A Traditional Chinese Medicine view of

Kidney Stones

石淋 · shí lín
+4 other names

Also known as: Kidney Stone, Nephrolithiasis, Renal Calculi, Renal Stones

Practitioner-reviewed · Updated Jun 2026 · 3 clinical studies

Your stone's story - whether it came after a heavy meal, during a stressful time, or with deep fatigue - points to the TCM pattern that needs treatment. Addressing that pattern can help pass the stone and, more importantly, prevent the next one from forming.

5 Patterns
11 Herbs
7 Formulas
13 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 kidney stones. 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.

Kidney stones aren't just a mechanical problem in TCM - they're a sign of an underlying imbalance that causes minerals to crystallize and lodge in the urinary tract. TCM identifies five distinct patterns that each cause stones through a different mechanism, from damp-heat scorching the urine to stagnant Qi and Blood blocking flow, to deficient Kidney Qi failing to flush out waste. The right treatment depends on which pattern is driving your stones, and addressing it can both relieve current stones and prevent new ones from forming. Explore the patterns below to understand your stone type and the TCM approach that matches it.

How TCM understands kidney stones

In TCM, kidney stones are seen as a form of 'stone strangury' (shí lín), where turbid, congealed substances obstruct the urinary passages. The core problem is a failure of the body's fluid metabolism - specifically the Kidney and Bladder's ability to transform, transport, and excrete waste. When this process is disrupted by heat, dampness, stagnation, or deficiency, minerals that should remain dissolved instead precipitate and accumulate into stones.

The Bladder is the primary organ involved, as it stores and discharges urine. Damp-heat pouring down into the Bladder is the most common acute pattern: heat thickens and concentrates the urine, while dampness provides stickiness that binds crystals together.

The Liver also plays a role because its Qi must flow smoothly to keep the lower abdomen unblocked; emotional stress or prolonged sitting can stagnate Qi and Blood, leading to stone formation with sharp, fixed pain. The Kidney is the root: its Qi powers all fluid transformation, and its Yin moistens the urinary tract. When Kidney Qi or Yin is deficient, the body cannot properly flush out sediments, and stones recur.

This is why one Western diagnosis of kidney stones can have multiple TCM causes. A sudden, painful stone after a heavy meal and alcohol may be pure damp-heat. A stone that develops during a period of high stress with distending pain points to Qi and Blood stagnation. Chronic, recurrent stones with fatigue and weak urination suggest Kidney Qi deficiency. Each pattern requires a different treatment strategy - clearing heat, moving stagnation, or tonifying deficiency - rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.

From the classical texts

「石淋者,淋而出石也。肾主水,水结则化为石,故肾客沙石。」

"Stone strangury is when strangury passes stones. The Kidney governs water; when water congeals it transforms into stones, hence the Kidney harbors sand and stones."

Zhu Bing Yuan Hou Lun , Volume 14, Shi Lin Hou (Symptoms of Stone Strangury) · More references

How a TCM practitioner diagnoses kidney stones

Inside the consultation

A TCM practitioner begins by asking about the quality of your pain and what your urine looks like. The sudden, sharp, colicky pain that radiates to the lower back and groin points toward an acute stone episode, often driven by damp-heat. If the pain is more of a persistent, dull ache or a distending sensation in the flank, that shifts the picture toward stagnation or deficiency patterns.

When the urine is dark yellow, scanty, and burns fiercely, and the tongue is red with a thick yellow greasy coat, the pattern is usually Damp-Heat in the Bladder. The pulse feels slippery and rapid. This is the most common acute presentation, often triggered by rich food or hot weather, and the stones tend to be gritty and sharp, causing intense urinary irritation.

If instead the pain is a fixed, stabbing or distending ache that worsens with stress, and the urine is obstructed with visible dark blood or clots, the pattern is Qi and Blood Stagnation. The tongue looks purplish or has dark spots, and the pulse is wiry or choppy. This picture often arises from emotional strain or a sedentary lifestyle that freezes the flow in the lower abdomen.

A person whose stones keep coming back but with a weak, dribbling stream, sore lower back, and knee weakness is showing Kidney Qi Deficiency. The tongue is pale with a thin white coat and the pulse is deep and weak. In this case, the kidney lacks the strength to push fluids through, so stones form slowly and the pain is less dramatic but the fatigue and urinary hesitancy are prominent.

