Recurrent Miscarriage
滑胎 · huá tāi+8 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Frequent Spontaneous Abortion, Habitual Abortion, Habitual Miscarriage, Recurrent Pregnancy Loss, Repeated Pregnancy Loss, Habitual miscarriage (recurrent pregnancy loss), Repeated miscarriage, Recurrent early miscarriage
Recurrent miscarriage isn’t one problem with one solution. The quality of your bleeding, your energy level, and your tongue tell a TCM practitioner exactly which pattern is at play - and addressing that root can dramatically improve the chances of carrying a pregnancy to term.
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 recurrent 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.
Recurrent miscarriage (滑胎, huá tāi) is not a single condition in TCM - it’s a family of distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and treatment approach.
Where conventional medicine often focuses on structural or chromosomal factors, TCM looks deeper at the body’s holding power: the Kidney Qi that anchors a pregnancy, the Blood that nourishes it, and the channels that supply the uterus. When that holding power is weak, obstructed, or disturbed by heat, the pregnancy cannot take root. The five patterns below show how different imbalances can lead to the same heartbreaking outcome - and why treatment must be tailored to the person, not just the diagnosis.
Recurrent miscarriage is defined as two or more consecutive pregnancy losses before 20 weeks of gestation. It affects about 1-5% of couples trying to conceive.
Known causes include parental chromosomal abnormalities, uterine structural problems (such as septate uterus or fibroids), hormonal imbalances (like luteal phase defect or thyroid disorders), autoimmune conditions (antiphospholipid syndrome), and blood clotting disorders. However, in roughly 50% of cases, no clear cause is ever found, which can be deeply frustrating for couples.
Diagnosis typically involves blood tests, imaging of the uterus, and genetic testing of both partners and sometimes of the pregnancy tissue. Treatment is directed at the identified cause when possible - for example, progesterone supplementation, surgery to correct uterine anomalies, or blood thinners for clotting disorders. When no cause is found, couples are often advised to try again with close monitoring, which can feel like a leap of faith without a clear plan.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatments depend on the identified cause. Hormonal support with progesterone is common for luteal phase defects. Surgical correction may be offered for uterine septa, fibroids, or polyps. Low-dose aspirin and heparin are used for antiphospholipid syndrome. Genetic counseling and preimplantation genetic testing may be recommended for chromosomal translocations. In unexplained cases, supportive care with early pregnancy monitoring is the mainstay, sometimes alongside lifestyle modifications like stress reduction and avoiding alcohol and smoking.
Where conventional treatment falls short
For the nearly half of couples with unexplained recurrent miscarriage, conventional medicine offers few targeted therapies. Even when a cause is identified, treatments like progesterone or blood thinners do not address the underlying constitutional weakness that may have allowed the problem to develop.
The approach also rarely considers the interplay between different body systems - for example, how chronic stress, digestion, and circulation might collectively create an environment where pregnancy cannot thrive. TCM fills this gap by treating the whole person, strengthening the body’s own capacity to hold a pregnancy rather than just managing individual risk factors.
How TCM understands recurrent miscarriage
In TCM, the ability to conceive and carry a pregnancy depends above all on the Kidneys. The Kidneys store the essence (Jing) that governs reproduction and generate the Qi that holds the fetus in place. Think of this as the deep root of a plant - if the root is weak, the plant cannot stay anchored in the soil.
When Kidney Qi is deficient, the body simply lacks the holding power needed to sustain a pregnancy, and losses tend to happen early, often around the same week each time. This is the most common pattern behind recurrent miscarriage.
But the Kidneys don’t work alone. The Spleen and Stomach produce Qi and Blood from the food we eat, and that Blood is the raw material that builds the uterine lining and nourishes a growing baby. When Qi and Blood are deficient - often from poor digestion, overwork, or previous losses - the uterus becomes like soil that is too thin and depleted to support a seedling.
Women with this pattern feel exhausted and pale, and their bleeding before a loss is often light and watery rather than bright red.
