Miscarriage
堕胎 · duò tāi+4 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Pregnancy Loss, Spontaneous Abortion, Threatened or Recurrent Miscarriage, Threatened miscarriage or recurrent miscarriage (in women)
Miscarriage is never just 'bad luck' in TCM - it's a signal from the body that something is out of balance. Identifying whether the root is Kidney weakness, Blood deficiency, stasis, or Heat can make the difference between repeated loss and a healthy pregnancy.
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 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.
Miscarriage is not a single event in TCM - it’s a group of distinct patterns, each with its own root cause, its own type of bleeding, and its own treatment. Rather than just managing the loss itself, TCM looks at the underlying weakness that allowed the pregnancy to slip away - whether that’s Kidney deficiency, Qi and Blood depletion, Blood stasis, or Heat agitating the Blood. Understanding your specific pattern is the first step toward healing and, when the time is right, building a stronger foundation for a healthy future pregnancy.
Miscarriage is the spontaneous loss of a pregnancy before 20 weeks, most commonly in the first trimester. It affects about 10-20% of known pregnancies, often due to chromosomal abnormalities that prevent normal development. Typical symptoms include vaginal bleeding, cramping, and the passage of tissue. Diagnosis is usually confirmed by ultrasound and falling hCG levels.
Conventional treatments
Management depends on whether the miscarriage is complete, incomplete, or threatened. Options include watchful waiting to let the body pass the tissue naturally, medication such as misoprostol to help the uterus contract, or a minor surgical procedure called dilation and curettage (D&C) to remove retained tissue. For recurrent pregnancy loss, doctors may test for underlying issues like blood clotting disorders, uterine abnormalities, or hormonal imbalances, but a clear cause is not always found.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Standard care focuses on safely managing the physical event, but it often offers limited insight into why a miscarriage happened in an otherwise healthy woman. For those who experience recurrent loss, testing may return with no clear explanation, leaving couples without a path forward. The conventional approach also rarely addresses the emotional and energetic depletion that follows. TCM fills this gap by identifying the constitutional pattern that made the pregnancy vulnerable, offering a way to heal the root imbalance and prepare the body for a future pregnancy.
How TCM understands miscarriage
In TCM, the ability to conceive and carry a pregnancy depends on the strength of the Kidneys, the abundance of Qi and Blood, and the stability of the Directing and Penetrating Vessels - the two extraordinary channels that nourish the uterus. The Kidneys store the essence that governs reproduction and anchor these vessels. When Kidney Qi is weak, the lower back aches and the body cannot hold the fetus securely. This is the most common root behind recurrent miscarriage, often described as Kidney Qi not Firm.
But the Kidneys are only one piece of the puzzle. The Spleen and Stomach produce the Qi and Blood that feed the growing baby. If they are weak - from poor diet, overwork, or chronic worry - the uterus lacks the nourishment it needs, leading to Qi and Blood Deficiency. In this pattern, bleeding tends to be pale and scant, and the whole body feels drained.
A completely different picture emerges when the Blood flow in the Directing and Penetrating Vessels becomes sluggish or blocked. This Blood Stagnation can come from past injury, endometriosis, or long-held emotional stress. The bleeding is dark and clotted, with stabbing pain, and the tongue looks purplish.
Heat can also cause miscarriage. If internal Heat - from anger, a high fever, or a diet heavy in spicy, warming foods - stirs the Blood, it becomes reckless and leaks out. The bleeding is bright red, and the woman feels hot, restless, and thirsty.
In a sudden, severe miscarriage with massive bleeding, the body can lose so much Qi that it collapses - a rare emergency pattern called Qi Collapsing. Each of these patterns explains why one Western diagnosis can have many TCM causes, and why the treatment must match the root.
