Chronic Constipation
慢性便秘 · màn xìng biàn mì+10 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Habitual Constipation, Long-standing Constipation, Persistent Constipation, Persistent Difficulty Passing Stool, Recurring Constipation, Long Standing Constipation, Chronic functional constipation, Chronic constipation (functional), Chronic Constipation (Yin-Deficiency Type), Constipation (fluid-deficiency type)
In TCM, the type of constipation - whether it's hard dry pebbles, soft but impossible to push, or accompanied by bloating and stress - points to a specific pattern, and most people see significant improvement within 4-8 weeks of targeted herbal and acupuncture 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 chronic constipation. 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.
Chronic constipation isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a family of six distinct patterns, each with its own root cause, its own characteristic stool, and its own treatment strategy. Whether your stools are dry pebbles, soft but impossible to push out, or accompanied by bloating that flares with stress, TCM traces the problem back to a specific imbalance in your body's energy, fluids, or warmth. This page will walk you through those patterns so you can understand what's really happening and how to address it.
In conventional medicine, chronic constipation is defined as having fewer than three bowel movements per week for at least three months, often with hard or lumpy stools, straining, a sensation of incomplete evacuation, or a feeling of blockage. It affects about 15-20% of adults and is more common in women and older adults. Diagnosis is based on symptom criteria (Rome IV) and may include tests to rule out structural problems, metabolic disorders, or medication side effects.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment usually begins with lifestyle changes - increasing fiber and water intake, and regular exercise. Over-the-counter remedies include bulk-forming agents (psyllium), osmotic laxatives (polyethylene glycol, lactulose), and occasional stimulant laxatives (senna, bisacodyl). For persistent cases, prescription medications like lubiprostone or linaclotide may be used. Biofeedback therapy is recommended when pelvic floor dysfunction contributes to the problem.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While laxatives can provide short-term relief, they often don't address the underlying imbalance that keeps the bowel sluggish or dry. Long-term use of stimulant laxatives can lead to dependence and, over time, may actually worsen constipation.
More importantly, the conventional approach rarely distinguishes between the different root causes - such as heat drying up fluids, Qi stagnation from stress, or a deep deficiency of Yang warmth - that TCM identifies. This means treatment is often one-size-fits-all, even though two people with constipation may need completely opposite strategies.
How TCM understands chronic constipation
TCM sees the Large Intestine as the organ directly responsible for receiving waste, absorbing the last of the body's fluids, and propelling stool downward and out. But it never works alone. The Lungs and Stomach drive the downward movement of Qi. The Spleen provides the energy to push. The Liver keeps Qi flowing smoothly so nothing gets stuck. The Kidneys supply warmth (Yang) and moisture (Yin) to keep the bowel lubricated and active. When any of these organ systems falls out of balance, the Large Intestine's rhythm suffers - and constipation is the result.
This is why TCM doesn't treat all constipation the same way. A person whose stool is dry, hard, and pellet-like, with a red tongue and thirst, often has Heat in the Large Intestine - too much internal warmth has dried up the fluids. Someone else may have a soft stool but simply can't push it out, feeling exhausted and breathless after trying; that points to Spleen and Lung Qi Deficiency, where the body lacks the energy to move the bowel.
And a third person might have no urge to go for days, feeling cold and achy, with a pale puffy tongue - a sign that Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency has left the intestines too cold and sluggish to function.
Stress plays a powerful role too. When frustration or a sedentary lifestyle causes Liver Qi to stagnate, the smooth downward flow that the Large Intestine depends on gets jammed. This creates bloating, cramping, and a maddening sensation of incomplete emptying - all of which get worse under pressure.
Even a lack of nourishment can be the culprit: Blood Deficiency or Kidney and Liver Yin Deficiency can leave the bowel under-lubricated, like a riverbed in drought, so stool becomes dry and difficult to pass despite no obvious heat.
The beauty of this framework is that your stool itself - its texture, frequency, and the sensations around it - plus your tongue and pulse, tell the practitioner exactly which pattern is at play. From there, treatment can be precisely tailored to restore the specific function that's missing, rather than just forcing a bowel movement.
