress, frustration, or anxiety sets off your symptoms. The quality of the stool and the type of discomfort help narrow down which pattern is active.
If your main complaint is cramping pain and loose stools that strike suddenly when you are upset, and your tongue is pale with a thin coating and your pulse feels wiry, that points to Rebellious Liver Qi invading the Spleen. This is the classic root pattern, where emotional tension directly disrupts the digestive rhythm, often creating an alternating diarrhea-and-constipation picture.
When stools are urgent, burning, and foul-smelling with a sensation of incomplete emptying, and the tongue appears red with a yellow greasy coat, Damp-Heat in the Large Intestine is likely. This pattern flares during acute episodes, often after rich or spicy food, and the pulse will feel slippery and rapid. It represents a buildup of pathogenic moisture and heat in the bowels.
Other common patterns shift the picture toward cold or deficiency. Spleen Yang Deficiency brings chronic loose stools, fatigue, and a craving for warmth, with a pale puffy tongue and a slow weak pulse.
If Heat arises from long-standing stagnation, you may see constipation with hard stools, thirst, and a bitter taste. In deeper or older cases, Kidney Yang Deficiency causes early-morning diarrhea and deep coldness in the lower back and limbs.
TCM Patterns for Irritable Bowel Syndrome
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same irritable bowel syndrome 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 normal to recognize yourself in more than one pattern. IBS often involves a web of overlapping imbalances, especially since Liver Qi stagnation can generate Heat, weaken the Spleen, and eventually chill the Kidney Yang. A flare-up of Damp-Heat might sit on top of a background of Spleen Yang Deficiency, so you may feel both burning urgency and chronic fatigue.
To untangle the picture, pay attention to what dominates and what brings relief. If your symptoms are clearly triggered by emotional stress and improve with relaxation, the Liver is the key player. If cold foods or weather worsen your diarrhea, Spleen or Kidney Yang deficiency is more central. A burning sensation and yellow tongue coating always signal Heat, even if you also feel cold in your limbs.
Because these patterns interlock, self-assessment can only go so far. A professional diagnosis uses the tongue and pulse to confirm the primary pattern and to detect hidden Heat or deep deficiency that you might overlook. If your symptoms are severe, sudden, or accompanied by weight loss or blood in the stool, see a practitioner promptly rather than trying to manage it alone.
<<Rebellious Liver Qi invading the Spleen
Spleen Yang Deficiency
Liver Qi Stagnation that transforms into Heat
Kidney Yang Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address irritable bowel syndrome in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for irritable bowel syndrome
5 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 relieve abdominal pain accompanied by diarrhea, especially when symptoms are triggered or worsened by stress and emotional upset. It works by strengthening the digestive system (Spleen) while calming the Liver, which in TCM theory is responsible for the cramping pain that precedes each episode of diarrhea.
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 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 warming formula used to strengthen the digestive system when it has become weakened by internal cold. It addresses symptoms like watery diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain relieved by warmth and pressure, poor appetite, and a general feeling of coldness. It works by warming the core of the body and restoring the Spleen and Stomach's ability to process food and fluids.
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.
Excess patterns such as Rebellious Liver Qi or Damp-Heat often show improvement in 2-4 weeks, with diarrhea frequency and urgency noticeably reduced. Deficiency patterns - Spleen Yang or Kidney Yang Deficiency - require more time to rebuild constitutional strength, typically 3-6 months. Acute flare-ups can settle quickly, but true, lasting relief comes from correcting the root imbalance, which is a gradual process of retraining the body's rhythms.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the central therapeutic goal is to harmonize the Liver and Spleen - to smooth the flow of Qi and restore the gut's ability to digest and absorb. How that is done varies by pattern: for excess conditions like Rebellious Liver Qi or Damp-Heat, treatment focuses on moving stagnant Qi, clearing Heat, and draining Dampness; for deficiency patterns like Spleen Yang or Kidney Yang Deficiency, the emphasis shifts to warming and tonifying the body's core energy.
Treatment typically works on two fronts simultaneously - calming the acute bowel symptoms while correcting the deeper organ imbalance that allowed the pattern to develop. Herbal formulas are adjusted frequently as the picture changes, and acupuncture points are chosen to target both the root (e.g., Liver and Spleen) and the branch (the abdominal pain or bowel irregularity). Diet and emotional regulation are integral parts of the plan, not afterthoughts.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients begin with weekly acupuncture sessions and a custom herbal formula taken daily. You can expect to notice subtle shifts - less bloating, a calmer gut, more predictable bowel movements - within the first 2-4 weeks. Excess patterns tend to respond faster; deficiency patterns require patience, with meaningful change often taking 2-3 months.
