Threatened Miscarriage
胎漏 · tāi lòu+6 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Impending Miscarriage, Impending Pregnancy Loss, Potential Abortion, Potential Pregnancy Loss, Threatened Abortion, Potential Miscarriage
The color and feel of the spotting tell the story: dull and sinking points to Kidney weakness; bright and hot points to Heat; pale and watery points to Deficiency; dark and clotted points to Stagnation. Most women see spotting stop within one to two weeks of pattern-specific herbs and acupuncture, with ongoing support to carry the pregnancy safely past the first trimester.
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 threatened miscarriage. 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.
Threatened miscarriage isn't a single diagnosis in TCM - it's a family of five distinct patterns, each with its own root cause, its own characteristic bleeding, and its own treatment. Two are deficiency patterns (Kidney Qi not Firm, Qi and Blood Deficiency) where the body lacks the strength to hold the pregnancy securely. Two are heat or cold patterns (Heat in Uterus Blood, Kidney Yang Deficiency) where the uterine environment is disturbed by temperature imbalance. One is a stagnation pattern (Blood Stagnation) where old blood blocks the nourishment the fetus needs. Understanding which pattern you're in is the key to the right care.
Threatened miscarriage is vaginal bleeding during the first 20 weeks of pregnancy, with a closed cervix and a fetus that still has a heartbeat on ultrasound. It may be accompanied by mild cramping or backache. Diagnosis typically involves a pelvic exam, blood tests for hCG levels, and an ultrasound to check fetal viability and rule out ectopic pregnancy or complete miscarriage. Many cases resolve on their own, but it's a frightening experience that warrants close monitoring.
Conventional treatments
Conventional management focuses on observation and supportive care. This often includes pelvic rest (avoiding intercourse and strenuous activity), sometimes bed rest, and serial ultrasounds or hCG measurements. In some cases, progesterone supplementation is prescribed to support the uterine lining, especially if low progesterone is suspected. However, there is no medication that can stop a miscarriage that is already in progress.
Where conventional treatment falls short
The conventional approach offers reassurance and monitoring but has limited tools to actively prevent progression. Progesterone helps some women but doesn't address the underlying constitutional weakness, heat, or stagnation that TCM identifies as the root. The watchful-waiting model can leave women feeling helpless, without a way to actively support their pregnancy. TCM fills this gap by offering targeted treatment that aims to correct the imbalance causing the bleeding, not just manage the symptom.
How TCM understands threatened miscarriage
In TCM, the Kidneys are the foundation of reproduction. They store the essence that creates life and anchor the fetus through the Chong and Ren vessels - the two extraordinary meridians that run through the uterus. When Kidney Qi is weak or Kidney Yang is cold, these vessels lose their grip, and a little blood leaks out. This is the most common root of threatened miscarriage, often felt as dull spotting with a heavy, sinking sensation in the lower back.
「妊娠胎漏,有因房事不节,损伤肾气,致冲任不固,不能摄血养胎者,宜固肾安胎。」
"In pregnancy, threatened miscarriage can arise from intemperate sexual activity damaging the Kidney Qi, causing the Chong and Ren vessels to become unconsolidated and unable to contain blood and nourish the fetus. One should secure the Kidney and calm the fetus."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses threatened miscarriage
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by carefully asking about the bleeding itself-its color, amount, consistency, and any accompanying sensations like pain or a sinking feeling. These details are the first and strongest clues that point toward one pattern rather than another. The tongue and pulse then confirm the underlying imbalance.
If the blood is dull or darkish, and there is a persistent lower back ache with a bearing-down sensation, the pattern is likely Kidney Qi not Firm. The tongue is usually pale with a thin white coat, and the pulse feels deep, weak, and fine, especially weak at the rear position. This reflects the Kidney system’s inability to hold the fetus securely.
When the bleeding is bright red and may be sticky, accompanied by thirst, a dry mouth, and a feeling of heat, the pattern is Heat in Uterus Blood. The tongue appears red with a dry yellow coating, and the pulse is rapid and slippery. The heat disturbs the uterus and forces blood to leak out recklessly.
If the spotting is pale, thin, and scanty, and the person feels weak, pale, and may have palpitations or shortness of breath, this suggests Qi and Blood Deficiency. The tongue is pale with a thin white coat, and the pulse is thready and weak. The body simply lacks the resources to nourish and anchor the fetus.
Dark, clotted spotting with a fixed, stabbing pain in the lower abdomen points to Blood Stagnation-sometimes triggered by physical trauma. The tongue may show purple spots, and the pulse is choppy or wiry. Stagnant blood obstructs proper nourishment, causing the bleeding.
When the bleeding is dull-colored and the person feels cold, with cold limbs, frequent urination, and a deep weak pulse, the pattern is Kidney Yang Deficiency. The tongue is pale and swollen with a white coating. The warming, securing function of the Kidney is too weak to stabilize the pregnancy.