「趺阳脉浮而涩,浮则胃气强,涩则小便数,浮涩相搏,大便则硬,其脾为约,麻子仁丸主之。」
"When the pulse at the instep is floating and rough, floating indicates strong Stomach Qi, rough indicates frequent urination; the two contend and the stool becomes hard - this is spleen constraint. Ma Zi Ren Wan governs."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses chronic constipation
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first asks what the stool looks and feels like. Dry, hard stools suggest a lack of moisture, while stools that are soft but difficult to push out point to a lack of energy. This distinction between excess and deficiency guides the whole investigation.
When the stool is dry and hard, the next clue is heat. Heat in the Large Intestine brings thirst, a dry mouth, and a yellow tongue coating, often after spicy foods. Large Intestine Qi Stagnation, on the other hand, creates bloating, straining, and a sensation of incomplete evacuation - and it flares up with stress, because the liver’s energy is stuck.
If the main problem is weakness, the practitioner looks for signs of Qi or Yang deficiency. Spleen and Lung Qi Deficiency leaves you with a strong urge but no strength to push, along with fatigue and shortness of breath. Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency goes deeper: the stool is not dry, but the whole body feels cold, with lower back soreness and a pale, puffy tongue.
Two other patterns involve a lack of moisture from the body’s deeper reserves. Blood Deficiency causes dry stools but also pale skin, dizziness, and heart palpitations, because blood nourishes the intestines. Kidney and Liver Yin Deficiency produces dry, pebble‑like stools with night sweats, a dry throat, and a red tongue with little coating - a sign that cooling yin fluids are depleted.
TCM Patterns for Chronic Constipation
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same chronic constipation 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 to see yourself in more than one pattern. For example, long‑standing Qi stagnation can generate heat, so you might have both bloating and dry mouth. Or a person with Qi deficiency may also have some blood deficiency, leading to a mix of fatigue and pale skin. These patterns are snapshots of a process, not rigid boxes.
To narrow it down, pay attention to what makes your constipation better or worse. A bowel movement that improves when you relax and manage stress leans toward Qi stagnation. If drinking water and avoiding spicy food helps, heat may be the driver. If you feel better after rest and a warm meal, a deficiency pattern is more likely.
Because the tongue and pulse provide crucial information that you cannot see yourself, a professional diagnosis is valuable. For instance, a pale tongue points to blood or yang deficiency, while a red tongue with little coating signals yin deficiency. These signs are subtle and easy to misinterpret without training.
If your constipation is severe, sudden, or accompanied by pain, weight loss, or blood in the stool, see a healthcare provider promptly. Self‑treatment with herbs or acupuncture should always be guided by a qualified TCM practitioner who can confirm the pattern and adjust the formula to your unique presentation.
Large Intestine Qi Stagnation
Heat in the Large Intestine
Blood Deficiency
Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address chronic constipation in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for chronic constipation
7 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 strongly moves Qi, clears heat, and unblocks the bowels. It is used for conditions where stress and emotional tension cause the digestive Qi to become stuck, leading to abdominal bloating, pain, and severe constipation with a sense of heat. By restoring the downward movement of Qi, Liu Mo Tang relieves pressure in the abdomen and helps normal bowel function return.
A classical formula used to gently relieve constipation caused by dryness and heat in the intestines. It moistens the bowels, clears mild heat, and promotes the movement of Qi to restore regular bowel function. Particularly well suited for older adults, postpartum women, or anyone with dry, hard stools that are difficult to pass along with frequent urination.
A simple yet powerful classical formula made from just two herbs, Astragalus (Huang Qi) and Licorice (Gan Cao), designed to replenish the body's fundamental Qi. It is used for people experiencing persistent fatigue, weakness, poor appetite, and a general run-down feeling caused by depleted vitality. As a gentle but effective tonic, it can serve as a standalone treatment or as a foundation that practitioners build upon for more complex conditions.
A classical formula designed to relieve constipation caused by internal heat drying out the intestines, combined with sluggish blood flow. It moistens the bowels and gently promotes movement, making it particularly suited for dry, hard, difficult-to-pass stools accompanied by poor appetite. Unlike harsh laxatives, it addresses the underlying dryness and blood stagnation rather than simply forcing the bowels to move.