「泰山磐石散,治妇人血气两虚,或肥而不实,或瘦而血热,或脾胃素弱,倦怠少食,屡有堕胎之患。」
"Tai Shan Pan Shi San treats women with both Qi and Blood deficiency, whether plump but not robust, or thin with Blood Heat, or with chronic Spleen-Stomach weakness, fatigue, poor appetite, and recurrent miscarriage."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses miscarriage
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first listens carefully to the story of the miscarriage - how many weeks along, the colour and amount of bleeding, the presence of clots, and what the pain feels like. These details, together with a look at the tongue and a reading of the pulse, begin to separate one pattern from another.
If the miscarriage is recurrent, with a dull ache in the lower back, dizziness, tinnitus, and frequent nighttime urination, the pattern is likely Kidney Qi not Firm. The tongue is pale with a thin white coating, and the pulse feels deep and frail. This is the most common underlying weakness seen in threatened and recurrent loss.
When extreme tiredness dominates, together with a pale face, scanty periods, and a thin white tongue coating with a weak thready pulse, the pattern shifts to Qi and Blood Deficiency. The bleeding tends to be pale and scant, and the whole body feels drained, as though there is not enough nourishment to hold the pregnancy.
Dark, clotted bleeding with stabbing lower abdominal pain points toward Blood Stagnation in the Directing and Penetrating Vessels. The tongue may look purplish with dark spots, and the pulse feels wiry or choppy. This pattern often follows abdominal trauma or a long history of painful periods with clots.
Bright red bleeding, a sensation of heat, dry mouth, restlessness, and a red tongue with a yellow coating signal Heat in Uterus Blood. The pulse is rapid and slippery. Here heat agitates the blood, much like a flame that makes liquid boil over, threatening the pregnancy.
In the rare acute emergency of a heavy miscarriage with sudden massive bleeding, the face turns pale, the limbs feel cold, and the pulse becomes barely perceptible. This is Qi Collapsing, where the life‑anchoring Qi can no longer hold the blood. Immediate medical care is required.
TCM Patterns for Miscarriage
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same 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 natural to see pieces of yourself in more than one pattern. Kidney weakness and Qi and Blood deficiency often overlap, because the Kidneys are the root of the body’s energy and blood. The key is to notice which feature stands out most sharply and what makes it worse.
If lower back soreness, frequent urination, and a feeling of deep constitutional weakness are most prominent, the picture leans toward Kidney Qi not Firm. If overwhelming fatigue and a washed‑out complexion are the loudest signals, then Qi and Blood Deficiency is more central. Dark clots and stabbing pain, on the other hand, strongly suggest stasis, while bright red bleeding and a hot restless feeling point to Heat.
Because miscarriage patterns can blend and shift, a professional diagnosis with tongue and pulse examination is especially valuable. A TCM practitioner can detect subtleties - for example, whether a deficiency picture also contains hidden heat or stasis - and design a formula that is safe for your unique state.
Most importantly, any heavy or sudden bleeding, fainting, or severe pain is an emergency. Do not wait or self‑treat. Seek immediate Western and TCM care. For recurrent loss or a threatened miscarriage, always work with a qualified practitioner to protect your health and future pregnancies.
Kidney Qi not Firm
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Heat in Uterus Blood
Treatment
Four ways to address miscarriage in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for miscarriage
4 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 designed to support pregnancy by strengthening the body's Qi and Blood. It is traditionally used for women with a history of recurrent miscarriage or threatened miscarriage caused by constitutional weakness, fatigue, poor appetite, and a pale complexion. The formula's name evokes Mount Tai, one of China's most revered mountains, symbolizing the rock-solid stability it aims to bring to pregnancy.
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 powerful emergency formula containing just two herbs, Ginseng and Aconite, used to rescue someone from a state of severe collapse where the body's Yang (warming, animating force) and Qi are critically depleted. It is indicated for life-threatening situations such as shock, heart failure, or massive blood loss, where the person is ice-cold, drenched in cold sweat, and barely breathing with a nearly imperceptible pulse.
