Functional Dyspepsia - Spleen-Stomach Deficiency-Cold Pattern
Dr. Li Wei, DACM
Functional Dyspepsia · Spleen-Stomach Deficiency-Cold Pattern
Updated: June 23, 2026
Reviewed by: Dr. Li Wei, DACM
Reading Time: 7 min
Body Area: Abdomen
Pattern Overview
Spleen-Stomach Deficiency-Cold is a chronic pattern in functional dyspepsia, characterized by cold-induced epigastric pain with hypomotility, cold pain, relief with warmth, poor appetite, and cold limbs. The core pathogenesis is Spleen-Stomach Yang deficiency with Cold, leading to reduced gastric mucosal blood flow, impaired gastric accommodation, and cold-induced pain.
Key Symptoms and Differentiation Points
| Differentiation Dimension | Manifestations |
| :— | :— |
| Primary Symptoms | Cold epigastric pain, relief with warmth, poor appetite |
| Associated Symptoms | Cold limbs, fatigue, loose stools, pale complexion |
| Tongue and Pulse | Pale and swollen tongue with thin white coating, deep and weak pulse |
| Pathogenesis | Spleen-Stomach Yang deficiency with Cold |
| Etiology | Cold food intake, overwork, chronic illness, constitutional Yang deficiency |
Acupuncture Point Prescription
| Point | Location | Function |
| :— | :— | :— |
| Zhongwan (RN12) | 4 cun above the umbilicus | Front-Mu point of Stomach; harmonizes the Stomach |
| Qihai (RN6) | 1.5 cun below the umbilicus | Tonifies Qi and warms the lower abdomen |
| Pishu (BL20) | Lower back, 1.5 cun lateral to T11 | Back-Shu point of Spleen meridian; strengthens Spleen-Qi |
| Zusanli (ST36) | 3 cun below the patella, 1 finger-width lateral to the tibial crest | Strengthens Spleen and Stomach; tonifies Qi |
Clinical Recommendation: Filament needle, reinforcing method; heavy moxibustion is strongly recommended to warm the Spleen and Stomach.
Herbal Formula
Base Formula: Huang Qi Jian Zhong Tang (黄芪建中汤)
Composition:
Astragalus (Huang Qi), Cinnamon Twig (Gui Zhi), White Peony (Bai Shao), Licorice (Gan Cao), Ginger (Sheng Jiang), Jujube (Da Zao), Malt Sugar (Yi Tang), Licorice (Gan Cao)
Action: Warms the Spleen and Stomach, supplements Qi, and relieves pain.
Modifications
| Associated Symptoms | Additions/Subtractions |
| :— | :— |
| Severe cold pain | Add Fu Zi, Gan Jiang to warm Yang and disperse Cold |
| Fatigue | Add Huang Qi to enhance Qi supplementation |
| Poor appetite | Add Sha Ren, Mu Xiang to harmonize the Stomach |
| Loose stools | Add Shan Yao, Yi Yi Ren to strengthen Spleen and stop diarrhea |
Western Mechanism Reference
Cold-induced epigastric pain with hypomotility, reduced gastric mucosal blood flow, and impaired gastric accommodation. Spleen-Stomach Deficiency-Cold corresponds to functional dyspepsia with cold sensitivity, where reduced gastric mucosal blood flow and impaired gastric accommodation contribute to cold-induced pain.
References
Internal Medicine of TCM - Functional Dyspepsia with Spleen-Stomach Deficiency-Cold.
Xiong Jibai: Spleen-Stomach Deficiency-Cold uses Huang Qi Jian Zhong Tang.
WHO. (2023). Digestive health. World Health Organization.
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