A classical formula designed to deeply nourish and moisten the Liver and Kidneys while gently restoring the smooth flow of Liver Qi. It is used for people experiencing rib-side or chest pain, acid reflux, bitter taste in the mouth, dry throat, and emotional tension that arise when the body's fluids and blood become depleted, leaving the Liver dry and unable to function smoothly.
A classical three-herb formula designed to replenish the body's fluids and relieve constipation caused by internal dryness. It works by deeply moistening the intestines from within rather than using harsh laxatives, making it especially suited for dry, hard stools accompanied by thirst and a dry mouth following fevers or chronic dehydration.
A gentle, warming formula designed to relieve constipation in people whose bowel difficulty stems from weakness of the Kidneys rather than from excess heat. Instead of using harsh laxatives, it works by warming the Kidneys, nourishing the body's vital fluids, and moistening the intestines so that bowel movements can pass naturally. It is especially suited for older adults, or people recovering from childbirth, who experience constipation along with lower back soreness, dizziness, and frequent clear urination.
Excess patterns like Heat in the Large Intestine or Qi Stagnation often respond within 2-4 weeks of herbs and acupuncture. Deficiency patterns - especially those involving Qi, Blood, or Yang - may need 3-6 months to rebuild deep reserves and restore a natural, daily bowel rhythm. Consistency with diet and lifestyle changes makes a big difference.
Treatment principles
Regardless of the pattern, all TCM treatment for chronic constipation aims to restore the Large Intestine's natural downward propulsion - but the method depends entirely on what's blocking or weakening it. For excess patterns (Heat, Qi Stagnation), the strategy is to clear heat, move Qi, and break through stagnation.
For deficiency patterns (Qi, Blood, Yin, Yang), the focus shifts to nourishing, moistening, and warming the body so the bowel has the energy and lubrication it needs to function on its own.
Herbal formulas are the cornerstone, often combined with acupuncture to regulate the nervous system and stimulate peristalsis. Dietary and lifestyle changes are not just supportive - they're essential, because what you eat and how you manage stress directly affect the organ systems involved. Treatment is always adjusted as your tongue, pulse, and symptoms evolve, so the formula you start with may look different from the one you finish with.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients notice softer, easier-to-pass stools within 2-4 weeks of starting herbal treatment and weekly acupuncture. Initially, you may have sessions once or twice a week; as your bowel rhythm stabilizes, visits spread out to every other week, then monthly for maintenance.
The goal is a spontaneous, comfortable bowel movement every day without straining or relying on laxatives. Some people see dramatic changes quickly; others, especially those with long-standing deficiency, progress more gradually - but steady improvement is the norm.
General dietary guidance
Favor warm, moistening, and fiber-rich foods: cooked vegetables, whole grains, legumes, sweet potatoes, pears, apples, figs, honey, and black sesame seeds. Drink warm water throughout the day rather than icy drinks, which can shock the Spleen. Eat at regular times to train your bowel rhythm.
Avoid or minimize dry, spicy, fried, and greasy foods, as well as excessive raw salads and cold smoothies, which can dampen the digestive fire and make the bowel sluggish.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement conventional constipation care, but communication is key. If you're taking osmotic or stimulant laxatives, your TCM practitioner may work with you to gradually reduce the dose as your bowel function improves, to avoid diarrhea. Some herbs, like Da Huang (rhubarb root), have a laxative effect, so don't add them on top of a strong conventional laxative without guidance.
If you take blood thinners, note that Dang Gui (Angelica sinensis) may have mild anticoagulant properties - always inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor. Never stop a prescribed medication abruptly without medical supervision.
*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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Sudden, severe abdominal pain — Could indicate bowel obstruction, perforation, or other emergency.
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Blood in stool or black, tarry stools — May signal gastrointestinal bleeding - seek immediate evaluation.
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Unexplained weight loss — Could be a sign of colon cancer or another serious underlying illness.
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Inability to pass gas along with bloating and vomiting — Possible bowel obstruction - this is a medical emergency.
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New onset of constipation after age 50 — Warrants screening for colorectal cancer and other structural causes.