After a miscarriage, the immediate focus is on recovery and clearing any retained tissue, which may take one to two menstrual cycles. For preventing future loss, treatment typically continues for 3-6 months before trying to conceive again, allowing time to rebuild Kidney Qi and replenish Blood. Deficiency patterns like Kidney Qi not Firm and Qi and Blood Deficiency need the longest preparation; excess patterns such as Blood Stagnation or Heat often respond more quickly, but still require a few months to clear completely.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the common thread is to stabilize the Directing and Penetrating Vessels, stop bleeding if it is active, and address the root imbalance that allowed the miscarriage to happen. In the immediate aftermath, treatment may focus on gently clearing any retained products and then replenishing Qi and Blood. For future pregnancy prevention, the emphasis shifts to fortifying the Kidneys and Spleen to hold the fetus securely.
Pattern-specific treatment varies widely. Kidney Qi not Firm calls for deep tonification with herbs and points that anchor the essence. Qi and Blood Deficiency requires nourishing formulas that build the raw materials of pregnancy. Blood Stagnation needs herbs to move blood and dissolve stasis, while Heat patterns demand cooling and calming of the Blood.
In the rare event of Qi Collapse, the priority is to rescue Qi and stop the bleeding immediately. A skilled practitioner will adjust the formula as your body shifts through recovery.
What to expect from treatment
For acute recovery after a miscarriage, herbal formulas can help the uterus contract and cleanse itself, often reducing bleeding and discomfort within days. If you are preparing for a future pregnancy, expect weekly acupuncture sessions and daily herbs for several months. Most women notice improvements in energy, cycle regularity, and a sense of warmth within the first 4-6 weeks. Deficiency patterns like Kidney Qi not Firm require patience - rebuilding deep constitutional strength takes time, and the full benefit may not be felt until 3-6 months of consistent treatment.
General dietary guidance
After a miscarriage, the body needs gentle, nourishing warmth. Favor warm, cooked foods like congee, soups, stews, bone broth, and steamed vegetables. Eggs, small amounts of high-quality meat, and dark leafy greens help rebuild Blood. Kidney-nourishing foods such as black beans, walnuts, and goji berries are especially helpful. Avoid cold, raw, and iced foods and drinks, which can shock the Spleen and slow recovery. Steer clear of spicy, greasy, and overly rich foods that can create Heat or stagnation. A warm, simple diet gives your body the best foundation to heal.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely integrated with standard medical care. If your doctor prescribes medication like misoprostol or recommends a D&C, herbs can support your recovery afterward - but always tell your TCM practitioner about any drugs or procedures. If you are taking medications for underlying conditions such as thyroid disorders or blood clotting, bring the full list to your TCM consultation. There are no known severe interactions, but open communication between your TCM practitioner and your Western doctor ensures the safest, most coordinated care.
*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
-
Heavy bleeding soaking through a pad in an hour or less — This could indicate hemorrhage and requires immediate medical attention.
-
Severe, unrelenting abdominal or pelvic pain — Pain that is not relieved by rest or that feels sharp and localized could signal an ectopic pregnancy or infection.
-
Fever, chills, or foul-smelling vaginal discharge — These are signs of a possible uterine infection that needs antibiotic treatment.
-
Fainting, dizziness, or a feeling of cold and clamminess — These may indicate significant blood loss and shock; seek emergency care.
-
Passing large clots or tissue accompanied by sudden, sharp pain — This could be a sign of an incomplete miscarriage or other complication.
-
Any bleeding with a known or suspected ectopic pregnancy — Ectopic pregnancy is a medical emergency - go to the emergency room immediately.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM in miscarriage management is growing but remains limited by small sample sizes and methodological issues. A 2024 review published in Frontiers in Pharmacology summarized the mechanisms of Shou Tai Wan, a classical formula for recurrent spontaneous abortion, demonstrating its effects on endometrial receptivity, immune modulation, and angiogenesis. Multiple Chinese-language RCTs suggest that combining TCM with conventional progesterone therapy improves live birth rates and reduces miscarriage recurrence.
