Migraine
偏头痛 · piān tóu tòng+11 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Intense Headache, Migraine Headache, Pulsating Headache, Severe Headache, Throbbing Headache, Migraine Headaches, Migraines, Migraine (temporal), Headache on one side of the head, Migraine (vertex type), Migraine with aura
Not every migraine is the same condition. The throbbing stress-triggered attack, the dull post-period ache, and the heavy weather-driven migraine are three different patterns - each with its own treatment.
About this page · what it is and isn't
What this is. A plain-English synthesis of how classical TCM and modern clinical research describe migraine. Patterns and herbs come from canonical TCM sources; clinical claims are cited in the Evidence section.
What it isn't. A diagnosis. Me&Qi is an editorial team, not a licensed clinic. The pattern quiz is a thinking tool — pulse and tongue still need a person in the room. Anything in the Safety section should send you to a doctor, not a herb.
Last reviewed Jun 2026.
Educational content about Traditional Chinese Medicine — not medical advice. See a qualified practitioner for diagnosis and treatment.
Migraine isn't a single condition in TCM — it's a family of five distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own characteristic pain, and its own treatment. Three are excess patterns (Liver Yang Rising, Liver Fire Blazing, Phlegm-Dampness) where something is moving or accumulating where it shouldn't. One is an obstruction pattern (Blood Stagnation) where old blockage in the head channels keeps the pain in the same exact spot every time. One is a deficiency pattern (Qi and Blood Deficiency) where the head simply isn't getting enough nourishment to function.
The 30-second quiz below will narrow you down to your most likely pattern in a few taps — start there if you want a clear direction. If you'd rather read the patterns first, scroll past the quiz. Either route lands you in the same place: a specific pattern with specific herbs, acupoints, dietary changes and formulas to discuss with a practitioner.
Migraine is a neurological condition characterised by recurrent episodes of moderate to severe headache, typically on one side of the head, often pulsating in quality. Episodes last between 4 and 72 hours and are frequently accompanied by nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light and sound. Some patients experience an aura — visual disturbances such as zigzag lines or blind spots — in the 20-60 minutes before the headache begins.
Migraine affects roughly 12% of the global population, with women affected about three times more frequently than men. It typically first appears in adolescence or early adulthood. The condition is understood as a disorder of neurovascular regulation, involving cortical spreading depression, activation of the trigeminovascular system, and release of neuropeptides including CGRP (calcitonin gene-related peptide). Genetic factors play a significant role, with a family history present in the majority of patients.
Conventional treatments
Acute treatment typically involves triptans (sumatriptan, rizatriptan), NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen), or combination analgesics, taken at the onset of symptoms. For patients with frequent attacks, preventive medications are prescribed daily — these include beta-blockers (propranolol), antidepressants (amitriptyline), anticonvulsants (topiramate), and the newer CGRP monoclonal antibodies (erenumab, fremanezumab). Non-pharmaceutical approaches include identifying and avoiding triggers, maintaining regular sleep and meal schedules, and cognitive behavioural therapy.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Triptans and analgesics address the acute attack but do nothing to reduce the frequency or underlying susceptibility. Daily preventive medications (beta-blockers, anticonvulsants) help some patients but carry significant side effects — fatigue, cognitive dulling, weight changes — and must often be taken indefinitely. The newer CGRP antibodies are more targeted but expensive and not universally effective. Crucially, the conventional approach treats all migraines as fundamentally the same condition, differing only in severity. It doesn't account for the possibility that a stress-triggered migraine with anger and red eyes, a fatigue-triggered migraine with pallor and dizziness, and a weather-triggered migraine with nausea and heaviness might each require a fundamentally different treatment strategy — which is precisely what TCM proposes.
How TCM understands migraine
TCM understands migraine primarily through the Liver and its relationship with other organ systems. The Liver governs the smooth flow of Qi throughout the body, and when this flow is disrupted — by emotional stress, frustration, or constitutional tendency — Qi stagnates and transforms into Heat or Wind that rises to the head. This is why stress is such a universal migraine trigger: it directly disrupts the Liver's core function.