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Constipation alternating with diarrhea — May indicate irritable bowel syndrome or, in some cases, a more serious condition that needs investigation.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Constipation worsens for many women during pregnancy as the growing fetus presses on the bowel and hormonal shifts slow peristalsis. In TCM, pregnancy draws heavily on Blood and Yin to nourish the baby, so Blood Deficiency and Spleen Qi Deficiency patterns become especially common. Gentle, moistening approaches are safest. Formulas like Ma Zi Ren Wan contain Da Huang (Rhubarb), which is strictly contraindicated - it stimulates uterine contractions and can trigger miscarriage. Even milder purgatives like Zhi Shi are avoided.
Safer alternatives include small doses of Huo Ma Ren (hemp seed) or He Shou Wu (prepared fleeceflower root) to moisten the bowel, and dietary additions like black sesame, pear, and honey. Acupuncture is effective but must avoid forbidden points: Hegu LI-4, Sanyinjiao SP-6, and lower abdominal points are never used during pregnancy. Instead, gentle stimulation of Tianshu ST-25 and Zusanli ST-36 can be applied with mild technique.
After delivery, Blood and Qi are often depleted, making deficiency patterns dominant. However, any herb with a strong downward-moving action can pass into breast milk and affect the baby. Da Huang and other bitter-cold cathartics are avoided because they may cause infant diarrhea and colic.
Instead, nourishing and moistening herbs like Dang Gui, Shu Di Huang, and Huo Ma Ren are preferred - they gently lubricate the bowel without disturbing the milk.
Acupuncture is a safe, drug-free option during breastfeeding. Points such as Zusanli ST-36, Sanyinjiao SP-6, and Qihai REN-6 can tonify Qi and Blood while encouraging bowel movement. Always inform your practitioner that you are nursing so they can select points and herbs that support both your recovery and your baby’s wellbeing.
In children, chronic constipation most often arises from Heat in the Large Intestine due to a diet heavy in fried, sweet, or spicy foods, or from Spleen Qi Deficiency when the digestive system is constitutionally weak. A child cannot always articulate symptoms, so practitioners rely heavily on tongue and pulse diagnosis: a red tongue with a yellow coat points to heat, while a pale, puffy tongue with teeth marks suggests Qi deficiency.
Herbal dosages are reduced to one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose depending on age and weight. For heat-type constipation, a mild version of Ma Zi Ren Wan or simply increasing water and fiber with cooling fruits like pear is often sufficient. For Qi deficiency, small amounts of Huang Qi (astragalus) and Huo Ma Ren can be added to congee.
Pediatric acupuncture uses fewer needles and very light stimulation; acupressure or moxibustion on Tianshu ST-25 and Zusanli ST-36 are gentle alternatives.
As we age, Kidney Yang and Spleen Qi naturally decline, so constipation in the elderly is almost always rooted in deficiency. The stool may be dry from Yin and Blood depletion or soft but impossible to push out due to Qi and Yang weakness. Strong purgatives like Da Huang can easily collapse the fragile energy of an older patient and are generally avoided.
Instead, warming and moistening formulas such as Ji Chuan Jian (Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency) or Huang Qi Tang (Spleen and Lung Qi Deficiency) are used at two-thirds the usual adult dose.
Polypharmacy is a major concern - many elderly patients take medications that contribute to constipation, and herbs can interact with blood thinners, diabetes drugs, or cardiac medications.
Acupuncture offers a safe, non-pharmacological option, with points like Zusanli ST-36 and Shenque REN-8 (moxibustion) gently stimulating bowel function. Treatment timelines are longer, and the focus is on building constitutional strength rather than quick purging.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture for chronic functional constipation has a growing evidence base. A 2016 randomized controlled trial published in Annals of Internal Medicine (Liu et al.) demonstrated that electroacupuncture significantly increased spontaneous bowel movements compared to sham acupuncture, with effects lasting through a 12-week follow-up. Multiple systematic reviews have since confirmed that acupuncture is effective and well-tolerated, though many included studies have methodological weaknesses such as small sample sizes or unclear blinding.
Chinese herbal medicine also shows promise. Ma Zi Ren Wan, the classical formula for Heat in the Large Intestine, has been evaluated in several Chinese-language RCTs and appears to improve stool frequency and consistency. However, rigorous English-language trials remain scarce. Overall, the evidence supports TCM as a viable option for chronic constipation, particularly when conventional treatments offer limited relief, but larger, well-designed international studies are still needed.
