What They Came In For: Constipation
When Things Stop Moving
Bill came in because he was tired of feeling stuck. His digestion had gotten slower over the past few years, in the gradual way that these things often do. At first it meant less regularity, a missed day here and there, nothing he thought about much. By the time he scheduled with us, it was not uncommon for him to go three or four days without a bowel movement. When things did move, the movement was slow, dry, and incomplete.
"It's like my body just forgot how to do it," he said.
He was 68, semi-retired, and active by most measures. He walked his dog daily, made coffee for his wife every morning, and kept up with a small handful of long-standing friendships. The constipation was the one thing that had begun to organize his daily experience. He felt heavy after meals, bloated in the evenings, and often turned down food he would have enjoyed because the aftermath was not worth it. He was not in pain exactly. He was never quite at ease either.
His primary care doctor had told him it was normal at his age. Slow motility, probably. Drink more water, eat more fiber, take stool softeners as needed. Bill had done all of it. He drank plenty of water, ate oatmeal most mornings, took a daily magnesium supplement, and had tried psyllium husk, probiotics, and prune juice across various combinations and durations.
"It's not like I'm eating cheeseburgers every day," he told us. "I'm doing the right things. My gut's just not cooperating."
By the time he arrived at Root and Branch, his baseline had not really moved in years. He still had a proper bowel movement only once every three days, sometimes longer. The longer he went, the worse he felt. Foggy. Sluggish. He described a sense of things backing up in more ways than one.
What Slow Transit Looks Like Biomedically
Chronic constipation is one of the most common gastrointestinal complaints in older adults. Prevalence estimates run somewhere between 15 and 30 percent in people over 60, and the numbers climb further with each decade. The standard biomedical framework distinguishes between several functional categories: slow transit constipation, where stool moves through the colon more slowly than it should; outlet dysfunction, where the muscles that coordinate evacuation are not firing in the right sequence; and constipation-predominant IBS, where transit is variable but trends slow. Bill's presentation matched the slow transit pattern.
The typical workup rules out structural causes (obstruction, stricture, tumor) and then defaults to a layered set of recommendations. Increase fluid intake. Increase fiber, usually starting with soluble fiber like psyllium. Add osmotic agents like magnesium or polyethylene glycol. Consider stimulant laxatives if the osmotic agents are not enough. For patients who do not respond, the next step is often a referral for anorectal manometry or a colonic transit study, followed by prescription prokinetics like prucalopride or, in selected cases, biofeedback for the pelvic floor.
This algorithm works for a significant fraction of patients. It also leaves a meaningful fraction stuck. The patients who do not respond tend to be people who have already addressed the obvious modifiable factors and whose physiology is doing something more subtle than the algorithm is designed to catch. Bill was in this group. He had checked every box on the standard list and his bowel still would not move on its own.
Reading the Pattern
When we did Bill's intake, the picture that emerged was less about a single broken mechanism and more about a system that had lost its momentum across several layers at once. His pulse was thin and slightly wiry, which in Chinese medicine suggests both depletion and a layer of tension running underneath. His tongue was pale, dry, and showed a slight scallop along the edges. His abdomen was soft overall but felt mildly firm in the lower left quadrant. He reported feeling cold easily, especially in his hands and feet in the evening, and his sleep had become lighter over the past two years.
The pattern that fit was a combination of fluid depletion and underlying Yáng deficiency, with some Liver qì stagnation layered on top. In classical terms, the Large Intestine had lost both its moisture and its motivating warmth, and the Spleen and Kidney systems that should have been replenishing both were no longer doing so reliably. The wiry quality in the pulse and the firmness in the lower left suggested that what little Yáng was available was getting bound up in tension rather than flowing through to drive peristalsis.
This is a common picture in the patients we see for chronic constipation in this age range. The conventional framing of "slow motility" describes what is happening at the level of muscle contraction. The Chinese medical reading describes the broader physiological context in which the slow motility is occurring. The bowel is not moving because the systems that should be warming it, moistening it, and rhythmically driving it have all become quieter together. Treating any one of them alone tends to produce limited results, which is part of why Bill's previous interventions had each helped a little and none of them had changed the underlying picture.
There is a useful biomedical bridge here. The enteric nervous system, the network of roughly 500 million neurons embedded in the wall of the gut, depends on adequate hydration of the mucosal surface, adequate parasympathetic tone, and adequate rhythmic input to keep the migrating motor complex (the wave of contractions that moves contents through the bowel between meals) firing on schedule. In older adults, all three of these inputs tend to decline together. The mucosa runs drier, autonomic tone shifts toward sympathetic dominance under chronic stress, and the rhythmic cuing of the gut becomes less reliable. The Chinese medical description of dryness, depletion, and lost rhythm is describing the same phenomenon from a different vocabulary.
The Treatment Approach
We started Bill on weekly acupuncture and a custom herbal formula, with the explicit goal of restoring rhythm rather than producing a single bowel movement.
The acupuncture sessions used points on the abdomen and lower back that have specific effects on the Dà Cháng 大腸 (Large Intestine) pathway, supported by points that nourish the Spleen and tonify Kidney Yáng. The biomedical correlate is that these points reliably shift autonomic tone toward parasympathetic dominance and increase blood flow to the splanchnic circulation. For a patient whose gut had been running on low parasympathetic input for years, time spent in a parasympathetic state was therapeutic in itself.
The herbal formula was built around moistening the intestines, gently warming the lower burner, and supporting the Spleen and Kidney systems that had become depleted. We deliberately stayed away from the strong purgative herbs that produce a single dramatic bowel movement and leave the underlying picture unchanged. Bill had tried the over-the-counter equivalent of that approach and it had not gotten him anywhere. The formula was designed to do a slower kind of work, and the herbs were adjusted every few weeks as his presentation shifted.
Diet recommendations were minor. Bill was already eating reasonably well. We suggested warming his breakfast oatmeal with a little ginger and walnuts, easing off raw salads in favor of cooked vegetables in the evening, and being more deliberate about a small amount of healthy fat with each meal. The goal was not to overhaul his diet. The goal was to stop subtly cooling and drying a system that was already too cool and too dry.
What Changed
After the first two weeks, Bill was going every two days without thinking about it. The evening bloating had eased noticeably. His appetite was better and he had started enjoying meals again rather than budgeting around them.
After a month, he was having regular, comfortable bowel movements almost daily. No urgency. No straining. No mental real estate spent on whether today was going to be a day.
"I never thought I'd feel this much joy over taking a normal crap," he said.
The change ran deeper than the headline symptom. Chronic constipation affects energy, mood, sleep, and the general sense of being at home in one's own body. Bill described feeling less irritable in the evenings, sleeping more solidly, and noticing that the low-grade fog he had assumed was just aging had lifted. None of these were surprises. The gut and the rest of the body are in continuous conversation, and when the gut is sluggish for years, the rest of the body adapts around the sluggishness in ways that are easy to attribute to other causes.
If You Have Been Told It's Just Age
What Bill came in for was a bowel that would move on its own. What he got was a system that had its rhythm back, which is a different and more durable thing.
If you have been told your slow transit is just a feature of getting older, that framing is not wrong exactly. Motility does change with age. What the framing tends to miss is that age-related changes are not a single switch that flips. They are a slow accumulation of small shifts in hydration, warmth, autonomic tone, and rhythmic cuing, each of which is more responsive to careful intervention than the "just age" framing suggests. The patients who do best with Chinese medicine for chronic constipation are usually the ones who have already done the basics and want to understand what else might be going on underneath. There is usually quite a bit going on underneath, and most of it is workable.