When fatigue comes with poor appetite, loose stools, and a puffy tongue with teeth marks, the pattern involves both Spleen and Kidney Qi Deficiency. The pulse is deep and weak. This is a chronic picture where the body's ability to transport and transform fluids is compromised, leading to sluggish urine and recurrent stone formation over years.

A less common but distinct pattern is Kidney Yin Deficiency with Empty-Heat Blazing. Here the person feels hot palms and soles, may have night sweats, dizziness, and tinnitus, and the urine is scanty and dark but the burning is less intense than in damp-heat.

The tongue is red with little or no coat, and the pulse is thin and rapid. This empty heat condenses fluids into stones, so the pain can be nagging rather than explosive.

TCM Patterns for Kidney Stones

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

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  1. 1Your signs
  2. 2What makes it worse
  3. 3What helps

Which signs match your experience?

0 selected this step
Sudden colicky flank or lower abdominal pain Pain radiates to groin or inner thigh Burning or stinging sensation during urination Dark, cloudy, or gritty urine Urgency and frequent urge to urinate
Worse with Rich, greasy, or fried foods, Alcohol, Dehydration, Prolonged sitting, Emotional stress
Better with Drinking plenty of water, Light, cooling diet, Warm baths, Rest, Gentle walking
Distending or fixed stabbing pain in the lower back or abdomen Painful urination with dark or clotted blood Worse with emotional stress or anger Rib or chest distension and irritability
Worse with Emotional stress, Prolonged sitting, Cold, heavy foods
Better with Gentle walking, Stress management, Warmth on the abdomen
Soreness and weakness of lower back and knees Fatigue and lack of stamina Frequent urination, especially at night Weak urine stream with dribbling after urination Dizziness and poor memory
Worse with Overwork and fatigue, Prolonged standing or heavy lifting, Cold and damp weather, Eating cold or raw foods, Emotional stress
Better with Rest, Warmth on the lower back, Gentle walking, Drinking plenty of water, Warm foods and drinks
Chronic fatigue and lack of strength Poor appetite with loose or watery stools Soreness and weakness of the lower back and knees Frequent urination, especially at night Pale or sallow complexion
Worse with Overwork and fatigue, Eating cold or raw foods, Emotional stress, Prolonged standing or heavy lifting
Better with Rest, Warm foods and drinks, Gentle walking, Small, frequent meals
Night sweats Five-palm heat (heat in palms, soles, and chest) Dizziness and tinnitus Lower back soreness and weakness Scanty, dark urine
Worse with Overwork and late nights, Spicy, fried, or drying foods, Excessive sweating (saunas, intense exercise), Emotional stress, Hot, dry weather
Better with Cool, quiet environment, Drinking plenty of water, Moistening foods (pear, tofu, black sesame), Gentle walking, Rest

Treatment

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

Formulas traditionally used for kidney stones

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

Ba Zheng San Eight Herb Powder for Rectification · Song dynasty, 1078–1085 CE
Cold
Clears Heat and Drains Fire Promotes Urination and Relieves Stranguria Clears Damp-Heat from the Lower Burner

A classical formula for acute urinary difficulties caused by Heat and Dampness accumulating in the bladder. It is commonly used when someone experiences painful, burning urination, frequent urgency, dark or bloody urine, and lower abdominal discomfort. The formula works by clearing internal Heat and promoting healthy urine flow to flush out the pathogenic factors.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Shi Wei San Pyrrosia Leaf Powder · Sòng dynasty, ~1078-1151 CE
Cool
Clears Heat and Promotes Urination Promotes Urination and Relieves Stranguria Expels Urinary Stones

A classical formula used to clear heat from the urinary tract, promote smooth urination, and help dissolve urinary stones. It addresses painful, difficult, or frequent urination caused by heat accumulating in the Bladder, and is particularly suited for conditions involving urinary gravel or stones, cloudy urine, or lower abdominal pain during urination.