But the Liver is only part of the story. The Gallbladder channel (Shào Yáng) physically traverses the temporal region where migraine pain most commonly strikes — the temples and the side of the head. When pathogenic factors lodge in this channel, whether internal (Liver Fire, rising Yang) or external (Wind-Cold, Wind-Heat), pain follows that characteristic one-sided pathway.
Beyond excess patterns, migraines also arise from deficiency. When Blood or Qi are insufficient — from overwork, poor diet, chronic illness, or heavy menstruation — the head simply doesn't receive adequate nourishment. These deficiency migraines tend to feel different: duller, often worse with fatigue, and relieved rather than aggravated by rest. Women are particularly susceptible to Blood Deficiency migraines around menstruation, which aligns with the observed Western epidemiology.
A third mechanism involves obstruction. Blood stagnation (old, stuck blood) or Phlegm-Dampness can physically block the channels running through the head. Stagnation migraines are characteristically fixed in location, stabbing in quality, and often have a long history. Phlegm migraines come with a heavy, foggy quality, nausea, and a feeling that the head is "wrapped in cotton." These obstruction patterns often explain why some migraines are so resistant to conventional treatment — the underlying blockage hasn't been addressed.
Most migraines that have lasted more than a few years are not pure single patterns — they are combinations. The most common chronic-migraine picture seen in TCM clinics worldwide is Liver Yang Rising layered over Phlegm-Dampness: stress drives Yang upward, which over years weakens the Spleen's ability to transform fluids, and the accumulated Phlegm then provides the substrate that the rising Yang stirs. Patients with this combination get the throbbing temple pain of Yang Rising AND the dull heaviness, nausea, and weather sensitivity of Phlegm — both at once, or alternating. Effective treatment must address both simultaneously, which is why a single-formula approach often plateaus in chronic cases.
Menstrual migraines have their own internal logic that maps onto the cycle. In the days before the period, Liver Qi tends to stagnate as the body prepares to discharge, producing the classic premenstrual one-sided throbbing attack. During the bleed itself, the moving Blood can become stuck — Blood Stagnation migraines arrive on the heaviest flow days, often with clots and cramping. After the period, the freshly emptied Blood reserves leave many women in a transient state of Blood Deficiency, producing dull post-menses headaches that respond to rest and nourishment but not to painkillers. The three menstrual sub-patterns share an underlying root but call for very different treatments, which is why generic painkillers help some women's monthly migraines and not others.
Migraine with aura — the visual zigzags, blind spots, or shimmering lights some patients experience 20-60 minutes before the pain — is understood in TCM as Liver Wind stirring. Just as physical wind moves leaves before a storm arrives, internal Liver Wind moves the spirit and the sensory orifices before the migraine itself strikes. This is one of the few cases where TCM and Western neurology converge on similar mechanisms: the cortical spreading depression of the Western model is a propagating disturbance, much like Wind. Patients with aura migraine typically need Wind-extinguishing herbs (Tiān Má, Gōu Téng) alongside their pattern-specific treatment.
「少阳之为病,口苦,咽干,目眩也。」
"When Shào Yáng is diseased, there is bitter taste in the mouth, dry throat, and dizziness with blurred vision."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses migraine
Inside the consultation
A TCM diagnostic consultation for migraine is a series of pattern-finding questions — the practitioner is matching your specific presentation to one (or a combination) of the five patterns. The questions can sound surprisingly specific:
- Where the pain sits. Temples and side-of-head, vertex (top), forehead, or occiput (back of head) — each maps onto a different channel and points to a different organ system.
- What worsens or relieves it. Stress, food, weather, alcohol, menstrual phase, lying down, pressure, sleep — the trigger profile narrows the pattern faster than any other question.
- Other body signals. Nausea, vision changes, mood, energy, digestion, sleep quality, menstrual regularity — accompanying symptoms confirm the pattern.
- How attacks cycle. Frequency, time of day, relationship to the cycle, response to previous treatments — these distinguish recent from chronic, single-pattern from combined.