TCM Patterns for Threatened Miscarriage
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same threatened miscarriage 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 bit of yourself in more than one pattern, because patterns like Kidney Qi not Firm and Qi and Blood Deficiency often overlap-both involve weakness and a bearing-down sensation. To narrow it down, notice which feature is strongest: if the bleeding is pale and you feel utterly drained, Deficiency is more prominent; if the lower back ache and sinking are dominant, the Kidney is the main issue.
Heat and Stagnation can also mix, especially when emotional stress or inflammation creates heat that thickens the blood. Bright red bleeding with some clots might suggest a combination. A professional can detect subtle tongue and pulse signs, such as a rapid pulse with a purple tongue, to untangle these overlapping pictures.
Any bleeding during pregnancy deserves medical attention. While these patterns offer insight into your body’s balance, they are not a substitute for a proper examination. A TCM practitioner will assess your tongue and pulse, then prescribe herbs or acupuncture that are safe in pregnancy and tailored to your exact pattern.
If you experience heavy bleeding, severe pain, or pass tissue, seek emergency care immediately. For milder spotting, a TCM consultation can help you understand the root cause and work alongside your obstetrician to support a healthy pregnancy.
Kidney Qi not Firm
Heat in Uterus Blood
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Blood Stagnation
Kidney Yang Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address threatened miscarriage in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for threatened miscarriage
3 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 designed to support pregnancy by strengthening the Kidneys and stabilizing the fetus. It is primarily used for women with a history of recurrent miscarriage, threatened miscarriage with vaginal bleeding, lower back soreness, and a sensation of downward pressure in the abdomen. The formula is gentle and balanced, making it suitable for preventive use from the early months of pregnancy onward.
A classical formula from Zhang Jingyue's Jing Yue Quan Shu designed for conditions where depleted Yin leads to internal Heat that causes abnormal bleeding. It is especially used for gynecological issues such as heavy menstrual periods, prolonged bleeding, uterine bleeding, and threatened miscarriage when accompanied by signs of Heat like warm palms and soles, a red tongue, and a rapid pulse. The formula works by simultaneously cooling the Blood to control bleeding and rebuilding the body's Yin reserves to address the root cause.
A classical formula that gently promotes blood circulation and dissolves masses in the lower abdomen. Originally used for gynecological conditions caused by blood stasis, it is now widely applied for conditions like uterine fibroids, ovarian cysts, painful periods, and endometriosis. Its mild but steady action makes it suitable for long-term use.
Acute bleeding often responds within days to two weeks of daily herbs and twice-weekly acupuncture. Excess patterns like Heat or Blood Stagnation may clear faster; deficiency patterns like Kidney Qi not Firm or Qi and Blood Deficiency typically need two to four weeks to stabilize. Treatment then continues at a gentler pace through the first trimester to reinforce the pregnancy and prevent recurrence. Complete constitutional rebuilding for recurrent miscarriage may take three to six months.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the immediate goal is the same: stop the bleeding and calm the fetus. This is done by securing the Chong and Ren vessels, the two meridians most responsible for holding a pregnancy. How we secure them depends on the underlying pattern - we tonify Kidney Qi if it's weak, clear Heat if it's agitating the blood, nourish Qi and Blood if they're depleted, gently move blood if it's stagnant, or warm the uterus if it's cold. The second phase of treatment, once bleeding stops, focuses on strengthening the root to carry the pregnancy safely to term.
What to expect from treatment
Your first visit will include a detailed intake about the color, amount, and sensation of the bleeding, plus your energy, digestion, and emotional state. Your practitioner will look at your tongue and feel your pulse to confirm the pattern. You'll likely receive acupuncture immediately and leave with a custom herbal formula to take daily. Follow-up visits are usually weekly at first. Most women notice less spotting within the first week and feel physically stronger and calmer. As the pregnancy stabilizes, visits space out to every two to four weeks through the first trimester.
General dietary guidance
During a threatened miscarriage, favor warm, cooked, easily digestible foods. Think soups, stews, congee, and bone broths - they nourish without taxing the Spleen. Avoid all raw, cold, and icy foods and drinks, which can chill the uterus and worsen Kidney Yang Deficiency or Blood Stagnation. Steer clear of spicy, greasy, or deep-fried foods that can create Heat. Gentle warming spices like ginger and cinnamon are fine in moderation. Small, frequent meals are better than large ones, and staying well-hydrated with warm water or herbal teas is essential.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment for threatened miscarriage can safely run parallel to conventional care. Continue all scheduled ultrasounds, blood tests, and prenatal visits. Herbs and acupuncture do not interfere with progesterone or other prescribed medications. Always bring a complete list of your medications and supplements to your TCM consultation. If you experience any sudden increase in bleeding, severe pain, or fever, seek emergency medical care immediately - TCM is not a substitute for urgent obstetric intervention.
*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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Heavy bleeding soaking through a pad per hour — This could indicate a miscarriage in progress or other serious complication.
