Introduction
Sudden diarrhea completely stops your daily life. Frequent bathroom visits, abdominal discomfort, and fatigue are common. In traditional Chinese medicine, diarrhea is viewed as a weakening of spleen function. It occurs when the spleen, which is responsible for food digestion and water absorption, fails to perform its role properly.
Fortunately, by stimulating acupoints in your body, you can quickly restore spleen function. Five key acupoints are particularly effective for diarrhea relief. Without medication, you can treat yourself anytime, anywhere using just your fingers.
5 Effective Acupoints for Diarrhea Relief
1. Zusanli (ST36, Zusanli) — The Foundation of Digestion, the Universal Acupoint

Location: 10 cm below the knee on the outer side of the shin. From the hollow area below the knee, measure down the width of four fingers to the outer edge of the shin bone.
Effects: Enhances digestive function, boosts immunity, normalizes intestinal movement. It improves not only diarrhea but also constipation and abdominal bloating. It is one of the most important acupoints in traditional Chinese medicine.
Massage technique: Place your thumb on the acupoint and press firmly for 3-5 seconds, then release. Repeat 10 times. Applying warm heat enhances the effect.
2. Sanyinjiao (SP6, Sanyinjiao) — The Center of Spleen Function

Location: On the inner side of the ankle, 10 cm above the ankle bone. It’s on the inner edge of the shin bone.
Effects: Restores spleen function, enhances digestion, improves water absorption. It rapidly improves both chronic and acute diarrhea.
Massage technique: Gently press with your thumb and massage in circular motions. Perform 3 times daily for 1-2 minutes each time for best results.
3. Tianshu (ST25, Tianshu) — The Key to Normalizing Intestinal Movement

Location: 5 cm to the side of the belly button. Measure the width of three fingers from the belly button to the side.
Effects: Normalizes peristalsis, removes abdominal gas, improves both diarrhea and constipation simultaneously. Particularly effective for stress-related diarrhea.
Massage technique: Using a comfortable finger, draw clockwise circles around the belly button with light pressure. Continue for 2-3 minutes until warmth is felt.
4. Taibai (SP3, Taibai) — The Acupoint That Strengthens the Foundation of the Spleen

Location: Below the joint where the big toe and the next toe bone meet, in the hollow area on the inner side of the foot.
Effects: Fundamentally strengthens spleen function, restores digestive power, improves chronic diarrhea. Known as an acupoint that improves overall constitution.
Massage technique: Rub back and forth with your thumb like massaging a pelvis. Repeat for 1-2 minutes until warmth is felt.
5. Shenque (CV8, Shenque) — The Mysterious Power of the Belly Button
Location: At the center of the belly button. The easiest acupoint to locate.
Effects: Replenishes spleen yang (warmth), provides immediate diarrhea relief, restores abdominal warmth. Quickly alleviates abdominal coldness caused by diarrhea.
Massage technique: Place one or two fingers on the belly button and draw gentle circles with warm pressure. Focus on the warming effect rather than pressing directly.
5-Minute Self-Massage Routine
Time allocation:
- Zusanli (ST36): 1 minute (30 seconds each side)
- Sanyinjiao (SP6): 1 minute (30 seconds each side)
- Tianshu (ST25): 1 minute (30 seconds each side)
- Taibai (SP3): 1 minute (30 seconds each side)
- Shenque (CV8): 1 minute
Recommended timing: After waking in the morning, 30 minutes after lunch, and before bed in the evening. Repeating 2-3 times daily can lead to symptom improvement within 2-3 days.
Caution: Avoid exposure to cold air for 30 minutes after massage. Drinking warm water enhances the effect.

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