Blocked Fallopian Tubes
输卵管阻塞 · shū luǎn guǎn zǔ sè+6 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Fallopian Tube Obstruction, Fallopian Tube Occlusion, Hydrosalpinx, Infertility Due To Tubal Factor, Tubal Occlusion, Tubal obstructive infertility
Your pain pattern, discharge, and even your emotional state are not just side effects - they are the map to your specific blockage. Most women who commit to a tailored TCM plan see measurable improvements in pelvic inflammation and pain within three cycles, and many go on to conceive naturally or with IVF support.
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 blocked fallopian tubes. 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.
In Western medicine, blocked fallopian tubes are a common cause of female infertility, accounting for up to 35% of cases. The tubes may be blocked by scar tissue, pelvic adhesions, or a fluid-filled swelling called a hydrosalpinx, often resulting from pelvic inflammatory disease, endometriosis, or previous abdominal surgery. Many women have no symptoms other than difficulty conceiving, though some experience chronic pelvic pain or unusual discharge.
Diagnosis is typically made through a hysterosalpingogram (HSG), an X-ray with dye that shows whether the tubes are open, or through laparoscopy, a surgical camera. The blockage prevents the egg and sperm from meeting, or stops a fertilized egg from reaching the uterus.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands blocked fallopian tubes
In Traditional Chinese Medicine, a blocked fallopian tube is never just a physical obstruction - it is a sign that the smooth flow of Qi and Blood through the lower abdomen has stalled. The fallopian tubes belong to the network of the Chong and Ren channels, the most important energy pathways for fertility. When these channels become congested, eggs cannot travel, and conception is blocked. The job of a TCM practitioner is to find out why the flow stopped.
The most common culprit is a disturbance in the Liver. The Liver is responsible for keeping Qi moving freely throughout the body, especially in the pelvic basin. Emotional stress, frustration, or long-held anger can cause Liver Qi to stagnate. Because Qi leads Blood, stagnant Qi eventually causes Blood to congeal, forming the clots and stabbing pains of Blood Stasis that physically block the tubes. This is why many women notice their symptoms worsen during stressful times.
In other cases, the blockage begins with Dampness and Heat settling in the lower burner. This pattern often follows a pelvic infection or a diet rich in greasy, spicy foods. The combination creates a sticky, inflamed environment - think of it as a thick, hot sludge that congests the delicate tubal passages. Yellow-green discharge, a heavy dragging sensation, and a bitter taste in the mouth are classic signs that Heat and Dampness are the root cause, not just a structural problem.
Finally, the Kidneys supply the foundational warmth that keeps Blood flowing. When Kidney Yang is weak, the lower abdomen grows cold, and Blood slows like a river in winter. This cold stagnation gradually blocks the tubes, often accompanied by deep fatigue, a sore lower back, and a feeling of cold. In every pattern, Blood Stasis is the final common pathway - but the treatment must address the underlying trigger, whether it is stress, infection, or deficiency.
「寒冰之地,不生草木;重阴之渊,不长鱼龙。今胞胎既寒,何能受孕?」
"In a land of ice and cold, no plants can grow; in a deep pool of heavy yin, no fish or dragons can live. If the uterus is cold, how can conception occur?"
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses blocked fallopian tubes
Inside the consultation
In Qi and Blood Stagnation, the pain is distending and may shift, often linked to emotional stress. You might experience premenstrual breast tenderness, irregular cycles, and dark menstrual blood with clots. The tongue looks purplish with possible stasis spots, and the pulse feels wiry-like a taut guitar string-indicating that the liver’s energy is stuck and blood flow is sluggish.
Damp-Heat in the Lower Burner usually follows a history of pelvic infection. Look for yellow-green, thick vaginal discharge, a bitter taste in the mouth, and a heavy or burning sensation in the lower abdomen. The tongue is red with a greasy yellow coating, and the pulse is slippery and rapid. These signs reveal an inflammatory, damp environment that thickens fluids and physically obstructs the fallopian tubes.
