Diarrhea
泄泻 · xiè xiè+49 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Loose Stools, Diarrhoea, Loose stools or diarrhoea, loose stools or mild diarrhea, Soft or watery diarrhoea, Watery Stools, Diarrhea with watery stools, Diarrhoea or loose watery stools, Diarrhoea with watery stools, Loose stools or watery diarrhea, Loose watery stools, Stools that are watery or paste-like, Watery diarrhea, Watery diarrhoea, Watery diarrhoea or loose stools, Diarrhea or Loose Stools Triggered by Emotional Upset, Stress-related diarrhoea, Urgency to have a bowel movement after anger, Diarrhea Worsened by Purgative Medicines, Diarrhea After Cold or Raw Food, Diarrhoea triggered by eating cold or raw food, Loose or Sticky Stools, Loose or poorly formed stools, Loose stools that feel incomplete or sticky, Loose stools or sticky bowel movements, Loose Stools or Diarrhea, Loose or soft stools, Loose or watery stools, Loose or unformed stools, Loose stools or watery diarrhoea, Slightly loose stools, Loose stools in some cases where Spleen Qi is more affected, Loose stools or chronic diarrhea, Occasional loose stools, Watery Diarrhea with Undigested Food, Watery diarrhoea with undigested food, Loose watery stools or undigested food in stools, Watery diarrhoea or loose stools with undigested food, Watery diarrhoea with undigested food fragments, Watery Diarrhea with Little Odour, Watery diarrhoea with little odour, Watery or Foamy Stools, Watery or Undigested Food in Stools, Nocturnal Diarrhea, Night-time diarrhea, Poor Appetite with Loose Stools, Loose stools or poor appetite, Loose stools or reduced appetite, Poor appetite with loose or watery stools
Not all diarrhea is the same. The acute, foul-smelling, urgent kind after a heavy meal is a very different pattern from the chronic, watery, early-morning kind that leaves you cold and exhausted - and each requires its own treatment strategy. Most acute cases resolve within days with the right herbs; chronic patterns may take weeks to months but can be transformed with consistent care.
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 diarrhea. 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.
Diarrhea isn't a single condition in Traditional Chinese Medicine - it's a family of seven distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and its own treatment strategy. Some are acute and driven by external pathogens like Damp-Heat or Cold-Damp, while others are chronic and stem from deep-seated weakness in the Spleen, Kidney, or Liver systems.
The key insight is that the same loose stools can arise from completely different imbalances: an urgent, foul-smelling bout after a heavy meal is not the same as the watery, early-morning diarrhea that leaves you exhausted and chilled. Below, we walk you through each pattern so you can understand what's really going on.
Diarrhea is defined as the passage of three or more loose or watery stools per day. Acute diarrhea often results from viral or bacterial infections, food poisoning, or medication side effects, and typically resolves within a few days. Chronic diarrhea, lasting more than four weeks, may signal an underlying condition such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), celiac disease, or malabsorption disorders.
Diagnosis usually involves a medical history, stool tests, and sometimes blood work, endoscopy, or imaging. Treatment focuses on rehydration, dietary adjustments, and addressing the underlying cause - but many people still struggle with recurring episodes when no clear medical explanation is found.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
Conventional treatments are often excellent at managing acute episodes and preventing dangerous dehydration. However, they tend to treat all diarrhea as essentially the same physiological problem - too much fluid in the bowel or too fast transit. Antidiarrheal drugs can mask symptoms without resolving the root imbalance, and many people with chronic, functional diarrhea (like IBS-D) find limited relief from standard approaches.
The conventional framework doesn't account for the possibility that a stress-triggered cramping diarrhea, a cold-induced watery diarrhea, and a fatigue-related loose stool might each require fundamentally different treatment strategies - which is precisely where TCM offers a fresh lens.
How TCM understands diarrhea
In TCM, the Spleen is the central organ of digestion, responsible for transforming food into Qi and separating the clear fluids from the turbid waste. When the Spleen is strong, it sends the clear upward and the turbid downward in an orderly way.