The tongue and pulse examination then confirms the picture. A red tongue with wiry pulse points to Liver excess; a pale tongue with thin pulse confirms Qi and Blood Deficiency; a swollen tongue with greasy coat indicates Phlegm; a purple tongue with choppy pulse marks Blood Stagnation.
Pain location → channel → likely pattern, at a glance:
- Temples and sides → Gallbladder (Shào Yáng) channel → Liver Yang Rising, Liver Fire Blazing, or Blood Stagnation
- Vertex (top of head) → Liver (Jué Yīn) channel → Liver Yang Rising or Qi and Blood Deficiency
- Forehead → Stomach (Yáng Míng) channel → Phlegm-Dampness or sinusitis-pattern
- Back of head / occiput → Bladder (Tài Yáng) channel → external Wind-Cold invasion or cervicogenic component
- Whole head, heavy and wrapped → Spleen pattern with Phlegm → Phlegm-Dampness
- Inside the head, deep and persistent → Kidney pattern → constitutional deficiency root
TCM Patterns for Migraine
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same migraine can come from several different patterns, each treated differently. The quickest way to find yours is the quiz below.
Find your pattern
Tap any sign that fits how yours feels.
- 1Your signs
- 2What makes it worse
- 3What helps
Which signs match your experience?
If the quiz above gave you a clear top match, jump straight to that pattern card below. If your symptoms straddle two or three patterns, or if none of the chips quite fit you, this is the section to read.
If your migraines are intense, throbbing, and stress-driven — with anger, a red face, or a bitter taste in your mouth — you're in the Liver excess family. Liver Yang Rising is the more common version: distending temple pain, irritability, worse with overwork and premenstrually. Liver Fire Blazing is the same family turned up to maximum: explosive burning pain, visible heat signs (red eyes, constipation, dark urine, intense thirst for cold drinks), often following an emotional outburst or excess alcohol/spicy food. The difference is intensity and heat — if you have noticeable heat signs, it's Fire; if it's pressure and tension without the heat, it's Yang Rising.
If your migraines are dull, heavy, foggy, and weather-sensitive — coming with strong nausea, mental fogginess, and a "wrapped head" feeling, especially in damp weather or after heavy/greasy meals — look at Phlegm-Dampness. The pain quality is unmistakably different from the throbbing Liver types: more pressure than pulsation, with the head feeling heavy rather than expanding outward.
If the pain is fixed in exactly the same spot, stabbing in quality, and you've had migraines for many years — especially if it's worse at night, and especially if previous treatments haven't worked — consider Blood Stagnation. Other signs that fit: a dark or dusky complexion, visible small veins on the cheeks, a purple or dark tongue. Blood Stagnation tends to be the diagnosis in chronic treatment-resistant migraine that has been present for a decade or more.
If your migraines are dull, achy, and get better with rest, food, or gentle pressure — and you're frequently tired or recovering from a period — look at Qi and Blood Deficiency. This is especially likely if attacks reliably arrive in the days after your period finishes, if you have a pale complexion, or if you faint or feel light-headed easily. The distinguishing feature is that rest and pressure help — in every excess pattern, pressure makes things worse.
If your migraines track your menstrual cycle, the timing within the cycle points to which pattern is operating. Premenstrual migraines (3-7 days before bleeding) are usually Liver Yang Rising or Liver Fire — the body is preparing to discharge and Liver Qi tends to stagnate then surge. During menstruation the picture often shifts toward Blood Stagnation — the migraine arrives on the heaviest flow days, often with clots and cramping. After the period, dull migraines that take a few days to clear typically reflect transient Blood Deficiency from the loss of blood. Same woman, same cycle, three different patterns — and three different treatment focuses depending on when in the cycle you treat.
Most long-standing migraine sufferers have a combination — a root deficiency (of Qi, Blood, or Yin) that allows an excess pattern (Yang Rising, Phlegm) to develop on top. The single most common chronic-migraine picture is Liver Yang Rising layered over Phlegm-Dampness, which presents as throbbing temple pain WITH heaviness and nausea. A skilled practitioner identifies both the root and the branch and treats them in proper sequence — usually clearing the excess first, then rebuilding the deficiency.