When Blood Stagnation dominates, the hallmark is a fixed, stabbing pain in the lower abdomen that does not move. Menstrual blood is very dark with large clots. The tongue shows distinct purple spots or a dusky color, and the pulse feels choppy or rough. This pattern reflects the core pathology of tubal blockage-sticky, congealed blood that has accumulated in the reproductive tract over time.
Kidney Yang Deficiency produces a different picture: a dull, cold ache in the lower back and abdomen, frequent urination, and a preference for warmth. The tongue is pale and puffy with tooth marks on the sides, and the pulse is deep and weak. Here, the body’s warming fire is too low to keep blood moving, so cold congeals the flow and leads to stagnation without the heat or distension seen in other patterns.
TCM Patterns for Blocked Fallopian Tubes
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same blocked fallopian tubes 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 yourself in more than one of these patterns. Blood stasis is the thread that runs through all tubal blockages, but the underlying trigger-stress, infection, cold, or deficiency-can blend together. For example, a person with Qi stagnation can later develop damp-heat if an infection sets in, or long-standing damp-heat can injure kidney yang over time.
To find your dominant pattern, focus on the one or two symptoms that are most pronounced. If yellow-green discharge and a bitter taste are your main complaints, damp-heat likely leads. If emotional stress and breast distension dominate, Qi and Blood Stagnation takes priority. A feeling of cold and a sore back points to Kidney Yang Deficiency, while fixed, stabbing pain alone suggests pure Blood Stagnation.
Because these patterns overlap and can shift, a professional diagnosis using tongue and pulse examination is invaluable. A trained practitioner can detect subtle imbalances that are easy to miss on your own and will tailor herbal formulas and acupuncture points to your unique combination. Never self-prescribe herbs, especially if you are trying to conceive.
Seek a qualified TCM practitioner if your symptoms are severe, if you have a fever or acute pelvic pain, or if you have been diagnosed with blocked fallopian tubes and are planning pregnancy. Tubal obstruction can sometimes be a surgical emergency, so always work alongside your Western medical doctor as well.
Qi And Blood Stagnation
Blood Stagnation
Kidney Yang Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address blocked fallopian tubes in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for blocked fallopian tubes
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 for fixed abdominal pain, masses, or bloating caused by blood stasis and Qi stagnation below the diaphragm. It works by vigorously moving stagnant blood while also promoting the smooth flow of Qi in the abdomen and flanks, and is commonly used for conditions such as liver enlargement, uterine fibroids, endometriosis, and chronic pelvic pain.
A classical formula designed to warm the lower abdomen, improve Blood circulation, and relieve pain. It is particularly well suited for women experiencing menstrual cramps, irregular periods, or fertility difficulties linked to Cold and Blood stasis in the pelvic area. The formula combines warming herbs with Blood-moving herbs to address both the underlying Cold and the resulting stagnation.
A classical four-herb formula used to clear heat and dampness from the lower body. It is commonly applied for hot, swollen, painful joints (especially in the knees and feet), lower limb weakness, and conditions like gout and eczema that involve a combination of inflammation and heavy, waterlogged tissue. The formula works by cooling inflammation, drying excess moisture, strengthening digestion to stop dampness at its source, and directing the formula's effects downward to the legs and lower body.
A classical formula that both nourishes and invigorates the Blood, used to address menstrual irregularities, period pain, and other conditions caused by Blood stagnation combined with Blood deficiency. It builds on the famous Si Wu Tang (Four-Substance Decoction) by adding Peach Kernel and Safflower to strengthen its ability to move stagnant Blood and promote healthy circulation.
A classical warming and tonifying formula designed to restore Kidney Yang, the body's foundational warmth and vitality. It is commonly used for people experiencing deep fatigue, persistent cold sensations, lower back weakness, reduced sexual function, or frequent urination due to depletion of the Kidney's warming capacity. The formula combines Yang-warming herbs with nourishing substances to rebuild vitality from within, following the principle that Yang is best restored by providing it with a nourishing Yin foundation.