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Severe abdominal pain or cramping that doesn't let up — May signal an ectopic pregnancy or placental abruption.
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Passage of tissue or large clots from the vagina — This could mean the pregnancy has been lost and requires medical evaluation.
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Fever over 100.4°F (38°C) or chills — Possible infection that needs immediate antibiotic treatment.
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Dizziness, fainting, or feeling like you might pass out — Could indicate significant blood loss or shock.
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Sudden, severe shoulder pain — Rare but can be a sign of internal bleeding from an ectopic pregnancy.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Because threatened miscarriage is itself a pregnancy complication, every TCM intervention is already tailored for pregnancy. Herbs like Tu Si Zi and Sang Ji Sheng are specifically chosen for their ability to stabilize the fetus without harming the mother. Blood-moving herbs such as Chuan Xiong, which may be indicated in the Blood Stagnation pattern, are used with extreme caution and only by experienced practitioners, as they can potentially trigger stronger uterine contractions. Acupuncture points like Sanyinjiao SP-6, though effective for stopping bleeding, are needled gently and are often avoided in the first trimester unless absolutely necessary. The guiding principle is always to calm the fetus and secure the Chong and Ren vessels without disturbing the pregnancy.
Evidence & references
Systematic reviews of Chinese herbal medicine for threatened miscarriage suggest a potential benefit in reducing the rate of miscarriage, but the overall quality of evidence is limited by small sample sizes and methodological weaknesses. A 2012 Cochrane review concluded that there is insufficient evidence to recommend any specific Chinese herbal medicine, though formulas like Shou Tai Wan show promise and are widely used in clinical practice in China.
Acupuncture has also been studied for threatened miscarriage. A meta-analysis indicated that acupuncture combined with conventional treatment may improve pregnancy outcomes, but more rigorous randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm these findings. Despite these limitations, TCM remains a clinically valued approach in many integrative settings, and ongoing research continues to explore its safety and efficacy.
Key clinical studies
Cochrane systematic review evaluating the effectiveness and safety of Chinese herbal medicines for threatened miscarriage. The review included multiple small trials but found insufficient high-quality evidence to support any specific herbal intervention, highlighting the need for larger, well-designed RCTs.
Chinese herbal medicine for threatened miscarriage
Li L, Dou L, Leung PC, Wang CC. Chinese herbal medicine for threatened miscarriage. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2012, Issue 5. Art. No.: CD008510.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「凡胎漏者,皆由冲任气虚,不能摄血。」
"All cases of threatened miscarriage are due to deficiency of Qi in the Chong and Ren vessels, rendering them unable to contain the blood."
Jing Yue Quan Shu (景岳全书)
Volume on women's miscellaneous diseases, discussion of threatened miscarriage
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for threatened miscarriage.
Yes, when performed by a licensed practitioner trained in pregnancy care. Certain points that are known to stimulate uterine contractions - such as Hegu LI-4 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 - are avoided or used only with extreme caution. Your practitioner will select points specifically to calm the uterus, strengthen the Kidneys, and stop bleeding. Many women find acupuncture deeply relaxing, which itself helps reduce stress-related miscarriage risk.
Yes, under the guidance of a qualified TCM practitioner who specializes in pregnancy. The formulas used for threatened miscarriage - such as Shou Tai Wan or Bao Yin Jian - are specifically designed to be safe in pregnancy and have centuries of traditional use. Never self-prescribe herbs during pregnancy. Some herbs that move blood or are cold in nature are contraindicated. Your practitioner will select only those herbs that support and stabilize the pregnancy.
Most women see a reduction in spotting within the first three to seven days of herbal treatment and acupuncture. Complete cessation may take one to two weeks, depending on the pattern. If bleeding is due to Heat or acute Blood Stagnation, it may resolve more quickly. If it's due to deep Kidney or Qi and Blood Deficiency, it may take a little longer. Your practitioner will monitor you closely and adjust the formula if needed.
Absolutely. TCM works well alongside conventional monitoring and progesterone supplementation. There are no known negative interactions between progesterone and the herbs typically used for threatened miscarriage. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and your obstetrician about everything you are taking. If you are on blood-thinning medications (rare in pregnancy), your practitioner will avoid blood-moving herbs like Dang Gui or Chuan Xiong.
First, contact your obstetrician or midwife to rule out ectopic pregnancy or other urgent causes. Once you've been diagnosed with threatened miscarriage, you can begin TCM treatment alongside conventional monitoring. In the meantime, lie down and rest, avoid lifting anything heavy, stay hydrated with warm fluids, and try to remain calm. Stress can worsen the condition by disrupting Qi flow. Do not insert anything into the vagina until the bleeding has fully stopped and your doctor clears you.
No. The herbs and acupuncture points used for threatened miscarriage are selected precisely because they support the pregnancy and stabilize the fetus. The goal is to create a calm, warm, well-nourished environment for your baby to grow. Many women report feeling stronger, less anxious, and more connected to their pregnancy after starting TCM care.
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