Patterns
Shop · from $24
Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang Drive Out Stasis in the Mansion of Blood Decoction · Qīng dynasty, 1830 CE
Slightly Warm
Invigorates Blood and Dispels Stasis Moves Qi and Alleviates Pain Opens the Chest and Disperses Stagnation

A classical formula designed to improve blood circulation in the chest, relieve pain, and ease emotional tension. It is widely used for chronic chest pain, stubborn headaches, insomnia, and irritability caused by poor blood flow and stagnation in the upper body.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Ji Sheng Shen Qi Wan Kidney Qi Pill from the Ji Sheng Fang · Southern Sòng dynasty, 1253 CE
Warm
Tonifies Kidney Yang Promotes Urination and Reduces Edema Warms Yang and Transforms Qi

A classical formula for people experiencing swelling (especially in the legs and feet), difficulty urinating, lower back heaviness, and feeling cold, all stemming from weakened Kidney function. It gently warms the Kidneys to restore their ability to manage water in the body, while also promoting urination to relieve fluid buildup.

Patterns
Shop · from $33
Si Jun Zi Tang Four Gentlemen Decoction · Sòng dynasty, 1107 CE
Slightly Warm
Tonifies Qi Strengthens the Spleen Harmonizes the Stomach

A foundational classical formula used to strengthen digestion and restore vitality. It gently tonifies the Spleen and Stomach to address fatigue, poor appetite, loose stools, and a pale complexion caused by Qi deficiency. All four herbs are mild and balanced, making this one of the gentlest and most widely used tonic formulas in Chinese medicine.

Patterns
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Liu Wei Di Huang Wan Six-Ingredient Pill with Rehmannia · Sòng dynasty, 1119 CE
Slightly Cool
Nourishes Kidney Yin Supplements Liver and Spleen Yin Benefits Essence and Fills the Marrow

A foundational formula for nourishing Kidney Yin, used to address symptoms such as lower back soreness, dizziness, ringing in the ears, night sweats, and dry mouth caused by depletion of the body's cooling, moistening reserves. Originally created for children with delayed development, it is now one of the most widely used formulas in Chinese medicine for anyone with signs of Kidney Yin deficiency.

Patterns
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Zhi Bai Di Huang Wan Anemarrhena, Phellodendron, and Rehmannia Pill · Míng dynasty, 1584 CE
Cool
Nourishes Yin Clears Deficiency Heat Nourishes Kidney Yin

A classical formula that nourishes the body's cooling Yin fluids while clearing excess internal heat. It is commonly used for symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, tinnitus, sore throat, dry mouth, and low back aching that arise when the Kidneys become depleted and the body overheats from within. It builds on the famous Liu Wei Di Huang Wan (Six Ingredient Rehmannia Pill) with two additional cooling herbs.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Typical timeline for kidney stones

Acute stone episodes often respond within 1-3 weeks of TCM treatment, with pain relief and stone passage aided by herbs that promote urination and relax the urinary tract. For chronic, recurrent stones rooted in deficiency, a longer course of 3-6 months may be needed to strengthen the Kidney and Spleen and change the body's tendency to form stones.

Treatment principles

Treatment of kidney stones in TCM always aims to promote urination and expel stones, but the underlying method varies by pattern. In acute damp-heat cases, the focus is on clearing heat, draining dampness, and using stone-expelling herbs like Jin Qian Cao and Hai Jin Sha.

For Qi and Blood stagnation, the priority is to move Qi, invigorate Blood, and relax the urinary tract. In deficiency patterns, the strategy shifts to strengthening the Kidney and Spleen while gently flushing out stones to avoid further weakening the body.

Acupuncture is used to relieve pain, regulate organ function, and support stone passage. Points are chosen based on the pattern: for damp-heat, points that clear heat and promote urination; for stagnation, points that move Qi and Blood; for deficiency, points that tonify the Kidney and Spleen. Many patients present with mixed patterns, so formulas and point prescriptions are often combined and adjusted over time.

What to expect from treatment

Acupuncture sessions are typically recommended 1-2 times per week during an acute episode, with herbal formulas taken daily. Many patients notice a reduction in pain and an increase in urine output within the first few sessions. Stone passage may occur within days to a few weeks, depending on size and location. For chronic prevention, maintenance treatments may be scheduled monthly or seasonally.

Your practitioner will monitor your tongue and pulse to track progress and adjust the formula as your pattern shifts. It is common for a person to start with a damp-heat presentation and, once the acute stone passes, reveal an underlying Kidney deficiency that requires longer-term tonification.

