Uterine Fibroids and TCM — Understanding the Blood Stasis Pattern Behind Fibroid Growth

Fibroids affect 1 in 3 women over 40 — yet for many, the choice between waiting and watching, hormonal suppression, or surgery feels unsatisfying. Classical Chinese medicine has a framework for understanding why fibroids develop and how to address the pattern generating them.

Do These Symptoms Sound Familiar?

1 in 3
Women over 40 have fibroids
Blood Stasis Zheng Ji
The TCM classification for uterine masses
Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan
Classical Jin Kui Yao Lue formula for this pattern

Why Fibroids Develop — The Blood Stasis Mass (Zheng Ji) Pattern in Classical Chinese Medicine

Uterine fibroids are classified in classical Chinese medicine as Zheng Ji — accumulations of Blood Stasis forming solid masses in the uterus. The Jin Kui Yao Lue text (Essential Prescriptions from the Golden Chamber), one of the oldest surviving Chinese medical texts, specifically describes the Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan formula for “masses in the uterus” — this is one of the oldest formula-condition matches in classical medicine, with direct textual evidence for this specific application.

The formula components (cinnamon, poria, peach kernel, moutan bark, red peony) collectively warm the channels, move Blood, dispel Stasis and drain Damp from the uterus. For larger or more established fibroids, the Da Huang Zhe Chong Wan direction (stronger Blood-breaking formulas using insect-derived ingredients) may be appropriate under careful supervision. Treatment is adjunctive — not curative for large fibroids requiring surgical removal, but appropriate for preventing growth, managing symptoms (heavy bleeding, pressure), and reducing recurrence.

Important: The classical approach is to prevent fibroid growth and manage symptoms, not to promise dissolution of large fibroids. Size and location are critical — fibroids requiring surgery still require surgery. TCM works alongside monitoring.

Your Treatment Timeline

Months 1–3
Baseline ultrasound, herbal support to move Blood Stasis, acupuncture for circulation
Months 4–6
Heavy bleeding begins to improve, fibroid growth stabilises
Months 6–12+
Sustained symptom reduction, size stabilisation, prevention of new fibroids

TCM Patterns We Commonly See

Blood Stasis Uterine Mass
Heavy periods with large clots
Pressure sensation, dark blood
Formula: Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan
Qi Stagnation Blood Stasis
Pre-menstrual distension
Mood changes, fibroid tender to pressure
Formula: Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang
Phlegm-Blood Combined Mass
Soft fibroids, obese or Damp constitution
Fluid retention, weight issues
Formula: Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan + Damp-drying

What Does the Research Show?

Acupuncture for Uterine Fibroids
Studies show acupuncture reduces fibroid-related heavy bleeding and pelvic pain through improved circulation.
View PubMed →
Chinese Medicine Fibroid Management
Herbal formulas addressing Blood Stasis show symptom improvement and slower fibroid growth.
View PubMed →
Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan Clinical Evidence
This classical formula has been studied for fibroid reduction and symptom management in modern trials.
View PubMed →

Do’s and Don’ts

Do’s
  • Regular ultrasound monitoring every 6–12 months
  • Coordinate with your gynaecologist
  • Reduce oestrogen-dominant foods (minimise soy, non-organic dairy)
  • Keep lower abdomen warm
  • Iron-rich foods to counteract heavy bleeding
  • Track bleeding changes and symptom patterns
Don’ts
  • Assume all fibroids can shrink without surgery
  • Delay gynaecological review for rapidly growing fibroids
  • Ignore signs of anaemia (fatigue, shortness of breath)
  • Use only TCM for fibroids affecting fertility or causing severe symptoms
  • Stop monitoring fibroids during treatment
  • Assume TCM will prevent surgery if fibroids are large

Frequently Asked Questions

Can acupuncture shrink fibroids?

Acupuncture cannot directly dissolve fibroids, but it can reduce symptoms (heavy bleeding, pain, pressure) and slow growth by improving blood circulation and reducing inflammation. Small fibroids may stabilise or shrink with consistent treatment.

Is Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan the same as conventional fibroid treatment?

No. Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan works through different mechanisms — improving circulation, moving stagnant Blood, and reducing inflammation — rather than hormonal suppression. Some patients combine both approaches.

When do fibroids require surgery?

Surgery is considered for fibroids causing severe bleeding (anaemia risk), pressure symptoms (pelvic pain, urinary problems), infertility impact, or rapid growth. Your gynaecologist will assess size, location, and symptoms.

Can TCM help with fibroid-related heavy bleeding?

Yes. Heavy bleeding is a primary symptom that TCM addresses through Blood-moving and Spleen-supportive herbs. Many patients see significant reduction in bleeding volume within 3–6 months.

Can fibroids affect fertility?

Yes, especially if they distort the uterine cavity. TCM support may improve uterine environment and circulation, which can enhance fertility outcomes when combined with conventional fertility management.