Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding
吐血 · tù xuè+5 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Bleeding In The Upper Digestive System, Upper Digestive Tract Bleeding, Upper Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage, Upper Gi Bleeding, Upper GI Tract Bleeding
The color of the blood and your energy level tell the real story: bright red with heat and anger points to a fire pattern, while pale and thin with exhaustion signals a deficiency. Most acute cases respond quickly to herbs that cool the blood and stop bleeding, but lasting freedom comes from treating the root cause - calming the Liver, strengthening the Spleen, or nourishing depleted Yin.
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 upper gastrointestinal bleeding. 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.
Vomiting blood - what doctors call hematemesis - is a frightening symptom that demands immediate attention. In Traditional Chinese Medicine, it's not a single disease but a sign that the body's internal balance has been disrupted in one of several distinct ways. The color, volume, and accompanying sensations all point to a specific pattern, each with its own root cause and treatment strategy. Rather than simply stopping the bleeding, TCM seeks to identify and correct the underlying imbalance so the bleeding doesn't return.
Upper gastrointestinal bleeding refers to bleeding that originates from the esophagus, stomach, or duodenum. It is a medical emergency that can present as vomiting bright red blood, dark 'coffee-ground' material, or passing black, tarry stools. Causes include peptic ulcers, gastritis, esophageal varices, and Mallory-Weiss tears. Prompt diagnosis and treatment are essential to prevent shock and other complications.
Conventional treatments
Emergency care focuses on stabilizing the patient with intravenous fluids and blood transfusions if needed. Medications such as proton pump inhibitors are given to reduce stomach acid and promote clot formation. Endoscopy is both diagnostic and therapeutic - it can inject medications, apply clips, or cauterize the bleeding vessel. In severe or recurrent cases, interventional radiology or surgery may be required. Long-term management targets the underlying cause, such as antibiotics for H. pylori or acid-suppressing drugs.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While conventional care is life-saving in acute bleeding, it often treats the local lesion without addressing the systemic factors that made the vessels vulnerable in the first place. A patient may heal one ulcer only to develop another. Medications that reduce stomach acid can cause nutrient malabsorption and rebound hyperacidity when stopped.
This approach does not differentiate between a stressed, angry individual whose Liver Fire scorches the stomach and a depleted, overworked person whose Spleen can no longer hold blood - two people whose bleeding stems from entirely different internal climates and who may benefit from fundamentally different long-term strategies.
How TCM understands upper gastrointestinal bleeding
TCM sees vomiting blood as a rebellion of Stomach Qi - the normal downward movement of the digestive tract reverses, and blood follows the upward surge. The Stomach is the central pivot, but it rarely acts alone. Heat is the most common culprit: either direct Stomach Fire from spicy food and alcohol, or Liver Fire that rages upward after emotional frustration and invades the Stomach, scorching its blood vessels.
In both cases, the heat acts like a fire that boils over, forcing blood out of its channels.
But not all bleeding is driven by heat. Sometimes the blood simply leaks out because the container is too weak. The Spleen is responsible for holding blood inside the vessels, and when Spleen Qi is depleted - from overwork, chronic illness, or poor diet - it can no longer contain it. This produces a pale, thin bleeding with profound fatigue. Another deficiency pattern arises when the body's cooling Yin fluids are exhausted, creating a false, empty heat that flares up and damages the stomach lining, causing scanty bright-red bleeding with night sweats and a dry mouth.
Even the quality of the blood itself matters. Chronic stagnation can make the vessels brittle, leading to dark, clotted blood that pools in the stomach before being vomited. This is a pattern of Stomach Blood Stagnation, where the blood doesn't flow smoothly and instead congeals and leaks. So the same symptom - vomiting blood - can be caused by a raging fire, a weak container, a dry internal climate, or sluggish circulation. Each requires a different treatment, which is why TCM practitioners pay close attention to the color of the blood, the pain, the thirst, and the emotional state before deciding on a strategy.
「心下痞,按之濡,其脈關上浮者,大黃黃連瀉心湯主之。」
"When there is epigastric stuffiness that feels soft on pressure and the pulse is floating at the bar position, Da Huang Huang Lian Xie Xin Tang governs. This pattern often underlies bleeding due to heat accumulation in the stomach."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses upper gastrointestinal bleeding
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by carefully observing the blood itself-its color, volume, and consistency-and asking about any pain, thirst, emotional state, and energy levels. These clues point toward the underlying imbalance driving the bleeding.
If the blood is bright red or dark purple, with a burning pain in the stomach, intense thirst, bad breath, and constipation, the pattern is likely Stomach Fire. The tongue will be red with a thick yellow coating, and the pulse will feel rapid and slippery. This points to excessive heat forcing blood upward.