Diarrhea happens when this process breaks down - either because the Spleen is too weak to hold the clear up, or because a pathogenic factor like Dampness, Heat, or Cold is obstructing its work and forcing fluids downward prematurely.
But the Spleen doesn't work alone. The Kidney provides the foundational Yang warmth that fuels the Spleen's digestive fire - when Kidney Yang is weak, the whole system runs cold and watery stools with undigested food are common, especially at dawn.
The Liver, when stressed, can surge sideways and attack the Spleen, causing sudden, cramping diarrhea that flares with emotional upset. Even the Large Intestine can be directly invaded by Damp-Heat or Cold-Damp from contaminated food or weather, producing acute, urgent episodes.
This is why TCM never treats all diarrhea the same way. An acute, foul-smelling, burning diarrhea after eating spicy food points to Damp-Heat in the Large Intestine. A chronic, loose stool with bloating and fatigue after meals signals Spleen Qi Deficiency.
An early-morning watery stool with cold limbs and a sore back reveals Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency. Each pattern has its own internal logic, its own tongue and pulse signs, and its own specific herbal formula and acupuncture protocol.
「湿胜则濡泻」
"When dampness prevails, there will be sloppy diarrhea. This early text identifies dampness as the primary pathogenic factor in diarrhea, a principle that remains central to TCM diagnosis and treatment today."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses diarrhea
Inside the consultation
Acute watery diarrhea with abdominal pain that feels better with warmth and a heavy, sluggish sensation points to Cold‑Damp invading the Spleen. The tongue usually looks pale with a thick white coating, and the pulse feels slow and soft. This pattern often follows exposure to cold, damp weather or eating too many raw, cold foods.
When diarrhea is urgent, yellow, sticky, and foul‑smelling with a burning sensation around the anus, Damp‑Heat in the Large Intestine is the likely culprit. The tongue is red with a yellow, greasy coating, and the pulse is rapid and slippery. This often flares after eating contaminated or spicy, greasy food.
Chronic, on‑and‑off loose stools with fatigue, poor appetite, and bloating after meals suggest Spleen Qi Deficiency. The tongue is pale and swollen with teeth marks, and the pulse is weak. When these signs are joined by cold limbs, watery stools with undigested food, and a strong dislike of cold, the pattern has deepened into Spleen Yang Deficiency.
Diarrhea triggered by emotional stress, with cramping pain and a sense of fullness in the chest and sides, indicates Rebellious Liver Qi invading the Spleen. The tongue may look normal or slightly pale, but the pulse feels wiry, especially on the left side. This pattern often alternates with constipation and worsens with mood swings.
TCM Patterns for Diarrhea
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same diarrhea 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 a blend of patterns, especially in chronic diarrhea. Long‑standing Spleen Qi Deficiency can easily progress to Spleen Yang Deficiency or even involve the Kidneys, producing early‑morning diarrhea. A bout of Cold‑Damp may linger and turn into a Spleen Qi Deficiency if your body was already weak.
Emotional stress can overlap with other patterns. You might have a base of Spleen Qi Deficiency, but stress triggers a Liver Qi attack, causing sudden worsening. Notice the timing: if diarrhea always comes after anger, the Liver is involved; if it is worse with fatigue and cold, Yang Deficiency is more prominent.
Food Stagnation diarrhea is usually short‑lived and easy to spot by its rotten smell and recent dietary excess. However, if you frequently overeat, it can damage the Spleen over time, blurring the line between an acute attack and a chronic weakness. Observe whether the problem clears with a light diet or persists.
Because the tongue and pulse provide objective signs that are hard to assess on your own, a professional diagnosis is valuable. If diarrhea is severe, contains blood or mucus, causes weight loss, or lasts more than a few days, see a practitioner promptly. Self‑treatment is safest for mild, occasional episodes with clear triggers.
Spleen Qi Deficiency
Spleen Yang Deficiency
Food Stagnation in the Stomach
Rebellious Liver Qi invading the Spleen
Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address diarrhea in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for diarrhea
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
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 used to relieve symptoms of gastrointestinal upset combined with a cold, especially during summer. It addresses chills, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal bloating, and a heavy feeling in the head caused by exposure to cold and dampness that disrupt digestion. One of the most widely used formulas in Chinese medicine for "stomach flu" type complaints.