The channels that deliver Qi and Blood to the uterus - the Directing and Penetrating Vessels (Chong and Ren) - play a critical role as well. If these channels become blocked by Blood Stagnation, often after surgery, endometriosis, or emotional stress, the flow of nourishment is cut off. The uterus cannot receive what it needs, and the pregnancy fails.
On the other hand, if Heat disturbs the uterus, the Blood becomes restless and prone to escaping, leading to bleeding and early loss. This Heat often arises from long-held anger, frustration, or a constitution that runs hot.
This is why one Western diagnosis of recurrent miscarriage can have several completely different TCM causes: a woman with a pale tongue, deep fatigue, and watery bleeding needs a very different treatment from one with a purple tongue, stabbing pelvic pain, and dark clotted blood. By reading the tongue, pulse, and symptom pattern, a TCM practitioner can identify which imbalance is primary and treat it at the root, often before the next pregnancy even begins.
「若怀胎三、五、七月,无故而胎自堕,至下次受孕。亦复如是。数数堕胎,则谓之滑胎。」
"If the fetus falls by itself without apparent cause at three, five, or seven months of pregnancy, and the same happens in the next pregnancy, and so on repeatedly, it is called 'slippery fetus' (habitual miscarriage)."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses recurrent miscarriage
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by listening to your pregnancy history and asking about the timing and nature of the losses. Recurrent miscarriage (滑胎) often points to a weakness in the Kidney system, which governs reproduction and holds the fetus in place. If miscarriages tend to happen around the same week each time and you feel a deep lower back ache or weakness in the knees, that strongly suggests Kidney Qi Deficiency as the root.
When the body also shows signs of poor nourishment - such as a pale face, extreme fatigue, dizziness, and a thin, weak pulse - the pattern shifts toward Qi and Blood Deficiency. The tongue here is often pale and puffy, and the bleeding before a loss may be light pink and watery rather than bright red. This picture tells the practitioner that the uterus simply lacks the materials to sustain a growing pregnancy.
If you describe dark, clotted bleeding with sharp, stabbing pelvic pain and your tongue appears purplish with distended veins underneath, Blood Stagnation in the Directing and Penetrating Vessels becomes a key suspect. This pattern often follows previous uterine procedures or endometriosis, and the pulse feels choppy or wiry. The obstruction physically blocks the blood supply the embryo needs.
Heat in Uterus Blood announces itself with a different set of clues: bright red or deep red bleeding, a sensation of internal warmth, thirst, a red tongue with a yellow coat, and a rapid, slippery pulse. A practitioner might also ask about frequent urinary tract infections or a history of sexually transmitted infections that could leave lingering Heat.
Damp-Heat in the Lower Burner adds a heavy, sticky quality - think thick yellow vaginal discharge, a foul odor, a greasy yellow tongue coating, and a feeling of pelvic fullness - pointing to a chronic inflamed environment that makes implantation difficult.
TCM Patterns for Recurrent Miscarriage
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same recurrent 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 recognize parts of yourself in more than one pattern, especially because Kidney Qi Deficiency often underlies other imbalances. For instance, a long-standing Kidney weakness can lead to poor blood production, creating a mixed picture of Kidney and Qi-Blood Deficiency. If you have both lower back soreness and extreme pallor with dizziness, the patterns are likely overlapping rather than being separate.
To gain clarity, pay attention to the quality of any bleeding or discharge before a loss. Dark, clotted blood pushes the needle toward Blood Stagnation, while bright red or foul-smelling discharge points to Heat or Damp-Heat. A pale, watery flow leans toward deficiency. Your energy level and temperature also help: feeling cold and washed out suggests deficiency, while feeling hot and restless suggests heat.
Because these patterns can coexist - for example, Blood Stagnation can generate local Heat, and Damp-Heat can damage Kidney Qi over time - self-diagnosis can be tricky. A professional will look at your tongue and feel your pulse to untangle which pattern is primary. If you have experienced two or more miscarriages, or if you notice severe pain, heavy bleeding, or a fever, please see a qualified TCM practitioner or medical doctor promptly rather than trying to self-treat.