When the blood is dark or fresh red and comes with sharp pain under the ribs, a bitter taste in the mouth, and a short temper, Liver Fire attacking the Stomach is suspected. The tongue is red with a yellow coat, and the pulse is wiry and rapid, reflecting the upward surge of angry heat.
If the vomiting is recurrent, the blood pale and thin, and the person feels exhausted, with a pale face and weak limbs, the root is Spleen not controlling Blood. The tongue is pale with a thin white coat, and the pulse is weak and thready. This is a deficiency pattern where the Spleen lacks the strength to hold blood in the vessels.
Scanty, bright-red blood accompanied by a sensation of heat in the palms, soles, and chest, night sweats, and a dry mouth suggests Empty-Heat from Yin Deficiency. The tongue is red with little or no coating, and the pulse is thready and rapid. This is a deeper, chronic imbalance where the body's cooling fluids are depleted.
Dark, clotted blood with a fixed, stabbing pain in the stomach area points to Stomach Blood Stagnation. The tongue may be purplish with dark spots, and the pulse feels choppy. This pattern indicates that blood has been pooling and congealing in the stomach vessels for some time.
TCM Patterns for Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same upper gastrointestinal bleeding 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 not unusual to recognize yourself in more than one pattern. For example, someone with a fiery temper and bitter taste (Liver Fire) may also have a burning stomach and constipation (Stomach Fire). These heat patterns often overlap, and a practitioner will look for the dominant influence.
To help distinguish, pay close attention to the color of the blood and your overall energy. Bright red blood with heat signs suggests a fire pattern, while pale, thin blood with exhaustion points to a deficiency. If you feel more tired than usual and the bleeding is recurrent, Spleen deficiency is likely at play.
Because vomiting blood can be a sign of a serious condition, any instance warrants professional evaluation. If the bleeding is heavy, you feel faint, or you notice black, tarry stools, seek emergency care immediately. A TCM practitioner can use tongue and pulse diagnosis to pinpoint the exact pattern and prescribe a safe, tailored treatment.
Stomach Fire (Stomach Heat)
Liver Fire Blazing
Spleen not controlling Blood
Empty-Heat caused by Yin Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address upper gastrointestinal bleeding in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for upper gastrointestinal bleeding
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A powerful three-herb formula used to clear intense internal Heat from all three Burners of the body. It is classically used for bleeding caused by Heat forcing the Blood out of its vessels (such as nosebleeds or vomiting blood), as well as for conditions like mouth sores, red swollen eyes, irritability, and constipation driven by excess Fire.
A classical emergency formula for stopping acute bleeding caused by excessive Heat in the Blood. It is used when someone experiences sudden, forceful bleeding from the upper body, such as vomiting blood, coughing up blood, or nosebleeds, with bright red blood. All ten herbs are charred to ash to enhance their ability to stop bleeding while also cooling the Blood and clearing Heat. This is a short-term, symptom-focused formula and is not intended for long-term use.
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.
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 classical formula that clears excess heat from the Stomach while nourishing Kidney Yin. It is commonly used for toothache, bleeding gums, headache, thirst, and other symptoms arising when Stomach fire burns upward and Kidney fluids are depleted. Often applied in modern practice for periodontitis, mouth ulcers, and diabetes with this underlying pattern.
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.
In acute bleeding, TCM herbal formulas can help stop bleeding within days when used alongside conventional emergency care. For chronic or recurrent bleeding, the underlying pattern treatment typically takes 4-8 weeks to show meaningful improvement, with deficiency patterns like Spleen not controlling Blood often requiring 3-6 months of consistent herbal therapy and dietary changes to rebuild the body's reserves and prevent relapse.
Treatment principles
All TCM treatment for vomiting blood begins with stopping the bleeding. In heat patterns, this means clearing heat, cooling the blood, and directing rebellious Qi downward. In deficiency patterns, it means tonifying Qi to hold blood in or nourishing Yin to extinguish empty heat. Once the acute bleeding is controlled, the focus shifts to correcting the root imbalance so the bleeding does not recur - whether that's calming the Liver, strengthening the Spleen, or moving stagnant blood. Acupuncture and herbs work together: acupuncture can quickly redirect Qi and calm the spirit, while herbal formulas provide sustained, deeper correction.
What to expect from treatment
For acute heat patterns, herbal formulas can start to cool the blood and ease symptoms within a few days, but full recovery of the stomach lining and resolution of the underlying heat takes several weeks. Acupuncture sessions are typically weekly. Deficiency patterns are slower: you may notice improved energy and less frequent bleeding episodes after 4-6 weeks, but rebuilding Spleen Qi or Yin can take 3-6 months.