One pattern not included as a separate card but worth mentioning: a deeper root of Kidney and Liver Yin Deficiency often sits underneath chronic Liver Yang Rising in patients over 50. Signs that fit: night sweats, dry eyes, lower back weakness, tinnitus between attacks, premature greying. If this describes you, the Liver Yang Rising card is the right starting point — your practitioner will add Yin-nourishing herbs (often Qǐ Jú Dì Huáng Wán, already cited in that pattern's recommended formulas) to address the underlying Yin depletion.
Liver Yang Rising
Liver Fire Blazing
Damp-Phlegm
Blood Stagnation
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address migraine in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for migraine
9 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A modern formula designed to calm an overactive Liver and settle internal Wind, used for headaches, dizziness, and insomnia caused by rising Liver Yang. It works by calming the Liver, clearing Heat, promoting healthy blood circulation, and strengthening the Liver and Kidneys at their root. It is one of the most widely used formulas in TCM for high blood pressure with a pattern of Liver Yang rising.
A classical formula that nourishes the Liver and Kidneys to support eye health and clear vision. It is used for blurred vision, dry eyes, sensitivity to light, excessive tearing in wind, dizziness, and ringing in the ears caused by Liver and Kidney Yin deficiency. Built on the famous Liu Wei Di Huang Wan (Six-Ingredient Rehmannia Pill) with the addition of goji berry and chrysanthemum flower for their vision-supporting properties.
A powerful cooling formula used to address conditions caused by excess heat and dampness in the Liver and Gallbladder systems. It is commonly used for red, painful eyes, headaches, ear problems, irritability, urinary difficulties, and skin conditions like shingles, particularly when accompanied by a bitter taste in the mouth, dark urine, and a feeling of heat or inflammation along the sides of the body or in the genital area.
A classical formula designed to relieve dizziness, vertigo, and headache caused by a buildup of internal dampness and phlegm combined with internal Wind. It works by dissolving phlegm, calming the Liver, and strengthening the digestive system to stop new phlegm from forming. It is especially well suited for people who experience spinning dizziness with nausea, a heavy head, and a sensation of fogginess or fullness in the chest.
A classical formula used to clear Phlegm and restore harmony between the Gallbladder and Stomach. It is commonly used for people experiencing insomnia, anxiety, restless sleep with vivid dreams, dizziness, nausea, or heart palpitations caused by Phlegm and stagnant Qi disturbing the mind. Despite its name ("Warm the Gallbladder"), the formula's overall effect is gently clearing and calming rather than warming.
A classical formula designed to improve blood circulation in the head and face, used for stubborn headaches, hair loss, hearing difficulties, skin discolorations, and other problems caused by stagnant blood obstructing the sensory organs. It works by powerfully moving blood and opening the body's orifices (eyes, ears, nose, mouth) in the upper body.
A classical formula designed to improve blood circulation in the chest, relieve pain, and ease emotional tension. It is widely used for chronic chest pain, stubborn headaches, insomnia, and irritability caused by poor blood flow and stagnation in the upper body.
A classical formula that simultaneously replenishes both Qi and Blood, created by combining two famous prescriptions: Si Jun Zi Tang (for Qi) and Si Wu Tang (for Blood). It is commonly used for people who feel chronically tired, look pale or sallow, have a poor appetite, experience dizziness or heart palpitations, and feel generally run down due to dual deficiency of Qi and Blood.
A classical formula known as the foundation of all blood-nourishing prescriptions in Chinese medicine. It gently replenishes and activates the Blood, and is widely used for conditions related to Blood deficiency such as pale complexion, dizziness, menstrual irregularities, and abdominal pain. Often called the 'number one formula for women's health,' it serves as a base that practitioners modify for a wide range of Blood-related conditions.