<<Kidney Qi Deficiency
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Heat in Uterus Blood
Treatment
Four ways to address recurrent miscarriage in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for recurrent miscarriage
5 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 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.
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 cooling formula used to address conditions caused by excess heat and dampness in the Liver and Gallbladder systems. It is commonly used for red, painful eyes, headaches, ear problems, irritability, urinary difficulties, and skin conditions like shingles, particularly when accompanied by a bitter taste in the mouth, dark urine, and a feeling of heat or inflammation along the sides of the body or in the genital area.
For deficiency-based patterns like Kidney Qi Deficiency or Qi and Blood Deficiency, preconception herbal treatment and acupuncture for 3-6 months is typical to rebuild deep reserves. For excess patterns such as Blood Stagnation or Heat in the Uterus, 1-3 months of treatment before attempting pregnancy often resolves the obstruction. Once pregnant, treatment usually continues through the first trimester to support the pregnancy, with the frequency of acupuncture and herbs adjusted to the new state.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the goal of TCM treatment for recurrent miscarriage is to secure the Chong and Ren vessels and anchor the fetus. This means strengthening the body’s holding capacity while removing any factors that disrupt the uterus. For deficiency patterns, we tonify Kidney Qi, nourish Blood, and support the Spleen to build the raw materials a pregnancy needs. For excess patterns, we clear Heat, resolve Dampness, or invigorate Blood to remove the obstruction before conception.
Many women present with mixed patterns - for example, a background of Kidney Qi Deficiency combined with some Blood Stagnation from previous procedures. In these cases, the practitioner prioritizes the most pressing imbalance first, often clearing stasis or heat before focusing on deep tonification. Treatment is always adjusted to the menstrual cycle phase and to whether the woman is actively trying to conceive or already pregnant.
What to expect from treatment
Most women notice improvements in their overall energy, menstrual regularity, and basal body temperature charts within 2-3 months of consistent treatment. Acupuncture is typically done weekly, and herbs are taken daily in the form of powders, pills, or decoctions.
For deficiency patterns, the deep strengthening is gradual - you may not feel dramatically different at first, but your tongue and pulse will show subtle shifts. For excess patterns, relief from symptoms like pelvic pain or heavy clotting can come more quickly.
Once you become pregnant, treatment usually continues through the first trimester to support the pregnancy. The frequency of acupuncture may increase during the early weeks, and your herbal formula will be adjusted to a pregnancy-specific prescription. It’s important to maintain close communication with your practitioner and report any spotting, cramping, or unusual symptoms immediately.
General dietary guidance
Warm, cooked, easily digestible foods form the foundation of a miscarriage-prevention diet in TCM. Favour soups, stews, congees, and bone broths, which nourish the Spleen and Kidneys without straining digestion. Include foods that gently build Blood and essence: black sesame seeds, walnuts, goji berries, dark leafy greens, and small amounts of high-quality animal protein.
Avoid cold, raw foods and iced drinks, which can chill the uterus and weaken digestive fire. Limit spicy, greasy, and deep-fried foods, especially if you tend toward Heat signs or have a red tongue. Caffeine and alcohol should be minimized or eliminated during the preconception period.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely used alongside conventional medical care for recurrent miscarriage, and many women combine both approaches. If you are taking progesterone, blood thinners (such as aspirin or heparin), or other medications, always inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor.
Some herbs used to invigorate Blood (like Dang Gui, Chuan Xiong) may have mild anticoagulant effects and should be used cautiously with pharmaceutical blood thinners. Your TCM practitioner can adjust the formula to avoid interactions.
If you are undergoing IVF, coordinate the timing of acupuncture and herbs with your clinic’s protocol. Herbs that strongly move Blood are typically stopped before embryo transfer and replaced with formulas that support implantation. Never stop prescribed medications abruptly without consulting your doctor. TCM works best as a complementary therapy that enhances your body’s own capacity while conventional medicine addresses structural or immunological factors.
