Malnutrition
疳证 · gān zhèng+3 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Nutritional Deficiency, Poor Nutrition, Undernourishment
Malnutrition is not just about what you eat-it's about what your body can absorb. TCM identifies the exact stage of digestive breakdown and treats it accordingly, often restoring appetite and weight gain within a few weeks for early patterns, while deeper patterns require months of rebuilding.
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 malnutrition. 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.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands malnutrition
In TCM, malnutrition is understood as a disorder of the Spleen and Stomach's ability to transform and transport food essence (Gu Qi). The Spleen is responsible for extracting the purest energy from what we eat and sending it upward to nourish the whole body. When the Spleen's Qi is weak-whether from improper feeding, chronic illness, or constitutional factors-this transformation fails, and the body slowly starves even if food is eaten.
As the condition deepens, undigested food can stagnate in the Stomach, generating dampness and heat. This is the stage where the belly becomes distended and foul-smelling stools appear. Over time, if the Spleen continues to fail, the body's deeper reserves of Qi and Blood are depleted, leading to the severe wasting, pallor, and developmental delays seen in advanced malnutrition. The Kidneys, which store the body's foundational Essence, may eventually be affected, causing growth retardation and bone weakness.
This is why TCM does not treat all malnutrition the same way. A child with early Spleen Qi Deficiency needs gentle tonification and dietary adjustment, while a child with Damp-Heat stagnation needs clearing and transforming herbs before tonification can begin. The same Western diagnosis of malnutrition thus unfolds into distinct patterns that require different treatment strategies.
「疳皆脾胃病,亡津液之所作也。」
"All malnutrition diseases are disorders of the Spleen and Stomach, caused by the depletion of body fluids."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses malnutrition
Inside the consultation
A practitioner begins by asking about appetite and energy. If a child eats poorly, loses weight gradually, and tires easily, the early pattern of Spleen Qi Deficiency is likely. The tongue looks pale and puffy with a thin white coat, and the pulse feels weak. This pattern reflects a digestive engine that simply lacks the strength to turn food into nourishment.
When food intake is irregular or excessive, undigested matter can sit in the stomach. The key questions then shift to bloating and stool quality. A distended belly, belching of foul air, and bulky stools with undigested bits point to Food Stagnation in the Stomach. The tongue coating becomes thick and greasy, and the pulse feels slippery, like a bead rolling under the finger.
If the stagnation persists, heat and dampness brew inside. The child becomes irritable, the belly feels hot and tight, and stools turn foul‑smelling or sticky. A yellow, greasy tongue coating and a rapid, slippery pulse confirm Damp‑Heat in the Stomach and Spleen. This middle‑stage picture shows the body struggling to clear the accumulated waste.
When malnutrition drags on, the deeper stores of Qi and Blood run dry. The child looks severely wasted, with a dull, sallow face and extreme weakness. The tongue appears pale with little coating, and the pulse is thin and feeble. This Qi and Blood Deficiency signals that the body’s reserves are exhausted, and simple dietary adjustments are no longer enough.
A different late‑stage pattern emerges when Yin fluids are consumed. The child appears withered and dry, with a parched mouth and a tongue that is red with a peeled or patchy coating. A thin, rapid pulse supports Spleen Yin Deficiency. The practitioner distinguishes this from pure Blood deficiency by the dryness and the tongue’s appearance.
In the most profound cases, the Kidney essence that fuels growth becomes depleted. The child fails to thrive, with delayed walking or talking and a frail frame. The tongue is pale and the pulse is deep and weak. This Kidney Essence Deficiency pattern tells the practitioner that the very foundation of development has been compromised and a long, restorative approach is needed.
TCM Patterns for Malnutrition
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same malnutrition 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 see a bit of yourself or your child in more than one pattern. Malnutrition is a moving process, not a fixed label. Early Spleen Qi Deficiency can easily coexist with signs of food stagnation, and a child with damp‑heat may also show some dryness. Overlap happens because the underlying digestive weakness allows several imbalances to build up at once.
To narrow things down, notice which feature dominates. If poor appetite and low energy are the main complaints, the Spleen Qi Deficiency pattern is the core. If bloating and foul‑smelling stools take center stage, then stagnation or damp‑heat is driving the picture. The tongue coating is especially helpful: a pale, thin coating leans toward deficiency, while a thick, greasy coating points to excess.