Most patients see attack frequency drop within 4-6 weeks of weekly acupuncture combined with daily herbs. Severity and duration usually shorten before frequency does — the first sign of progress is often that the attacks become more manageable rather than less frequent. Excess patterns (Liver Yang Rising, Liver Fire Blazing) typically respond within 2-4 weeks because the treatment directly subdues the pathogenic factor. Deficiency patterns (Qi and Blood Deficiency) need 3-6 months because you're rebuilding depleted reserves and the body does that gradually. Blood Stagnation migraines that have been present for ten years or more can take 6-12 months and may never fully resolve — the realistic goal in those cases is months between attacks rather than complete freedom from them.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, TCM treatment of migraine works on two timescales simultaneously. During an acute attack, the priority is to relieve pain by addressing the immediate pathogenic factor — subduing rising Yang, clearing Fire, moving stasis, or resolving Phlegm. Between attacks, the focus shifts to correcting the underlying imbalance that makes the patient susceptible — nourishing deficient Yin or Blood, strengthening the Spleen, smoothing Liver Qi flow.
This two-phase approach is one of TCM's key advantages for migraine. Rather than one medication taken identically whether you're mid-attack or in remission, TCM adjusts the treatment to the phase. Acute formulas tend to be stronger and shorter-term; inter-attack formulas are gentler and taken over weeks or months to rebuild the constitution.
Acupuncture and herbal medicine play different roles in this two-phase model, which is why most chronic-migraine plans use both rather than either alone. Acupuncture handles the attack window better — it can shorten an active migraine within a single session and is often the safest intervention to use during acute pain. Herbal medicine handles the between-attack rebuilding better — it can be taken daily for weeks or months to gradually correct the underlying pattern. Patients who use only one of the two often plateau; combining them targets the migraine on both timescales at once.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients notice a reduction in migraine frequency within 4-6 weeks of consistent treatment (herbs plus weekly or biweekly acupuncture). The first change is usually that attacks become less severe and shorter before they become less frequent. Complete resolution of chronic migraines typically takes 3-6 months of treatment, depending on how long the condition has been present and which pattern is involved.
Excess patterns (Liver Yang, Liver Fire) tend to respond faster — often within 2-4 weeks — because the treatment directly subdues the pathogenic factor. Deficiency patterns (Qi and Blood Deficiency) require longer because you're rebuilding depleted resources, which the body does gradually. Blood Stagnation patterns are typically the slowest to resolve, especially if the migraines have persisted for years or decades.
During treatment, some patients experience a temporary increase in mild headaches in the first 1-2 weeks as stagnant Qi and Blood begin to move. This is generally a positive sign, not a worsening of the condition. Keeping a simple migraine diary — noting frequency, intensity, duration, and triggers — helps both you and your practitioner track progress objectively.
General dietary guidance
Across all migraine patterns, certain dietary principles apply broadly. Eat regular meals at consistent times — blood sugar fluctuations are a trigger across all patterns. Stay well hydrated. Reduce or eliminate common migraine-aggravating foods: alcohol (especially red wine and beer), aged cheese, cured meats, MSG, artificial sweeteners, and excessive caffeine. Note that moderate, consistent caffeine intake is less problematic than irregular use — it's the fluctuation that triggers attacks.
Foods broadly beneficial for migraine sufferers include ginger (fresh, anti-nausea and Qi-moving), magnesium-rich foods (dark leafy greens, nuts, seeds), omega-3 rich fish, and anti-inflammatory spices like turmeric. Chrysanthemum tea (菊花茶) is the single most commonly recommended daily drink across TCM migraine patterns — it clears the head, brightens the eyes, and gently calms Liver Yang.
If you want one concrete dietary addition with strong evidence in migraine specifically: aim for roughly 400mg of magnesium per day, either from food (a generous handful of pumpkin seeds, almonds, and dark leafy greens daily) or from a supplement. The Western evidence base for magnesium in migraine prevention is solid, and from a TCM perspective magnesium-rich foods broadly support Liver Blood and gently calm Liver Yang — there's no mechanism conflict, and patients across all five patterns can use it.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM migraine treatment can generally be used alongside conventional approaches, and many patients begin TCM while still using their existing medications. Triptans can be used for breakthrough attacks during the early phase of TCM treatment. Patients on daily preventive medications (beta-blockers, anticonvulsants, CGRP antibodies) should NOT stop these abruptly — if the migraine frequency decreases with TCM treatment, work with your prescribing doctor to taper gradually.