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 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 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 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.
Acute diarrhea (Cold-Damp, Damp-Heat, Food Stagnation) often improves within 1-3 days of herbal treatment. Chronic patterns (Spleen Qi Deficiency, Spleen Yang Deficiency, Kidney Yang Deficiency) require 4-12 weeks of consistent herbs and acupuncture to rebuild digestive strength. Stress-induced diarrhea may respond within 2-4 weeks with combined Liver-soothing and Spleen-strengthening treatment.
Treatment principles
The overarching principle is to restore the Spleen's ability to transform and transport, while clearing any pathogenic factors - Dampness, Heat, Cold, or Food Stagnation - that are obstructing it. In acute patterns, the priority is to expel the pathogen: dispelling Cold-Damp with warming, aromatic herbs; clearing Damp-Heat with bitter, cooling herbs; or eliminating food stagnation with digestive enzymes. In chronic patterns, the focus shifts to strengthening the Spleen and, if needed, warming the Kidneys.
Because the Spleen dislikes dampness, drying dampness and supporting Qi are common threads across many formulas. Treatment is always individualized to the pattern, and mixed patterns are common - especially when a chronic weakness makes you more susceptible to acute attacks.
What to expect from treatment
General dietary guidance
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
Chinese herbs can be used alongside conventional rehydration and dietary management. If you are taking loperamide or other antidiarrheals, inform your TCM practitioner, as some herbs may have astringent properties that could compound effects. Antibiotics may deplete gut flora - TCM can support recovery afterward.
Always tell your doctor about any herbs or supplements you are taking, especially if you have a chronic condition like IBD or are on immunosuppressants. If your diarrhea is being managed by a gastroenterologist, coordinate care so that both providers are aware of your full treatment plan.
*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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Diarrhea lasting more than 3 days without improvement — Prolonged diarrhea can lead to dehydration and may signal a more serious underlying condition.
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Severe abdominal pain or cramping — Intense pain, especially if it's constant or worsening, needs immediate medical evaluation.
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Blood or mucus in the stool — This can indicate infection, inflammation, or other serious bowel conditions.
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Signs of dehydration — Dizziness, dry mouth, extreme thirst, little or no urination, or dark-colored urine.
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Fever above 101°F (38.3°C) — A high fever may indicate a bacterial infection that requires antibiotics.
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Diarrhea after recent travel to areas with poor sanitation — You may have picked up a parasitic or bacterial infection that needs specific treatment.
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Unexplained weight loss — Unintentional weight loss alongside diarrhea can be a red flag for malabsorption or chronic disease.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for diarrhea shows moderate but encouraging evidence, particularly for functional and chronic forms. A 2012 Cochrane review of acupuncture for irritable bowel syndrome found that acupuncture may improve symptoms including diarrhea, though the quality of evidence was limited by small sample sizes and heterogeneous protocols. More recent trials have focused on specific herbal formulas.
Preclinical and clinical studies on formulas like Tong Xie Yao Fang and Shen Ling Bai Zhu San suggest they can reduce stool frequency and improve stool consistency, often by modulating gut microbiota and reducing inflammation. However, large-scale, double-blind RCTs are still scarce, and most evidence comes from Chinese-language studies. Patients should view TCM as a promising complementary approach while continuing necessary biomedical diagnostics, especially for acute or bloody diarrhea.
Key clinical studies
This study combined network pharmacology and 16S rRNA sequencing to investigate how Tong Xie Yao Fang (TXYF) relieves diarrhea. The results indicated that TXYF significantly improved diarrhea symptoms by restoring gut microbiota balance, reducing inflammation, and repairing intestinal barrier function. The formula's multi-target action supports its traditional use for Liver-Spleen disharmony diarrhea.
Chinese herbal medicine, Tongxieyaofang, alleviates diarrhea via gut microbiota remodeling: evidence from network pharmacology and full-length 16S rRNA gene sequencing
Li J, Zhang Y, Wang X, et al. Chinese herbal medicine, Tongxieyaofang, alleviates diarrhea via gut microbiota remodeling: evidence from network pharmacology and full-length 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2024;14:1502373.