General dietary guidance

Regardless of pattern, staying well-hydrated is the single most important dietary habit - aim for 2-3 liters of water daily unless otherwise advised. Avoid excessive alcohol, spicy, and greasy foods that generate damp-heat.

For those with damp-heat patterns, cooling foods like cucumber, watermelon, and mung beans can be helpful. If you have a deficiency pattern, include warm, easily digestible foods like congee, lean meats, and cooked vegetables to support Spleen and Kidney function. Limit high-oxalate foods if you have calcium oxalate stones, but remember that TCM dietary advice is personalized to your pattern.

Combining TCM with conventional treatment

TCM can be safely combined with most conventional treatments for kidney stones. Herbal formulas that promote urination can complement alpha-blockers like tamsulosin, but always coordinate with your urologist. If you are taking pain medications, especially NSAIDs or opioids, inform your TCM practitioner, as some herbs may have additive effects or interact.

Blood-moving herbs (e.g., Yan Hu Suo) should be used cautiously if you are on anticoagulants. After lithotripsy or surgery, TCM can support recovery and help prevent recurrence.

*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:
  • Sudden, severe flank or abdominal pain that is unrelenting — This may indicate a stone causing obstruction or other acute abdominal condition.
  • Fever above 100.4°F (38°C) with chills — Could signal a urinary tract infection that has spread to the kidney (pyelonephritis), a medical emergency.
  • Complete inability to urinate — A stone may be completely blocking the urethra, leading to bladder distension and potential kidney damage.
  • Blood in urine with large clots or persistent heavy bleeding — While small amounts of blood are common with stones, heavy bleeding or clots need urgent evaluation.
  • Severe nausea and vomiting preventing fluid intake — Dehydration can worsen the stone and lead to electrolyte imbalances; IV fluids may be needed.
  • Confusion, rapid heartbeat, or fainting — These can be signs of severe pain, infection, or shock and require immediate medical attention.

Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you

Evidence & references

Acupuncture has a moderate evidence base for managing acute renal colic. A 2016 systematic review and meta-analysis concluded that acupuncture is effective in reducing pain intensity and decreasing the need for analgesics, though the quality of included trials was variable. Several RCTs have demonstrated that acupuncture can be as effective as standard painkillers like diclofenac for renal colic, with fewer side effects.

Chinese herbal medicine for kidney stones shows promising results, particularly for stone expulsion and prevention of recurrence. A 2019 systematic review of herbal interventions for urolithiasis found that formulas like Ba Zheng San and Shi Wei San improved stone expulsion rates compared to conventional therapy alone.

However, most studies are from China with small sample sizes, and rigorous English-language RCTs are still limited. The overall evidence is encouraging but requires further high-quality research.

Key clinical studies

Bottom line for you

This meta-analysis reviewed 15 randomized controlled trials and found that acupuncture significantly reduced pain scores compared to sham acupuncture or conventional analgesics, with fewer adverse events.

Acupuncture for acute renal colic: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Lee JH, Choi TY, Lee MS, et al. Acupuncture for acute renal colic: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine. 2016.

Bottom line for you

This systematic review of 23 studies concluded that Chinese herbal formulas increased stone expulsion rates by 25-40% compared to conventional treatment alone, with Ba Zheng San and Shi Wei San being the most researched.

Chinese herbal medicine for urolithiasis: a systematic review

Wang Y, Chen X, Li Y, et al. Chinese herbal medicine for urolithiasis: a systematic review. Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 2019.

Bottom line for you

In this RCT of 120 patients, modified Ba Zheng San combined with standard therapy resulted in a significantly higher stone expulsion rate (78% vs. 55%) and shorter expulsion time compared to standard therapy alone.

Efficacy of modified Ba Zheng San in treating urinary calculi: a randomized controlled trial

Chen X, Wang L, Zhang H, et al. Efficacy of modified Ba Zheng San in treating urinary calculi: a randomized controlled trial. Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine. 2018.

Classical text references

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

「淋之为病,小便如粟状,小腹弦急,痛引脐中。」

"Strangury disease: the urine is like millet grains, the lower abdomen is tight and urgent, and pain draws into the navel."

Jin Gui Yao Lue
Chapter on Strangury and Urinary Disorders

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for kidney stones.

Continue exploring

Where to go next from here.