Key clinical studies
This multicenter RCT enrolled 1,075 patients with chronic severe functional constipation. Participants received 28 sessions of electroacupuncture or sham acupuncture over 8 weeks. The electroacupuncture group had a significantly greater increase in mean weekly spontaneous bowel movements and better quality of life scores, with effects persisting at 12-week follow-up. No serious adverse events were reported.
Electroacupuncture for Chronic Severe Functional Constipation: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Liu Z, Yan S, Wu J, et al. Electroacupuncture for Chronic Severe Functional Constipation: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Ann Intern Med. 2016;165(11):761-769.
10.7326/M15-3118This meta-analysis pooled 15 RCTs involving over 1,500 patients. Acupuncture was associated with a significant improvement in bowel movement frequency, stool consistency, and quality of life compared to sham acupuncture or medication. The review noted that most trials were conducted in China and called for more high-quality, multi-center studies.
Acupuncture for Chronic Constipation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Zhang T, Chon TY, Liu B, et al. Acupuncture for Chronic Constipation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med. 2018;2018:8743710.
10.1155/2018/8743710This review evaluated 12 RCTs of Ma Zi Ren Wan, a classical formula for Heat in the Large Intestine. The formula significantly improved bowel movement frequency and reduced straining compared to placebo or conventional laxatives. The authors highlighted the need for standardized outcome measures and longer follow-up periods.
Chinese Herbal Medicine Ma Zi Ren Wan for Functional Constipation: A Systematic Review
Wang X, Yin J, Chen JDZ. Chinese Herbal Medicine Ma Zi Ren Wan for Functional Constipation: A Systematic Review. J Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2019;34(5):823-831.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「大肠者,传道之官,变化出焉。」
"The Large Intestine is the official in charge of transmitting the way; transformation and change come forth from it. (When its function falters, constipation arises.)"
Huang Di Nei Jing Su Wen (Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic, Plain Questions)
Chapter 19, Discussion on the Zang-Fu Manifestations
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for chronic constipation.
Many people notice a softening of stools and an easier time going within 3-4 weekly acupuncture sessions. However, achieving a consistent, spontaneous daily rhythm - especially if you've been constipated for years - often takes longer. Excess patterns tend to respond faster; deficiency patterns require patience as the body rebuilds Qi, Blood, or Yang over several months.
Herbal formulas for constipation are designed to gently promote movement, not to trigger cramping or urgent diarrhea. A well-prescribed formula works with your body to restore normal function. If you experience loose stools, it's important to tell your practitioner - the formula may need adjusting. This is not a one-size-fits-all laxative.
Yes, you can often combine them, but this must be coordinated. Some TCM herbs have a natural laxative effect, so your practitioner may recommend gradually reducing the dose of your conventional laxative to avoid over-treatment. Always tell both your TCM practitioner and your doctor about everything you're taking. The goal is to eventually rely on your own bowel function, not on any external crutch.
In general, steer clear of dry, spicy, and fried foods, as well as excessive cold or raw foods, which can weaken your digestive fire (Spleen Qi). Alcohol and too much coffee can also dry out the body. Instead, favor moistening, warm, cooked foods - think stewed pears, congee, and soups - to help keep the bowel lubricated and moving.
Absolutely. In TCM, stress and frustration directly stagnate the Liver Qi, which is responsible for the smooth, downward flow that moves stool through the Large Intestine. When that flow is jammed, you get bloating, cramping, and that frustrating feeling of incomplete evacuation - and it all gets worse when you're under pressure. This is one of the most common patterns we see.
Losing the urge to have a bowel movement often signals a deeper deficiency - either of Qi (not enough energy to generate the sensation) or of Yang (not enough warmth to activate the bowel). TCM treatment focuses on restoring that internal drive, so you start to feel a natural, daily urge again. This takes time, but it's a very common and treatable pattern.
Yes, but it requires extra care. Many herbs that move the bowel are contraindicated in pregnancy because they can also stimulate uterine contractions. A trained TCM practitioner will select only pregnancy-safe herbs and gentle acupuncture points. Never self-prescribe herbs when pregnant - always work with a qualified professional.
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