Most women begin with a commitment of three to six months of weekly acupuncture and daily customized herbs. Excess patterns like Damp-Heat often show a reduction in discharge and pain within the first two months, with tubal patency sometimes improving by month three. Deficiency patterns, especially those involving Kidney Yang, require a longer runway - typically four to six months - to rebuild warmth and resolve deep-seated stasis. A follow-up HSG is usually recommended after three to six months to assess changes.
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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Sudden, severe lower abdominal pain — Could indicate a ruptured ectopic pregnancy or ovarian torsion.
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Fever with pelvic pain and foul discharge — Signs of a serious pelvic infection or abscess that needs immediate antibiotics.
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Heavy vaginal bleeding with dizziness or fainting — May signal a miscarriage or hemorrhagic ovarian cyst.
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Positive pregnancy test with sharp one-sided pain — Could be an ectopic pregnancy, which is a medical emergency.
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Inability to urinate or severe bloating with pain — Possible complication from an ovarian cyst or infection.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Once pregnancy is achieved, the treatment focus shifts from unblocking tubes to stabilizing the pregnancy. All blood-invigorating and stasis-breaking herbs like Tao Ren (Semen Persicae), Hong Hua (Flos Carthami), San Leng (Rhizoma Sparganii), and E Zhu (Rhizoma Curcumae) are strictly contraindicated due to their potential to cause miscarriage. Formulas such as Shao Fu Zhu Yu Tang and Ge Xia Zhu Yu Tang must be discontinued.
Gentle formulas like Shou Tai Wan or Tai Shan Pan Shi San may be used to support Qi and Blood and prevent miscarriage. Acupuncture points like Sanyinjiao SP-6 and Hegu LI-4, which strongly move Qi and Blood, should be avoided in early pregnancy. Moxibustion on Guanyuan REN-4 and Shenshu BL-23 can safely warm the uterus if Kidney Yang Deficiency was the underlying pattern.
During breastfeeding, the primary concern is the safety of herbs passing into breast milk. Strong blood-moving herbs like Hong Hua and Tao Ren should be used with caution, as they may affect the infant's digestion or cause mild diarrhoea. If treatment for residual tubal blockage or pelvic pain is needed, milder herbs such as Dang Gui (Radix Angelicae Sinensis, in small doses) and Chuan Xiong (Rhizoma Chuanxiong) can be considered under professional guidance.
Acupuncture is generally safe and can be a preferred modality. The treatment principle may shift slightly to include more Blood and Qi nourishing herbs to support milk production, especially if the mother shows signs of deficiency.
In postmenopausal women, blocked fallopian tubes are no longer a fertility concern but can still cause chronic pelvic pain or hydrosalpinx. The TCM pattern often shifts towards more deficiency-Kidney Yang Deficiency and Blood Stagnation due to aging. Treatment focuses on pain relief and managing inflammation rather than unblocking tubes.
Herb dosages may be reduced, and strong blood-moving formulas like Shao Fu Zhu Yu Tang should be used cautiously to avoid depleting Qi and Blood. Gentle warming formulas like You Gui Wan modified with mild blood-moving herbs are more appropriate. Acupuncture and moxibustion are well-tolerated and can provide significant relief.
Evidence & references
The evidence for TCM treatment of tubal blockage infertility is moderate, consisting mainly of Chinese-language randomized controlled trials and systematic reviews. A 2017 meta-analysis of Chinese herbal medicine combined with conventional therapy showed significantly higher pregnancy rates and tubal patency compared to conventional treatment alone. Acupuncture, especially when combined with herbs, has also demonstrated improved blood flow to the pelvic region and reduced inflammation.
However, many studies suffer from methodological limitations, including small sample sizes and lack of blinding. High-quality, multi-center RCTs published in English are still scarce. The available data suggest that TCM offers a promising adjunctive approach, particularly for mild to moderate tubal blockage, but more rigorous research is needed to establish definitive efficacy.
Key clinical studies
This meta-analysis of 15 RCTs found that Chinese herbal medicine combined with conventional therapy significantly improved pregnancy rates (RR 1.32, 95% CI 1.15-1.52) and tubal patency compared to conventional therapy alone, with no serious adverse events reported.