10.3389/fcimb.2024.1502373This Cochrane systematic review assessed acupuncture for IBS, including diarrhea-predominant subtypes. The review found that acupuncture may improve abdominal pain and bowel function compared to no treatment or sham acupuncture, though the evidence was not conclusive due to risk of bias. The authors called for larger, well-designed trials.
Acupuncture for irritable bowel syndrome
Manheimer E, Cheng K, Wieland LS, et al. Acupuncture for irritable bowel syndrome. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012;5: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.
「太阴之为病,腹满而吐,食不下,自利益甚,时腹自痛。」
"Taiyin disease presents with abdominal fullness, vomiting, inability to eat, increasingly severe spontaneous diarrhea, and intermittent abdominal pain. This passage describes the classic Spleen Yang Deficiency pattern of diarrhea and underpins the use of warming and tonifying formulas like Li Zhong Wan."
Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage)
Chapter on Taiyin Disease
「泄泻之本,无不由于脾胃。」
"The root of all diarrhea lies in the Spleen and Stomach. Zhang Jingyue's assertion reinforces that treatment must always consider the middle burner, even when other organs like the Liver or Kidneys are involved."
Jing Yue Quan Shu (Complete Works of Zhang Jingyue)
Chapter on Diarrhea (泄泻)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for diarrhea.
Yes. Acute diarrhea from contaminated food often falls under the Damp-Heat or Food Stagnation patterns. Herbal formulas that clear Heat, dry Dampness, and eliminate stagnation can shorten the course and relieve cramping and urgency. However, if you have a high fever, bloody stools, or signs of severe dehydration, seek urgent medical care first - TCM can then support recovery.
Many patients with chronic loose stools or IBS-D find acupuncture very helpful, especially when combined with herbs. Points like Zusanli ST-36 and Tianshu ST-25 strengthen the Spleen and regulate the intestines. Treatment frequency is usually once or twice a week, and improvements in stool form and urgency are often felt within the first few weeks. Long-standing Spleen and Kidney deficiency patterns need more time, but acupuncture can gradually restore digestive resilience.
Generally yes, but you should inform both your TCM practitioner and your doctor about everything you are taking. Some herbs have astringent or drying properties that could compound the effects of loperamide. If you are on medication for an underlying condition like IBD, your TCM practitioner will select herbs that support rather than interfere with your treatment. Never stop a prescribed medication abruptly without consulting your doctor.
Diet plays a huge role. Across all patterns, TCM recommends avoiding raw, cold, and greasy foods, which burden the Spleen. Favor warm, cooked foods like congee and soups. Your practitioner will give specific advice based on your pattern - for example, if you have Damp-Heat, you'll avoid spicy and fried foods; if you have Cold-Damp, you'll emphasize warming foods like ginger. Dietary changes often speed up improvement dramatically.
Acute diarrhea often responds within a day or two of starting herbs. Chronic patterns take longer - you might notice less urgency and better-formed stools in 2-4 weeks, but full resolution of Spleen or Kidney deficiency can take 3-6 months of consistent treatment. The key is patience: TCM is rebuilding your digestive strength, not just stopping the symptom.
Yes, TCM can be very gentle and effective for children. Pediatric diarrhea is often due to Spleen weakness or food stagnation. Herbal doses are adjusted, and acupressure or pediatric tuina massage may be used instead of needles. Always work with a practitioner experienced in pediatrics, and seek urgent care if the child shows signs of dehydration, blood in stool, or lethargy.
Absolutely. The Liver-Spleen connection is well recognized in TCM: emotional stress constrains the Liver, which then attacks the Spleen, leading to sudden cramping and diarrhea. This is the Rebellious Liver Qi invading the Spleen pattern. Herbs like Bai Zhu and Bai Shao, along with acupuncture points such as Taichong LR-3, soothe the Liver and strengthen the Spleen. Many people find that as their stress response improves, the diarrhea becomes far less reactive.
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