Neuralgia
神经痛 · shén jīng tòng+7 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Nerve Pain, Nerve Pains, Neuralgias, Neuritic Pain, Neuritic Pains, Forearm Neuralgia, Pain Radiating Along a Limb
Not all nerve pain is the same. The sharp, cold-sensitive pain, the burning stress-triggered pain, and the dull, exhaustion-driven ache are three different TCM patterns - and each responds to a different treatment. When matched correctly, most neuralgia patients see meaningful relief within 4-8 weeks of acupuncture and herbs.
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 neuralgia. 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.
Neuralgia - nerve pain - is not one condition in Traditional Chinese Medicine. It's a cluster of distinct patterns, each with its own underlying cause, characteristic pain, and specific treatment. Some patterns involve blockage from Blood Stagnation or Cold, while others stem from malnourishment due to Qi and Blood Deficiency. The key is matching your unique pain - its quality, location, and what makes it better or worse - to the right pattern. Below, you'll find the six most common patterns that TCM practitioners identify and treat.
Neuralgia is pain caused by irritation or damage to a nerve. The pain is typically sharp, stabbing, burning, or electric-shock-like, and it follows the distribution of the affected nerve. Common forms include trigeminal neuralgia (face), postherpetic neuralgia (after shingles), and intercostal neuralgia (ribs). Diagnosis is based on symptom history, physical examination, and sometimes imaging or nerve conduction studies to rule out other causes. While the location and intensity vary, conventional medicine often groups these pains under a single umbrella and treats them with similar medications.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment for neuralgia usually begins with medications that stabilize nerve signals, such as anticonvulsants (gabapentin, pregabalin) or certain antidepressants (amitriptyline, duloxetine). Over-the-counter pain relievers are often ineffective. For severe cases, nerve blocks, local anesthetic injections, or even surgery may be considered. Physical therapy and lifestyle adjustments are sometimes recommended, but drug therapy remains the mainstay for most patients.
Where conventional treatment falls short
These medications, while helpful for some, often come with significant side effects - dizziness, fatigue, cognitive dulling, weight gain - and they may not fully control the pain. More importantly, they manage the symptom without addressing the underlying imbalance that made the nerve vulnerable in the first place. The conventional approach also rarely differentiates between a burning pain that flares with stress, a stabbing pain that worsens with cold, and a dull ache that accompanies exhaustion - yet in TCM, these distinctions are the very key to effective treatment.
How TCM understands neuralgia
TCM views neuralgia as a problem of flow in the body's channels (meridians). The fundamental principle is "where there is blockage, there is pain" (不通则痛, bù tōng zé tòng). When Qi and Blood cannot circulate smoothly through a nerve's pathway, pain signals fire. This blockage can be caused by Cold that constricts the channels, Phlegm that gums up the works, or Blood Stagnation that creates a physical logjam.
But there's another mechanism: "where there is malnourishment, there is pain" (不荣则痛, bù róng zé tòng). When Qi and Blood are too weak to nourish the nerves, they become hypersensitive and ache dully. This is common in chronic, lingering nerve pain, especially in older adults or after a long illness. The nerves are simply not receiving the energy and nutrients they need to function calmly.
The Liver is often central because it governs the smooth flow of Qi. Emotional stress can stagnate Liver Qi, which then turns into Heat and flares upward along nerve channels, causing burning pain. The Spleen, Kidney, and Heart also play roles depending on the pattern. That's why one Western diagnosis of neuralgia can have six different TCM patterns - and each requires a different strategy.
「寒气入经而稽迟,泣而不行,客于脉外则血少,客于脉中则气不通,故卒然而痛。」
"When cold Qi enters the channels it slows and stagnates; if it lodges outside the vessels the blood becomes scanty, and if it lodges inside the vessels the Qi is blocked - hence the sudden onset of pain."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses neuralgia
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking you to describe the pain in your own words - its quality, location, and what makes it better or worse. The timing and triggers of the nerve pain are the first big clues that steer the diagnosis toward one pattern rather than another. They will also look at your tongue and feel your pulse to confirm the internal picture.
If the pain is fixed, stabbing, and worsens with pressure, Blood Stagnation is the leading suspect. The tongue often appears dark or purplish with possible stasis spots, and the pulse may feel choppy or wiry. This pattern is very common when nerve pain has been present for a while.
When emotional stress clearly triggers or intensifies the pain, and it comes with a burning sensation, irritability, a bitter taste, or a red face, the practitioner thinks of Liver Qi Stagnation that has transformed into Heat. The tongue is red with a yellow coating, and the pulse is wiry and rapid.