Specific cautions: some Blood-moving herbs (Dāng Guī, Chuān Xiōng, Táo Rén) may interact with anticoagulant or antiplatelet medications (warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel) — inform both your TCM practitioner and prescribing doctor. Herbs with sedative properties should be used carefully alongside medications that cause drowsiness. If you are taking any daily medication, always bring the full list to your TCM consultation.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Safety & special considerations
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Thunderclap headache — Sudden, severe headache unlike any you've had before — can indicate brain haemorrhage or aneurysm
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Headache with fever and stiff neck — Possible meningitis — requires same-day medical assessment
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Headache after head trauma — Even a delay of hours-to-days post-injury can indicate subdural haematoma
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Headache with confusion, slurred speech, one-sided weakness or vision loss — Possible stroke — call emergency services immediately
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Headache with a seizure — Requires neurological investigation regardless of prior migraine history
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Dramatic change in your usual migraine pattern — Sudden frequency or severity jump without obvious trigger warrants imaging
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First severe headache after age 50 — Higher index of suspicion for temporal arteritis or intracranial pathology
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Migraine management changes significantly during pregnancy. Many migraines — particularly those related to hormonal fluctuation (Blood Deficiency pattern) — actually improve during pregnancy due to stabilised oestrogen levels, especially in the second and third trimesters.
For migraines that persist, acupuncture is the preferred treatment modality throughout pregnancy — it is safe and effective without the concerns that accompany herbal medicine. Several key migraine herbs are contraindicated in pregnancy: Táo Rén and Hóng Huā (strongly move Blood and risk miscarriage), Bàn Xià (traditionally contraindicated though some modern practitioners use prepared forms cautiously). Tiān Má, Jú Huā, and Gōu Téng are generally considered safe but should be prescribed by a practitioner experienced with prenatal care.
Gentle formulas like Sì Wù Tāng (for Blood Deficiency migraine) can be used with appropriate supervision. LI-4 (Hé Gǔ) and SP-6 (Sān Yīn Jiāo) — both commonly used for migraine — are classically contraindicated for acupuncture during pregnancy as they can promote labour. Alternative point prescriptions are available.
During breastfeeding, most migraine herbs can be used cautiously but some warrant attention. Strongly bitter-cold herbs (Lóng Dǎn Cǎo, Huáng Lián) can cause loose stools in the nursing infant through breast milk — use milder alternatives. Blood-moving herbs (Táo Rén, Hóng Huā) should be used at reduced dosage. Acupuncture has no restrictions during breastfeeding and is the safest first-line treatment. Chrysanthemum tea and gentle dietary therapy are appropriate self-care measures. Note that menstrual migraines may return abruptly when menstruation resumes postpartum, sometimes more intensely — Blood Deficiency is common in breastfeeding mothers and may need proactive support.
Migraines in children present differently and are often under-recognised. Children may not describe one-sided head pain clearly; instead they present with recurrent abdominal pain and vomiting (abdominal migraine, a recognised Western and TCM entity), car sickness, or simply "not feeling well" with pallor and desire to lie down. In TCM, pediatric migraines most commonly involve Liver Wind (children's Liver is constitutionally active and easily generates Wind), Food Stagnation (irregular eating habits producing Phlegm-Heat that rises to the head), or inherited constitutional Liver Yang Rising.
Herbal dosage follows age-based guidelines: roughly 1/4 adult dose for ages 3-5, 1/3 for ages 6-9, 1/2 for ages 10-14. Paediatric tuī ná (massage) is often effective and well-accepted by children. Dietary management — regular mealtimes, reducing sugar, processed foods, and screen time — is particularly impactful for children with Phlegm or Food Stagnation patterns.