During treatment, you'll be asked to monitor your stools for any sign of hidden blood. Progress is measured not just by the absence of vomiting blood, but by improvements in digestion, energy, and emotional balance.
General dietary guidance
During and after a bleeding episode, the stomach needs gentle, cooling, and easily digestible foods. Favour congee, steamed vegetables, cooked pears, and small amounts of lean protein. Avoid all heat-generating substances: alcohol, coffee, spicy peppers, fried foods, and grilled meats. Also avoid cold, raw foods and icy drinks, which weaken the Spleen's digestive fire. Eat small, frequent meals rather than large ones, and chew thoroughly. Bitter greens like dandelion can help clear heat, while bland, slightly sweet foods like rice and yam gently strengthen the Spleen. Emotional calm during meals is just as important - eat without rushing or anger.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely integrated with conventional care, but timing is critical. During an active, significant bleed, Western emergency medicine must take the lead. Once the patient is stable, TCM herbs and acupuncture can support healing and prevent recurrence. Patients on anticoagulants or antiplatelet drugs (warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel) must exercise caution: some blood-cooling and blood-moving herbs may enhance their effects and increase bleeding risk. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and your gastroenterologist of all treatments you are receiving. Never discontinue prescribed medications without medical supervision, especially if you have a history of ulcers or varices.
*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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Vomiting large amounts of bright red blood — This indicates a rapid, active bleed that can quickly become life-threatening.
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Vomiting blood that looks like coffee grounds — This suggests blood that has pooled in the stomach and may indicate a slower but significant bleed.
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Feeling lightheaded, dizzy, or fainting — These are signs of significant blood loss and possible shock.
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Black, tarry stools (melena) — This indicates that blood is passing through the digestive tract and may signal ongoing bleeding even if you are not vomiting.
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Rapid heart rate, cold clammy skin, or confusion — These are emergency signs of hypovolemic shock from severe blood loss.
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Severe abdominal pain with vomiting blood — This could indicate a perforated ulcer or other surgical emergency.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
In pregnancy, hematemesis is a medical emergency requiring immediate care. TCM treatment must avoid herbs that move blood or strongly purge, such as Da Huang (rhubarb) in Xie Xin Tang, which could threaten the pregnancy. For Stomach Fire, milder cooling hemostatics like Bai Mao Gen or Ou Jie may be used, and acupuncture at points like Neiguan PC-6 and Zusanli ST-36 is often preferred. The Spleen not controlling Blood pattern becomes more common as pregnancy advances, and the gentle tonification of Gui Pi Tang is generally considered safe under professional guidance. Always consult both an obstetrician and a qualified TCM practitioner.
During breastfeeding, any herbal treatment for hematemesis must consider the infant. Bitter-cold herbs such as Huang Lian (coptis) and Da Huang (rhubarb) can pass into breast milk and cause diarrhea or digestive upset in the baby. For Stomach Fire, a practitioner might substitute with milder cooling hemostatics like Bai Mao Gen and rely more extensively on acupuncture. The Spleen not controlling Blood pattern, often related to postpartum blood loss, can be safely treated with Gui Pi Tang, which nourishes blood and supports milk production without harming the infant.
In children, hematemesis is uncommon and always warrants urgent investigation. Dietary factors, such as overconsumption of spicy snacks, can trigger Stomach Fire, while congenital Spleen weakness may lead to Spleen not controlling Blood. Herbal dosages are reduced to one-third to one-half of adult doses, often administered as syrups or powders. Acupuncture can be used but with fewer needles and gentler stimulation; points like Zusanli ST-36 and Neiguan PC-6 are safe and effective. Avoid harsh purgatives like Da Huang; focus on gentle hemostatic herbs such as Ou Jie (charred lotus node).
In the elderly, hematemesis often arises from deficiency patterns, particularly Spleen not controlling Blood due to chronic illness or frailty. Stomach Blood Stagnation may also be present from long-standing gastritis or medication use (such as NSAIDs). Herbal dosages are typically reduced to two-thirds of standard adult doses, and formulas like Gui Pi Tang are favored for their gentle tonification. Caution is needed with potential interactions between herbs and common geriatric medications, especially anticoagulants. Treatment aims to stop bleeding while supporting overall vitality, with a slower, more sustained approach.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for upper gastrointestinal bleeding is primarily from China, where herbal formulas like Xie Xin Tang and Shi Hui San are used alongside standard care to reduce rebleeding and promote hemostasis. Several small randomized controlled trials suggest that adding TCM to conventional treatment can shorten hospital stay and improve outcomes in peptic ulcer bleeding. Acupuncture at points such as Zusanli ST-36 and Neiguan PC-6 has shown promise in regulating gastric function and reducing stress-induced bleeding.