*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 vaginal bleeding soaking through a pad in an hour — May indicate hemorrhage or incomplete miscarriage - seek emergency care immediately.
-
Severe abdominal pain or cramping with dizziness or fainting — Could signal an ectopic pregnancy or miscarriage complication requiring urgent evaluation.
-
Fever and chills with pelvic pain — Possible uterine infection, which needs prompt antibiotic treatment.
-
Passing tissue larger than a golf ball — May indicate an incomplete miscarriage; medical attention is needed to prevent complications.
-
Sudden sharp shoulder pain with bleeding — A classic sign of internal bleeding from a ruptured ectopic pregnancy - call emergency services.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Because this condition is defined by pregnancy loss, TCM treatment is most effective when it begins before conception and continues through the first trimester. During pregnancy, the focus shifts to calming the fetus and securing the Chong and Ren vessels. The formula Shou Tai Wan is the cornerstone for Kidney Qi Deficiency and is widely considered safe during pregnancy.
For Qi and Blood Deficiency, Tai Shan Pan Shi San can be used, with careful monitoring. Formulas that strongly move blood, such as those containing Tao Ren or San Leng, are contraindicated in pregnancy.
Acupuncture during pregnancy for recurrent miscarriage must be performed with caution. Points traditionally used to prevent miscarriage include Shenshu BL-23, Mingmen DU-4, and Guanyuan REN-4, applied with gentle, shallow needling and no strong stimulation. SP-6 (Sanyinjiao) is generally avoided in early pregnancy because it can stimulate uterine contractions, despite its role in preconception treatment.
Moxibustion on Guanyuan REN-4 is often used to warm the uterus and strengthen Kidney Yang. All treatments should be tailored to the pattern and gestational age, ideally under the care of a TCM specialist experienced in pregnancy.
If a woman is breastfeeding while receiving TCM treatment to prepare for a subsequent pregnancy, herbal choices must consider both milk supply and infant safety. Bitter-cold herbs like Huang Qin (Scutellaria) and Huang Bai (Phellodendron), which appear in formulas for Heat in Uterus Blood such as Bao Yin Jian, can pass into breast milk and may cause loose stools or digestive upset in the nursing infant. In such cases, acupuncture and moxibustion are preferred first-line options, or the herbal formula may be adjusted to use milder, lactation-compatible alternatives.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for recurrent miscarriage is growing, with most high-quality studies focusing on the herbal formula Shou Tai Wan. A 2025 systematic review and meta-analysis of 11 randomized controlled trials found that Shou Tai Wan combined with conventional treatment significantly improved live birth rates and reduced miscarriage rates compared to conventional treatment alone. These results are promising, though the overall evidence base remains limited by small sample sizes and methodological variability across studies.
Acupuncture for recurrent miscarriage has been investigated in several trials, but results are mixed and often confounded by the difficulty of blinding. Many Chinese-language studies report positive outcomes for integrated TCM approaches, but English-language RCTs are still scarce. The evidence, while encouraging, is not yet robust enough to make definitive clinical recommendations, and larger, well-designed trials are needed to confirm the benefits of TCM in preventing recurrent pregnancy loss.
Key clinical studies
This meta-analysis evaluated 11 RCTs comparing Shou Tai Wan plus conventional therapy versus conventional therapy alone. The combination significantly improved the live birth rate and reduced the miscarriage rate, with no serious adverse events reported, suggesting Shou Tai Wan is an effective and safe adjunctive treatment for recurrent miscarriage.
Shoutai pills for treating recurrent miscarriage: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the safety and clinical efficacy in 11 randomized controlled trials
Authors not specified. Shoutai pills for treating recurrent miscarriage: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the safety and clinical efficacy in 11 randomized controlled trials. BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies, 2025.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12116662This clinical study observed the effect of modified Shou Tai Wan combined with progesterone on recurrent miscarriage. Results indicated that the herbal combination improved pregnancy outcomes and regulated immune factors such as NKG2D, providing a potential mechanism for its action.