In elderly patients, new-onset severe headache always warrants medical investigation before TCM treatment, to exclude serious pathology (temporal arteritis, intracranial lesion). For established migraine, the pattern emphasis shifts heavily toward deficiency: Qi and Blood Deficiency, Kidney Yin and Yang Deficiency, and Blood Stagnation (the elderly accumulate stagnation over decades). Excess Liver Fire patterns become less common with age.
Herb dosages should be reduced to approximately 2/3 of standard adult doses. Strongly purging or draining herbs (Lóng Dǎn Cǎo, Dà Huáng) are poorly tolerated and should be avoided or used minimally. Polypharmacy is a major concern — many elderly patients take anticoagulants, antihypertensives, or statins that may interact with Blood-moving herbs. Always request a complete medication list. Acupuncture with thinner needles, fewer points, and gentler stimulation is well-tolerated and effective in this population. Moxa is often particularly beneficial for the deficiency patterns that predominate.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture for migraine prevention has a relatively strong evidence base. A 2016 Cochrane systematic review (Linde et al.) concluded that acupuncture is at least as effective as prophylactic drug treatment for migraine, with fewer side effects. Multiple subsequent RCTs, including a large Chinese trial published in the BMJ (2020), have confirmed that acupuncture reduces migraine frequency by roughly 3 days per month compared to sham acupuncture.
The evidence for Chinese herbal medicine is more mixed. Several Chinese-language RCTs report positive results for formulas including Tiān Má Gōu Téng Yǐn and Xuè Fǔ Zhú Yū Tāng, but English-language trials remain fewer and often have methodological limitations (small sample sizes, inadequate blinding). The herb Chuān Xiōng and its active compound ligustrazine have been studied for their vasodilatory and anti-platelet effects with promising results in laboratory and early clinical settings. Overall, the evidence supports TCM as a legitimate treatment option for migraine, particularly acupuncture, while acknowledging that more rigorous research on herbal formulas would strengthen the case.
The strongest single aggregate evidence currently available is a 2022 Frontiers in Neurology network meta-analysis (Pei et al., 39 RCTs, 4,379 patients) that compared multiple acupuncture variants against sham acupuncture and waitlist controls. True acupuncture was consistently superior across all four endpoints — visual analogue pain scale, migraine days per month, attack frequency, and attack duration — and the effect sizes were clinically meaningful, not just statistically significant. This matches what experienced practitioners see in clinic and reinforces the conclusion from the Cochrane review at higher resolution.
Key clinical studies
Acupuncture works as well as preventive migraine drugs — and causes fewer side effects. If you're already treating attacks when they hit, adding regular acupuncture on top cuts how often the attacks happen in the first place.
Acupuncture for the prevention of episodic migraine (Cochrane Review, 2016)
Linde K, Allais G, Brinkhaus B, et al. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2016, (6), CD001218.
10.1002/14651858.CD001218.pub3Twenty real-acupuncture sessions over six months cut migraine days by three more per month than fake acupuncture, and matched topiramate (a standard preventive drug) for effectiveness — with far fewer side effects than the drug.
Acupuncture versus topiramate for chronic migraine prophylaxis (JAMA Internal Medicine, 2017)
Zhao L, Chen J, Li Y, et al. JAMA Internal Medicine, 2017, 177(4), 508–515.
10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.9378Eight weeks of real acupuncture (20 sessions in total) significantly reduced attack frequency compared to fake acupuncture — and the benefit was still measurable five months after treatment ended, suggesting the underlying pattern is being corrected rather than just suppressed.
Manual acupuncture versus sham acupuncture for migraine without aura (BMJ, 2020)
Li Y, Liang F, Yang X, et al. BMJ, 2020, 368, m697.
10.1136/bmj.m697Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「诸风掉眩,皆属于肝。」
"All Wind conditions with trembling and dizziness belong to the Liver."