As symptoms improve, session frequency may reduce to biweekly or monthly for maintenance. Progress is rarely linear, and occasional setbacks during stressful periods are normal. Your practitioner will use tongue and pulse changes to track internal shifts even before you feel them.
General dietary guidance
The single most important dietary principle across all IBS patterns is to eat warm, cooked foods and avoid anything cold or raw. Think soups, stews, congees, and steamed vegetables rather than salads, smoothies, and iced drinks. Eat at regular times, in a relaxed environment, and chew thoroughly. Favour easily digestible grains like rice and millet, and small portions of well-cooked lean protein. Avoid greasy, fried, and heavily processed foods, as well as excessive dairy, sugar, and alcohol.
Ginger tea between meals can gently strengthen the Spleen and settle the gut. Specific food recommendations will be refined based on your pattern - for instance, those with Damp-Heat may need to limit rich, sweet, and spicy foods, while those with Yang Deficiency benefit from warming spices like cinnamon and cloves.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement conventional IBS care. Herbs and acupuncture can be used alongside low-FODMAP diets, fiber, antispasmodics, and neuromodulators. It is crucial to inform both your TCM practitioner and your medical doctor about all treatments you are receiving. Certain herbs that move Qi or Blood may theoretically interact with anticoagulant or antiplatelet medications, so full disclosure is essential.
If you are taking a tricyclic antidepressant or SSRI, your TCM practitioner can select formulas that avoid over-sedation or additive serotonergic effects. Never discontinue prescribed medication without consulting your doctor, even if your IBS symptoms improve.
*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
-
Blood in the stool or black, tarry stools — This may indicate gastrointestinal bleeding and requires immediate medical evaluation.
-
Unexplained weight loss of 5% or more in a month — Unintentional weight loss can be a red flag for inflammatory bowel disease or malignancy.
-
Severe, unrelenting abdominal pain that wakes you from sleep — Pain that disturbs sleep or is not relieved by bowel movements warrants urgent investigation.
-
Fever accompanying abdominal pain and diarrhea — Fever suggests an infectious or inflammatory process that may need antibiotics or other acute care.
-
Symptoms starting for the first time after age 50 — Late-onset IBS-like symptoms should be evaluated to rule out colorectal cancer or other structural disease.
-
Family history of colorectal cancer, celiac disease, or inflammatory bowel disease — A strong family history increases the risk profile and may require screening before assuming a functional diagnosis.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the growing fetus consumes Qi and Blood, which can exacerbate Spleen Qi Deficiency patterns in IBS. Constipation-predominant IBS may worsen as the uterus presses on the intestines. Herbs that strongly move Qi or purge the bowels, such as Da Huang (Rhubarb) and Zhi Shi (Immature Bitter Orange), are contraindicated.
Instead, gentle formulas like Si Jun Zi Tang or mild modifications of Tong Xie Yao Fang can be used under professional supervision. Acupuncture is often a safer first-line approach, especially in the first trimester, using points like Zusanli ST-36 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 (avoiding strong stimulation).
Many herbs are excreted in breast milk and can affect the infant. Bitter-cold herbs like Huang Lian (Coptis) and Da Huang (Rhubarb), used for Damp-Heat patterns, should be avoided as they may cause infant diarrhea. For Liver-Spleen disharmony, Tong Xie Yao Fang is generally considered safe in lactation, but always consult a qualified practitioner. Acupuncture remains an excellent option without risk to the baby.
In children, IBS often presents as recurrent abdominal pain with loose stools or constipation, frequently triggered by school stress or diet. The most common TCM pattern is Spleen Qi Deficiency with Liver Qi stagnation, though food stagnation is a contributing factor.
Herbal dosages are reduced to one-quarter to one-half of adult doses based on age and weight. Pediatric tui na (massage) and gentle acupuncture are effective and well-tolerated. The diagnosis relies heavily on parental observation of bowel habits and emotional triggers, as children may not articulate their symptoms clearly.
In the elderly, deficiency patterns dominate. Spleen Yang Deficiency and Kidney Yang Deficiency are more common, leading to chronic, watery morning diarrhea and cold intolerance. Herbal dosages should be reduced (typically two-thirds of adult dose) and warming herbs like Gan Jiang (Dried Ginger) and Bu Gu Zhi (Psoralea) are often indicated.
Be cautious with polypharmacy - many elderly patients take multiple medications, and TCM herbs may interact. Acupuncture and moxibustion are particularly beneficial for warming Yang and strengthening the Spleen and Kidneys.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM in IBS is growing, though quality varies. Acupuncture has moderate support from systematic reviews and meta-analyses, with a 2012 Cochrane review concluding it may offer benefits over sham acupuncture for symptom severity and quality of life, though the evidence was considered low to moderate quality.