Because these patterns are subtle and the tongue and pulse require training to read, a professional diagnosis is invaluable. A TCM practitioner can feel the pulse quality, inspect the tongue, and palpate the abdomen to pinpoint the exact stage and pattern mix. This clarity is essential to choose the right foods, herbs, or acupressure points without making things worse.
If you notice rapid weight loss, persistent refusal to eat, severe lethargy, or any sign of developmental delay, seek a qualified practitioner promptly. These are not patterns to self‑treat. A trained professional can safely combine gentle tonics with clearing methods, especially in children, whose systems are sensitive and can shift quickly.
Spleen Qi Deficiency
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Spleen Yin Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address malnutrition in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for malnutrition
7 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 for treating acute digestive upsets caused by a combination of Dampness and Heat lodging in the Stomach and intestines. It addresses simultaneous vomiting and diarrhea, a feeling of fullness and stuffiness in the chest and upper abdomen, irritability, and dark scanty urine, particularly during hot and humid seasons.
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 formula that simultaneously replenishes both Qi and Blood, created by combining two famous prescriptions: Si Jun Zi Tang (for Qi) and Si Wu Tang (for Blood). It is commonly used for people who feel chronically tired, look pale or sallow, have a poor appetite, experience dizziness or heart palpitations, and feel generally run down due to dual deficiency of Qi and Blood.
A classical formula that strengthens the Spleen and nourishes the Heart to address fatigue, poor appetite, insomnia, forgetfulness, palpitations, and anxiety caused by weakness of both the Heart and Spleen. It is also widely used for bleeding disorders such as heavy or prolonged menstrual periods, easy bruising, or blood in the stool that result from the Spleen being too weak to keep blood in its proper channels.
A gentle formula designed to replenish the fluids of the Stomach when they have been depleted by heat or chronic illness. It is commonly used for dry mouth and throat, poor appetite despite feeling hungry, and a red tongue with little coating. The formula uses sweet, cooling, moistening herbs to restore the Stomach's natural lubrication and digestive function.
A classical concentrated paste formula that deeply replenishes the body's foundational vitality using tortoise shell and deer antler as its core ingredients, supported by ginseng and goji berry. It is used for people experiencing significant depletion of their core reserves, shown by symptoms like exhaustion, low back weakness, poor vision, sexual dysfunction, infertility, and premature aging. The formula is designed to nourish both the Yin (cooling, nourishing) and Yang (warming, activating) aspects of the Kidneys simultaneously.
For early-stage patterns like Spleen Qi Deficiency or Food Stagnation, improvements in appetite and energy often appear within 2-4 weeks of consistent herbal and dietary therapy. Deeper patterns such as Qi and Blood Deficiency or Kidney Essence Deficiency, where the body's reserves are severely depleted, may need 3-6 months or more of steady rebuilding before significant weight gain and growth catch-up occur.
Treatment principles
What to expect from treatment
General dietary guidance
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
*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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Severe weight loss or failure to gain weight over several weeks — This may indicate a serious underlying condition that needs immediate medical investigation.
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Signs of dehydration (dry mouth, sunken eyes, no tears when crying, decreased urination) — Dehydration can be life-threatening, especially in malnourished children.
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Lethargy, unresponsiveness, or extreme weakness — These may signal severe electrolyte imbalances or infection requiring urgent care.
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Difficulty breathing or rapid breathing — Could indicate pneumonia or heart failure, which are emergencies.
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Swelling of the feet, legs, or face — This may be a sign of severe protein deficiency (kwashiorkor) or kidney involvement.
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Fever with signs of infection — Malnourished individuals have weakened immunity; infections can progress rapidly.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Malnutrition during pregnancy is a serious concern because the Spleen must nourish both mother and fetus. The most common pattern is Spleen Qi Deficiency, often with some degree of Blood Deficiency as the pregnancy progresses. Treatment must be gentle: Shen Ling Bai Zhu San is generally safe and can strengthen the Spleen without disturbing the fetus. Avoid herbs that strongly move Qi or Blood, such as San Leng, E Zhu, or Tao Ren, as well as harsh purgatives that could trigger uterine contractions.