Clinical observation on Jiawei Shoutai Wan combined with progesterone in treating recurrent miscarriage and its effect on NKG2D expression
Authors unknown. Clinical observation on Jiawei Shoutai Wan combined with progesterone in treating recurrent miscarriage and its effect on NKG2D expression. Journal of Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, year unknown.
https://xb.njucm.edu.cn/cn/article/pdf/preview/ZR2017_0511.pdfClassical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「凡妊娠之数见堕胎者,必以气脉亏损而然……而亏损之由,有禀质之素弱者,有年力之衰残者,有忧怒劳苦而因其精力者……」
"In all cases of repeated miscarriage, it must be due to deficiency of Qi and vessels... The causes of deficiency include constitutional weakness, decline due to age or overwork, and damage to essence and strength from worry, anger, or physical labor."
《景岳全书·妇人规》
Section on habitual miscarriage
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for recurrent miscarriage.
Yes, for many women, TCM treatment before and during early pregnancy significantly improves the chance of carrying to term. The key is identifying the correct pattern - whether it’s Kidney weakness, Blood deficiency, or something else - and treating it thoroughly before the next conception.
Studies on the classic formula Shou Tai Wan (used for Kidney Qi Deficiency) show it can reduce miscarriage rates when the pattern matches. However, TCM is not a guarantee; it works best when the underlying imbalance is clearly identified and addressed.
It depends on the pattern. For deficiency patterns (Kidney Qi, Qi and Blood), we usually recommend 3-6 months of daily herbs and weekly acupuncture to rebuild the body’s reserves. For excess patterns like Blood Stagnation or Heat, 1-3 months is often enough to clear the obstruction. Your practitioner will monitor your tongue, pulse, and menstrual cycle to know when your body is ready. Rushing into another pregnancy before the root imbalance is corrected increases the risk of another loss.
Yes, when prescribed by a qualified TCM practitioner who specializes in pregnancy. The formulas used to prevent miscarriage are specifically designed to be safe and gentle, and many have been used for centuries.
However, some herbs that are fine for non-pregnant women (like strong Blood movers) are avoided during pregnancy. This is why you should never self-prescribe or take over-the-counter herbal products without guidance. Always inform your practitioner as soon as you become pregnant so your formula can be adjusted if needed.
This is actually where TCM often shines. When all tests come back normal, the problem is usually a functional imbalance - a Kidney weakness, a subtle Blood deficiency, or a mild stagnation that doesn’t show up on scans or blood work. TCM diagnosis relies on the tongue, pulse, and symptom picture to detect these patterns.
Many women with unexplained recurrent miscarriage find that TCM treatment not only helps them carry a pregnancy but also improves their overall energy, menstrual regularity, and sense of well-being.
Absolutely. TCM is often used alongside IVF to improve egg quality, thicken the uterine lining, and support implantation. Acupuncture around embryo transfer is particularly common. However, it’s essential that both your TCM practitioner and your reproductive endocrinologist know about all treatments you’re receiving. Some herbs can interact with hormonal medications or blood thinners, so coordination is critical. Your TCM practitioner can adjust formulas to complement, not conflict with, your ART protocol.
Diet plays a supporting role in TCM treatment. Generally, we recommend warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest - soups, stews, congees - and avoiding cold, raw foods and icy drinks, which can weaken the Spleen and Kidneys.
Bone broths, black sesame, walnuts, and goji berries are especially nourishing for the Kidney essence. If your pattern involves Heat, you’ll also want to avoid spicy, greasy, and overly heating foods. Your practitioner will give you specific dietary guidance based on your pattern.
Before pregnancy, you might notice your menstrual cycle becoming more regular, less painful, and with healthier color and consistency. Your basal body temperature chart may show a stronger, more stable luteal phase. You’ll likely feel more energetic, warmer, and less anxious. During pregnancy, the goal is to maintain a steady, symptom-free progression - no spotting, no cramping, and a strong, calm pulse. These are all signs that the underlying imbalance is being corrected.
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