Chinese herbal medicine, particularly formulas like Tong Xie Yao Fang, shows promising results in Chinese-language RCTs and a 2022 meta-analysis published in Frontiers in Pharmacology, which found significant improvement in global IBS symptoms compared to placebo.
Most studies are small and lack rigorous blinding, so larger, well-designed international trials are needed. Nevertheless, the existing data align with clinical experience: TCM, especially when tailored to pattern differentiation, can reduce pain, regulate bowel habits, and improve emotional well-being in IBS patients.
Key clinical studies
This 2022 meta-analysis evaluated randomized controlled trials of Tongxie Yaofang for IBS-D. The formula significantly improved global IBS symptoms, abdominal pain, and stool consistency compared to placebo or conventional medication, with a favorable safety profile.
Systematic review and meta-analysis of Chinese herbal formula Tongxie Yaofang for diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome: Evidence for clinical practice and future trials
Frontiers in Pharmacology, 2022.
10.3389/fphar.2022.904657A Cochrane systematic review (2012) assessed acupuncture versus sham acupuncture or other interventions for IBS. Acupuncture showed a modest benefit over sham for symptom severity and quality of life, though the quality of evidence was low to moderate, warranting further rigorous trials.
Acupuncture for irritable bowel syndrome
Manheimer E, et al. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2012, Issue 5. Art. No.: CD005111.
10.1002/14651858.CD005111.pub3Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「痛泻要方,治痛泻不止。」
"Tong Xie Yao Fang (Important Formula for Painful Diarrhea) treats unremitting painful diarrhea."
Dan Xi Xin Fa (The Heart and Essence of Danxi's Methods of Treatment)
Chapter on Diarrhea
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for irritable bowel syndrome.
Yes, acupuncture can be very effective for IBS diarrhea, especially when the diarrhea is triggered by stress or anxiety. Points like Taichong (LR-3) and Zusanli (ST-36) are used to smooth the Liver Qi and strengthen the Spleen, directly addressing the Liver-Spleen disharmony that drives many cases. Research supports its benefit in reducing stool frequency and abdominal pain. Most patients notice a calmer gut within a few sessions, though a full course of 8-12 weekly treatments is typical for lasting results.
You may feel some relief within the first 1-2 weeks - less cramping, more formed stools, or a drop in urgency. However, the full effect of a herbal formula builds over 4-8 weeks as it rebalances the underlying pattern. For chronic, deep-seated deficiency patterns like Kidney Yang Deficiency, expect to take herbs for 3-6 months to rebuild your body's reserves. Your practitioner will adjust the formula as your symptoms evolve, so it's not a static prescription.
Emotional stress is a major trigger, but it's not the only cause. In TCM, stress causes Liver Qi to stagnate, which then disrupts the Spleen's digestive function - hence the gut-brain connection. However, dietary factors (too much cold, raw, or greasy food), overwork, and constitutional weakness can also directly damage the Spleen and Kidney yang, creating IBS patterns even in the absence of obvious emotional stress. The key is identifying which factor is primary in your case.
Across all patterns, TCM recommends avoiding cold and raw foods (iced drinks, salads, raw fruit in excess), greasy or fried foods, dairy, and spicy-hot foods, as these tend to create Dampness and irritate the gut. Alcohol and caffeine are also generally discouraged because they stoke Heat and stir up Liver Qi.
Instead, favor warm, cooked, easily digested meals like rice congee, steamed vegetables, and small amounts of lean protein. Specific dietary advice will be tailored to your pattern - for example, someone with Damp-Heat might need to avoid rich, sweet foods, while someone with Spleen Yang Deficiency should emphasize warming ingredients like ginger and cinnamon.
In most cases, yes, but it's essential to coordinate with both your prescribing doctor and your TCM practitioner. Herbs are generally compatible with antispasmodics, fiber supplements, and low-dose neuromodulators. However, some herbs that move Blood or clear Heat may interact with anticoagulants or antiplatelet drugs.
Always bring a complete list of your medications and supplements to your TCM consultation so potential interactions can be safely managed. Never stop prescribed medication abruptly without medical supervision.
TCM aims to bring the body back to a state of balance where symptoms no longer arise spontaneously. Many people achieve long-term remission - months or years without significant IBS episodes - after a thorough course of treatment and lifestyle adjustments.
However, because the underlying constitution remains somewhat susceptible, major stressors or dietary lapses can trigger a recurrence. In that sense, TCM offers lasting control rather than a one-time "cure," and periodic tune-ups can help maintain your gut stability.
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