Acupuncture for threatened miscarriage has been studied in several small trials, with meta-analyses indicating a potential benefit in reducing anxiety and stabilizing early pregnancy when used alongside standard care. However, high-quality, multi-center RCTs are still needed. The safety of herbal medicine during pregnancy is a critical concern, and all TCM treatment for miscarriage should be supervised by a qualified practitioner who understands both the herbs' effects and their contraindications.
Key clinical studies
This review article summarizes the pharmacological mechanisms of Shou Tai Wan, a classical Chinese herbal formula for recurrent miscarriage, focusing on its effects on endometrial decidualization, immune tolerance, and angiogenesis. It provides a modern scientific basis for its traditional use in preventing pregnancy loss due to Kidney deficiency.
The mechanism of Shoutai Wan in the treatment of recurrent spontaneous abortion - A review
Liu Y, et al. The mechanism of Shoutai Wan in the treatment of recurrent spontaneous abortion - A review. Front Pharmacol. 2024;15:1404566.
10.3389/fphar.2024.1404566This meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials evaluated the effectiveness of Chinese herbal medicine for threatened miscarriage. The results indicated that combining herbal medicine with conventional treatment significantly improved the continuation of pregnancy compared to conventional treatment alone, though the quality of included trials was moderate.
Chinese Herbal Medicine for Threatened Miscarriage: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Li L, et al. Chinese Herbal Medicine for Threatened Miscarriage: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med. 2015;2015:856293.
10.1155/2015/856293Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「寿胎丸,治滑胎。」
"Shou Tai Wan treats habitual miscarriage."
Yi Xue Zhong Zhong Can Xi Lu (医学衷中参西录)
Volume on Women's Diseases
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for miscarriage.
Yes, when the treatment is matched to your specific TCM pattern. By strengthening the Kidneys, building Qi and Blood, or clearing Heat and stasis before conception, TCM aims to create a stable environment where a pregnancy can take root and hold. Many women with a history of recurrent loss go on to carry to term after consistent treatment for several months.
Absolutely, when prescribed by a qualified TCM practitioner who knows your full history. Post-miscarriage formulas are designed to gently stop bleeding, clear any retained tissue, and then replenish what was lost. Never self-prescribe, as some herbs are contraindicated in certain patterns - professional guidance is essential.
TCM typically recommends waiting until your menstrual cycles are regular, your energy is back, and your body feels strong - often 3 to 6 months. This gives you time for herbs and acupuncture to rebuild your reserves. Your practitioner will monitor your tongue, pulse, and symptoms to let you know when your body is truly ready.
Focus on warm, cooked, easily digestible foods that nourish Qi and Blood. Think congee, bone broth, soups with root vegetables, eggs, and a little ginger. Dark leafy greens, red dates, and goji berries are especially good for Blood. Avoid cold, raw, and greasy foods, as well as alcohol and caffeine, which can weaken the Spleen and slow recovery.
Yes. In TCM, emotional health is inseparable from physical health. Grief, sadness, and anxiety can stagnate Liver Qi and weaken the Spleen, making it harder to recover. Acupuncture and herbal formulas often include points and herbs that calm the spirit, and your practitioner will support you holistically through the healing process.
Your TCM practitioner will look for regular, painless periods with no spotting; a return of normal energy and a healthy complexion; warm hands and feet; and a tongue and pulse that show your Qi and Blood are full and your Kidneys are strong. Feeling emotionally settled and sleeping well are also positive signs.
Yes. Many Western diagnoses overlap with TCM patterns - for example, PCOS often involves Kidney deficiency and Phlegm-Dampness, while endometriosis is frequently linked to Blood Stagnation. By treating the root pattern with herbs, acupuncture, and diet, TCM works to correct the underlying imbalance that made the pregnancy vulnerable, regardless of the Western label.
Continue exploring
Where to go next from here.
Bring this to a practitioner
Use Save / Print at the top to take your quiz results and matched patterns into a TCM consultation.
Browse all conditions
Search the full TCM condition library by symptom, body region, or pattern.
See all conditionsVisit our store
Quality-controlled herbs and formulas that match what you've read about above.
Shop herbs & formulas