Acupuncture is a good option, but certain points traditionally avoided in pregnancy - such as Sanyinjiao (SP-6), Hegu (LI-4), and points on the lower abdomen like Guanyuan (REN-4) - should be used with extreme caution or omitted. Instead, focus on Zusanli (ST-36) and Zhongwan (REN-12) to gently tonify the Spleen. Small, frequent, warm meals are as important as any herb.
When a breastfeeding mother is malnourished, her Spleen Qi and Blood are depleted, which can directly reduce milk supply and quality. The treatment goal is to tonify Qi and Blood to support lactation. Ba Zhen Tang or Gui Pi Tang are often suitable, as they nourish both Spleen and Blood and are generally safe during breastfeeding. Avoid bitter-cold herbs like Huang Lian or Da Huang, which can pass into breast milk and cause infant diarrhea or colic.
Milder herbs like Dang Shen, Huang Qi, and Dang Gui are preferred. Acupuncture with points like Zusanli (ST-36) and Sanyinjiao (SP-6) can safely boost energy and milk production. As always, ensure the mother is eating enough warm, nutrient-dense foods - congee with red dates and goji berries is a classic Spleen-nourishing meal that supports both mother and baby.
Malnutrition (疳证) is classically a pediatric disorder, and children present differently from adults. The most common early pattern is Food Stagnation in the Stomach, often from overfeeding or irregular eating, which then weakens the Spleen and leads to Spleen Qi Deficiency. The child’s belly may be distended while the limbs are thin, and the tongue coating is often thick and greasy. Because children cannot always articulate their symptoms, practitioners rely heavily on observing the tongue, the smell of the breath and stool, and the child’s behavior - irritability, clinging, or lethargy.
Herbal dosages are typically one-third to one-half of the adult dose, adjusted by age and weight. Child-friendly formulas include Bao He Wan for food stagnation and Shen Ling Bai Zhu San for Spleen Qi Deficiency. Acupuncture is used sparingly, with very shallow needling and quick insertion; points like Zusanli (ST-36) and Sanyinjiao (SP-6) are often selected. Pediatric tui na massage - especially clockwise abdominal rubbing and kneading the Spleen meridian - is a gentle, effective alternative that many children tolerate well.
In the elderly, malnutrition often reflects a deep decline of both Spleen and Kidney function. The Spleen fails to extract nourishment from food, and the Kidneys lack the Essence to support tissue repair and vitality. The most common patterns are Qi and Blood Deficiency and Kidney Essence Deficiency, leading to frailty, muscle wasting, and slow recovery from illness. Unlike children, where food stagnation and damp-heat are frequent, geriatric malnutrition is almost entirely deficiency-based.
Herbal treatment should start with gentle tonics like Ba Zhen Tang or Gui Pi Tang at reduced dosages - about two-thirds of the standard adult dose - to avoid overwhelming a weak digestive system. Harsh or cold herbs are contraindicated. Acupuncture points such as Zusanli (ST-36), Qihai (REN-6), and Taixi (KI-3) can be used with mild stimulation, and moxibustion is especially beneficial for warming and strengthening the Spleen and Kidneys. Treatment timelines are slower, and progress is measured in small improvements - better appetite, a little more energy, a bit of weight gain.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM treatment of malnutrition, especially in children, has a long history in China but remains limited by Western evidence standards. Numerous Chinese-language studies, including randomized controlled trials, report that herbal formulas like Shen Ling Bai Zhu San and Bao He Wan, combined with acupuncture or pediatric tui na, significantly improve weight gain, appetite, and digestive symptoms. The clinical research review from TCM journals consistently shows positive results, with some studies reporting over 90% effective rates.
However, most of these studies are small, single-center, and lack rigorous blinding or placebo controls. Publication bias is likely. High-quality RCTs published in English-language journals are scarce. While the clinical experience is strong and the safety profile is generally favorable, more well-designed trials are needed to confirm the efficacy of TCM for malnutrition and to satisfy evidence-based medicine standards.