Chinese herbal medicine for tubal infertility: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Li X, et al. Chinese herbal medicine for tubal infertility: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Tradit Chin Med. 2017;37(4):456-465.
In this trial of 120 women, the group receiving acupuncture plus oral herbs showed a tubal patency rate of 45% after 3 months, compared to 25% in the control group receiving conventional antibiotics and anti-inflammatory drugs, suggesting a significant benefit of integrated TCM therapy.
Acupuncture combined with Chinese herbs for fallopian tube obstruction: a randomized controlled trial
Zhang Y, et al. Acupuncture combined with Chinese herbs for fallopian tube obstruction: a randomized controlled trial. Chin Acupunct Moxibustion. 2015;35(8):791-795.
This prospective study evaluated 60 patients with hydrosalpinx treated with Shao Fu Zhu Yu Tang for 6 months. Tubal patency improved in 60% of cases, and serum levels of TNF-α and IL-6 decreased significantly, indicating an anti-inflammatory mechanism of the formula.
Effect of Shao Fu Zhu Yu Tang on tubal patency and inflammatory cytokines in patients with hydrosalpinx
Wang M, et al. Effect of Shao Fu Zhu Yu Tang on tubal patency and inflammatory cytokines in patients with hydrosalpinx. Chin J Integr Tradit West Med. 2019;39(5):567-571.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「妇人少腹满如敦状,小便微难而不渴,生后者,此为水与血俱结在血室也。」
"A woman's lower abdomen is full and firm like a bowl, with slight difficulty urinating but no thirst; after childbirth, this is water and blood binding together in the blood chamber."
Jin Gui Yao Lue
Chapter 22: Diseases of Women
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for blocked fallopian tubes.
Yes, in many cases. TCM does not physically scrape out a tube the way surgery does, but it works to resolve the inflammation, adhesions, and sluggish blood flow that cause the blockage. Studies and clinical experience show that a combination of acupuncture, herbs, and sometimes moxibustion can improve tubal patency, especially when the blockage is mild to moderate and not a complete surgical occlusion. Success depends on the pattern and severity, which is why a proper diagnosis is essential.
Most women notice improvements in their pelvic pain, menstrual cycle, and discharge within one to three months. Changes in tubal patency, confirmed by an HSG, typically take three to six months of consistent treatment. Excess patterns tend to respond faster; deficiency patterns like Kidney Yang Deficiency require more time to rebuild the body's reserves. Your practitioner will monitor your symptoms and may recommend a repeat imaging study after several months.
Absolutely, and this is a very common combination. Acupuncture and herbs can improve ovarian function, uterine lining, and pelvic blood flow, which may increase IVF success rates. Many women use TCM for several months before an IVF cycle to optimize their body. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and your reproductive endocrinologist about all treatments; some blood-moving herbs may need to be paused around egg retrieval or embryo transfer to avoid any theoretical risk of bleeding.
TCM aims to correct the underlying imbalance that caused the blockage, not just open the tube temporarily. By resolving chronic inflammation, draining Dampness, or warming a cold uterus, the goal is lasting change. However, if the root cause - such as repeated infections, high stress, or a poor diet - returns, blockages can re-form. Your practitioner will often recommend maintenance treatments and lifestyle adjustments to protect your fertility long-term.
Warm, cooked foods are the foundation. Avoid icy drinks, raw salads, and cold smoothies, which can congeal blood flow in the pelvis. Favor gentle blood-moving spices like turmeric, ginger, and cinnamon. If you have Damp-Heat, reduce greasy, fried, and sugary foods that create more internal sludge. Your practitioner will give you specific dietary advice based on your pattern, but the rule of thumb is to keep your lower abdomen warm and your food easy to digest.
Most people feel only a tiny prick or a dull ache when the needles are inserted, especially around the lower abdomen and ankles. Many find the sessions deeply relaxing. The needles are hair-thin and nothing like a hypodermic needle. If you are sensitive, your practitioner can use fewer points or gentler stimulation. Moxibustion, a warming therapy often used for blocked tubes, feels comfortable and soothing.
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