However, most studies have methodological limitations, including small sample sizes and unclear randomization. Large-scale, multicenter trials are lacking, and few studies have been published in English-language journals. The evidence supports TCM as a complementary approach, but more rigorous research is needed to confirm these benefits and establish standardized protocols.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「吐血不止者,柏葉湯主之。」
"For unremitting vomiting of blood, Bai Ye Tang (Biota Leaf Decoction) governs. This classical line addresses hematemesis from deficiency-cold patterns, showing the ancient recognition of both heat and cold causes."
Jin Gui Yao Lue
Chapter 16: On Vomiting, Retching, and Diarrhea
「熱氣留於胃,胃熱則消穀,穀消則善飢,…… 血溢於上,則為吐衄。」
"When heat lodges in the stomach, it causes rapid digestion and hunger... if blood spills upward, it results in vomiting of blood or epistaxis. This early text links stomach heat directly to upper gastrointestinal bleeding."
Huang Di Nei Jing, Su Wen
Chapter 71
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for upper gastrointestinal bleeding.
TCM has a long history of using cooling, astringent herbs to help arrest acute bleeding, but vomiting blood is a medical emergency. In any active, significant bleed, you must go to the emergency room immediately. TCM can be used alongside conventional care under close medical supervision, but it is not a substitute for endoscopy, IV fluids, or blood transfusion. Once the acute bleeding is stabilized, herbal formulas can support healing and address the root imbalance that caused the bleed.
The color is a key diagnostic clue. Bright red blood usually indicates heat - either Stomach Fire or Liver Fire - where the heat is fresh and forceful, pushing blood out rapidly. Dark red or purple blood suggests the blood has been stagnant or that heat has been smoldering longer. Dark brown, coffee-ground material points to blood that has pooled in the stomach and been partially digested, often seen in Stomach Blood Stagnation. Pale, thin blood with little color suggests a deficiency pattern where the Spleen is too weak to hold blood. Always tell your practitioner the exact color and consistency.
Yes, diet is a cornerstone of TCM treatment for this condition. During and after a bleeding episode, the stomach lining needs to heal. You'll be advised to eat only bland, easy-to-digest, cooked foods - think congee, steamed vegetables, and soups - and to avoid anything that generates heat, such as alcohol, coffee, spicy foods, fried foods, and rich meats. Cold and raw foods should also be avoided because they tax the Spleen's digestive fire. Once the acute phase passes, your practitioner will tailor dietary recommendations to your specific pattern.
This is a classic Liver Fire invading the Stomach pattern. Treatment focuses on clearing Liver Fire, soothing the Liver Qi, and cooling the blood. Herbal formulas like Long Dan Xie Gan Tang are used to drain the fire, while acupuncture points such as Taichong (LR-3) and Xingjian (LR-2) help calm the Liver and redirect its energy downward. Patients are also taught stress-management techniques because emotional regulation is part of the cure - if the anger keeps flaring, the bleeding may recur.
Generally yes, but it must be coordinated. TCM herbs and proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) like omeprazole can often be taken together, but timing may need to be adjusted to avoid interference with absorption. More importantly, some cooling herbs that stop bleeding, such as Da Huang (rhubarb root), can have a mild laxative effect, which might be intensified if you are also taking other medications. Always provide your TCM practitioner with a full list of your medications, and do not stop prescribed medication without consulting your doctor.
Yes, if the bleeding is recurrent, small in volume, and the blood is pale or thin, it often points to Spleen not controlling Blood. This is a chronic weakness pattern where the body's Qi is too depleted to hold blood inside the vessels. Treatment uses formulas like Gui Pi Tang to tonify the Spleen and build blood, and recovery is gradual - usually several months. You'll also need to prioritize rest, warm cooked meals, and avoid overwork, as exhaustion directly weakens the Spleen further.
Your practitioner will ask detailed questions about the bleeding episode: the color, amount, frequency, and what you felt before it happened. They'll look at your tongue and feel your pulse, which reveal the internal heat or deficiency state. They'll also ask about your emotions, diet, bowel habits, and energy levels to pinpoint the underlying pattern. Based on this, they'll prescribe a custom herbal formula and possibly acupuncture. If you are currently bleeding or have black stools, you'll be referred for emergency medical evaluation before any TCM treatment begins.
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