Key clinical studies
This review article summarizes the TCM approach to childhood malnutrition, covering pattern differentiation, commonly used herbal formulas (such as Shen Ling Bai Zhu San, Bao He Wan, and Zi Sheng Jian Pi Wan), acupuncture points (including Si Feng and Zusanli), and pediatric tui na techniques. It reports that TCM therapies consistently improve appetite, weight, and digestive symptoms, with effective rates above 90% in many studies, though it notes the need for larger, more rigorous trials.
Clinical Research Progress on TCM Treatment of Pediatric Malnutrition (中医治疗小儿疳证的临床研究进展)
Author(s) not listed. Clinical Research Progress on TCM Treatment of Pediatric Malnutrition. Traditional Chinese Medicine [journal name in Chinese]. Published online. Available at: https://pdf.hanspub.org/tcm_2272784.pdf
This clinical experience paper presents Dong's Xiao Gan Formula, a tailored herbal prescription for pediatric malnutrition due to Spleen Qi Deficiency with food accumulation. The formula includes Dang Shen, Bai Zhu, Shan Yao, and digestive herbs like Chao Gu Ya. Case reports show marked improvement in appetite, weight gain, and reduction of abdominal distention, with the formula adjusted as the child's condition shifts from excess to deficiency.
Differentiation and Treatment of Childhood Malnutrition with Dong's Xiao Gan Formula Based on the Theory 'All Malnutrition Is Due to the Spleen and Stomach' (基于“疳皆脾胃病”理论的董氏消疳方辨治小儿疳积经验)
Author(s) not listed. Differentiation and Treatment of Childhood Malnutrition with Dong's Xiao Gan Formula Based on the Theory 'All Malnutrition Is Due to the Spleen and Stomach'. Published online at biomedrxiv. Available at: https://www.biomedrxiv.org.cn/article/pdf/display/10.12201/bmr.202603.00003
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「小儿疳候,皆由乳食不节,伤于脾胃,脾胃虚弱,不能消化乳汁,停滞于内,则成疳也。」
"The symptoms of childhood malnutrition are all caused by irregular breastfeeding and eating, which injure the Spleen and Stomach. When the Spleen and Stomach become weak and cannot digest milk and food, stagnation occurs internally, and malnutrition develops."
诸病源候论 (Treatise on the Causes and Symptoms of Diseases)
Volume 47, Pediatric Malnutrition
「治疳之法,总以调理脾胃为主。」
"The method for treating malnutrition always centers on regulating the Spleen and Stomach."
幼幼集成 (A Complete Work on Pediatrics)
Chapter on Malnutrition and Accumulation
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for malnutrition.
Yes, by strengthening the Spleen and Stomach. TCM herbs and dietary therapy work to improve the body's ability to transform food into usable nourishment. When digestion improves, appetite returns, stools become more formed, and weight gain follows naturally. The approach is gradual and tailored to the child's specific pattern.
For early-stage patterns like Spleen Qi Deficiency or Food Stagnation, improvements in appetite and energy often appear within 2-4 weeks of consistent herbal and dietary therapy. Deeper patterns such as Qi and Blood Deficiency or Kidney Essence Deficiency, where the body's reserves are severely depleted, may need 3-6 months or more of steady rebuilding before significant weight gain and growth catch-up occur.
Yes, when performed by a trained pediatric TCM practitioner using very fine needles and gentle techniques. Often, acupressure or laser acupuncture is used instead for very young or weak children to avoid discomfort. Points like Zusanli (ST-36) and Sanyinjiao (SP-6) are commonly stimulated to strengthen digestion and energy.
Yes, dietary therapy is a cornerstone of TCM treatment for malnutrition. The practitioner will recommend warm, easily digested foods like congee, well-cooked vegetables, and soups, and advise avoiding raw, cold, greasy, or overly sweet foods that burden the Spleen. Small, frequent meals are preferred over large portions.
Absolutely. TCM can safely complement conventional nutritional rehabilitation. Herbal formulas and dietary therapy work to strengthen the digestive system, which may improve tolerance to therapeutic foods and reduce refeeding diarrhea. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and your pediatrician of all treatments being used.
The first signs are often increased appetite, better digestion (less bloating, firmer stools), and more stable energy. Weight gain typically follows, though in severe chronic cases it may be gradual. A child who was previously lethargic may become more active and playful as Qi and Blood are replenished.
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