Huáng Dì Nèi Jīng Sù Wèn (黄帝内经素问)
Chapter 74 — Zhì Zhēn Yào Dà Lùn (至真要大论)
「头痛日久不愈,用此方一剂而愈。查病源,乃瘀血在脑。」
"Headache persisting for a long time without resolution — one dose of this formula cures it. Investigating the root cause, it is stasis Blood in the brain."
Yī Lín Gǎi Cuò (医林改错) by Wáng Qīng Rèn, 1830
Tōng Qiào Huó Xuè Tāng chapter
「头痛多主于痰,痛甚者火多,有可吐者,有可下者。」
"Headache is mostly governed by Phlegm. When pain is severe, Fire predominates. Some cases require emesis, others purgation."
Dān Xī Xīn Fǎ (丹溪心法) by Zhū Dān Xī, 1347
Tóu Tòng (头痛) — Headache chapter
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for migraine.
Acupuncture needles are far thinner than the needles used for injections or blood tests — most people feel a brief pinch followed by a dull, heavy or tingling ache. TCM calls that ache de qi and treats it as a sign the point is working, not a problem.
For migraines, many of the key points sit on the hands, feet and lower legs rather than on the head itself, so sessions are usually relaxing — a lot of patients doze off on the table. If you have a needle phobia, say so: acupressure, ear seeds and gentler techniques can achieve much of the same effect.
It depends on your pattern, and being specific is more useful than being optimistic. Excess patterns — Liver Yang Rising, Liver Fire, Phlegm-Dampness — often respond within 2–4 weeks of weekly acupuncture plus daily herbs, usually as shorter, milder attacks before the frequency itself drops.
Deficiency (Qi and Blood Deficiency) and long-standing Blood Stagnation take longer — typically 3–6 months — because the body is rebuilding reserves or clearing an old blockage rather than simply calming something down. Chronic migraines that combine patterns (commonly Liver Yang layered over Phlegm) sit in between and usually need both addressed at once.
Usually yes — TCM is most often used alongside conventional treatment, not instead of it, and many people combine herbs with triptans, painkillers or preventives such as propranolol or amitriptyline without trouble.
That said, some herbs can interact with medication, so don't start a formula without telling both your prescriber and a qualified TCM practitioner exactly what you take. And never stop a prescribed migraine medication on your own — the aim is to gradually need it less as the underlying pattern improves, ideally with your doctor involved.
Acupuncture is generally regarded as a safe, drug-free option for migraine in pregnancy and is often preferred over herbs — particularly in the first trimester. But several acupuncture points and many herbs are contraindicated during pregnancy, so this is not a do-it-yourself situation.
Always work with a practitioner experienced in treating pregnant patients, and tell them you're pregnant (or trying) before any treatment. The Safety section above has more on what changes during pregnancy.
No. Herbal treatment for migraines is meant to be a course, not a life sentence. Once the pattern is corrected and attacks have settled, most people taper off the herbs and hold the result with diet, lifestyle and the occasional short top-up around known triggers — the premenstrual week, for example.
Deficiency patterns can need a longer rebuilding phase, but the goal is always to need less over time, not more.
Yes. In TCM the visual aura — the zigzags, blind spots or shimmering lights that arrive 20–60 minutes before the pain — is understood as Liver Wind stirring, much like wind moving leaves before a storm. Treatment typically adds Wind-extinguishing herbs such as Tiān Má and Gōu Téng to whichever pattern-specific formula you need.
One important caveat: if your aura is brand new, suddenly different from your usual one, or comes with weakness, slurred speech or vision loss that doesn't fully clear, treat it as a medical emergency first — see the Safety section.
Some dietary change usually helps, but it's targeted to your pattern rather than a single "migraine diet". Liver Fire and Liver Yang types are typically asked to cut alcohol, coffee and very spicy or greasy food; Phlegm-Dampness types benefit from less dairy, sugar and cold or raw food; deficiency types do better with regular, warm, nourishing meals and not skipping breakfast.
The General dietary guidance and the per-pattern Diet & lifestyle notes above give the specifics. Most people find that a few consistent changes matter more than a drastic overhaul.
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