Acupuncture: Relief for Menopause Symptoms

Menopause need not be a dark time of violent mood swings, insomnia, hot flashes, and decreased intimacy. Instead, menopause can mark the beginning of the most passionate, creatively inspired, and professionally productive period of a woman’s life. Through acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), women are finding that menopause can be a time of revolutionary growth and vibrant energy.

Acupuncture has been used for women’s health for over 2,000 years with excellent results. Unlike western medicine, Traditional Chinese Medicine recognizes that menopause is a natural transitional period in a woman’s life, and aims to treat each individual’s specific symptoms through acupuncture, herbs, diet, and lifestyle changes. Since every woman is unique, every treatment is personalized.

It is our mission to provide women suffering from the symptoms of menopause an environment where treatment is given with a caring hand. We will discuss your individual symptoms in great detail and provide a comprehensive, holistic approach to proper treatment, incorporating acupuncture, herbs, nutrition, and lifestyle counseling. We will be with you every step of the way.

Acupuncture and Menopause

TCM and Menopause

As a major branch of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), gynecology has played an important roll in women’s health for over two thousand years. The Huandi Neijing (Canon of Medicine) published in 50-300 B.C. is the earliest extant medical book in China that describes acupuncture. It also describes gynecological terms such as infertility, miscarriage, ante partum care, labor, and delivery. It provides methods for diagnosing pregnancy and treating a variety of women’s diseases, including menopause.

The Role of the Kidney in Menopause

According to Chinese medical theory, a part of the kidney’s job is controlling sexual function. When a woman’s kidney power diminishes in middle age, menopause occurs. Normally, kidney yang and kidney yin should be in balance. At the beginning of menopause, many women suffer from kidney yin deficiency, which results in hot flashes, night sweats, tinnitus, dizziness, and high blood pressure. Later in menopause, both kidney yin and yang diminish, resulting in poor circulation, lower back pain, muscle weakness, and low energy.

Mother-child relationship in Qi

According to Chinese medical law of mother and son, the kidney is the symbol for water and liver is the symbol for wood, and the two have a very close relationship. If there is an imbalance in the kidney, the liver will also suffer from Qi disorders. Mood swings or anxiety can be symptoms of Qi stagnation or some heat in the liver. Also closely linked are the kidney and heart. The heart is the symbol for fire, and the Chinese believe that fire (heart) and water (kidneys) should maintain harmonious communication. Insomnia in menopausal women indicates that the kidney and heart have lost communication. Spleen and Kidney Qi deficiency can also lead to nonfunctional bleeding in menopausal women.

Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)

Hormone replacement therapy is still considered the standard treatment for menopause, despite its many drawbacks. While it reduces hot flashes and prevents osteoporosis, it also increases the risk of breast, ovarian, and uterine cancer, and has a number of significant side effects. Acupuncture, on the other hand, offers a gentle yet effective way to alleviate menopause and related conditions. Most importantly, it is completely natural and therefore safer on the body.