A dull, lingering ache that gets much worse with fatigue and feels better after rest points to Qi and Blood Deficiency. The complexion may be pale, the tongue looks pale with a thin white coat, and the pulse is weak and thready. This picture often develops after a long illness or overwork.
Sudden, severe nerve pain that flares in cold or windy weather and feels better with warmth suggests Cold invading the Channels. The tongue is pale with a thin white coating, the pulse is tight or slow, and you might notice an aversion to drafts. This pattern is less common but very distinct.
Heavy, distending pain with a feeling of numbness or muzziness, along with a thick, greasy tongue coating and a slippery pulse, directs the diagnosis toward Phlegm in the Channels. There may also be nausea or a sense of heaviness in the body, reflecting dampness and phlegm obstructing the flow of Qi.
For recurrent, burning pain that is worse at night, accompanied by a dry mouth, night sweats, or a sensation of heat in the palms and soles, the practitioner considers Kidney Yin Deficiency with Empty-Heat Blazing. The tongue is red and peeled, and the pulse is fine and rapid - signs of deep yin depletion allowing heat to flare upward.
TCM Patterns for Neuralgia
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same neuralgia 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?
It is completely normal to see a bit of yourself in more than one pattern. Nerve pain does not always fit neatly into a single box, because patterns can overlap and evolve over time. For example, a long-standing stabbing pain from Blood Stagnation can drain your Qi and Blood, adding a dull, tired ache to the picture.
To narrow things down, pay attention to what triggers your pain most reliably and what brings relief. Pain that worsens with cold and eases with heat leans strongly toward Cold invasion or a deficiency pattern. Pain that flares with emotional stress and burns points to Liver Qi stagnation with Heat. Stabbing pain that is fixed in one spot is the hallmark of Blood Stagnation.
You can also look at your tongue in a mirror under natural light, but keep in mind that professional pulse and tongue diagnosis is far more reliable. A pale tongue hints at deficiency or cold, a red tongue suggests heat, a purplish tongue indicates blood stasis, and a greasy coating often signals phlegm. These clues help you decide which pattern is dominant.
Because these patterns overlap and can shift, a professional TCM diagnosis is invaluable. If your pain is severe, comes on suddenly, or is accompanied by other worrying symptoms, see a practitioner promptly rather than trying to self-treat. A tailored combination of herbs, acupuncture, and lifestyle guidance can address the root cause safely.
Blood Stagnation
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Cold invading the Channels joints and muscles
Phlegm in the Channels joints and muscles
Kidney Yin Deficiency With Empty-Heat Blazing
Treatment
Four ways to address neuralgia in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for neuralgia
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
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 both nourishes and invigorates the Blood, used to address menstrual irregularities, period pain, and other conditions caused by Blood stagnation combined with Blood deficiency. It builds on the famous Si Wu Tang (Four-Substance Decoction) by adding Peach Kernel and Safflower to strengthen its ability to move stagnant Blood and promote healthy circulation.
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 from the Shang Han Lun designed for people who catch a cold when their body is already weakened, particularly when they feel extremely cold, deeply tired, and have a weak pulse. It works by warming the body's core while gently helping it expel the cold from the surface. It is also widely used in modern practice for conditions like allergic rhinitis, slow heart rate, and cold-type joint pain when the underlying pattern involves Yang deficiency.
A powerful classical formula used to relieve joint and muscle pain, numbness, and stiffness caused by Wind, Cold, and Dampness lodged in the body's channels. It warms the channels, dissolves phlegm blockages, and promotes blood circulation to restore movement. Traditionally used for chronic arthritis, frozen shoulder, and lingering weakness after stroke.
A classical formula that nourishes the body's cooling Yin fluids while clearing excess internal heat. It is commonly used for symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, tinnitus, sore throat, dry mouth, and low back aching that arise when the Kidneys become depleted and the body overheats from within. It builds on the famous Liu Wei Di Huang Wan (Six Ingredient Rehmannia Pill) with two additional cooling herbs.
For excess patterns like Blood Stagnation, Cold Invasion, or Liver Heat, noticeable improvement often begins within 2-4 weeks of weekly acupuncture combined with daily herbs. Phlegm patterns may take a little longer as the sticky obstruction is dissolved. Deficiency patterns - Qi and Blood Deficiency or Kidney Yin Deficiency - require rebuilding the body's reserves, so expect 3-6 months of consistent treatment for lasting change. Many patients feel some relief sooner, but full resolution of the underlying imbalance takes time.
Treatment principles
Treatment of neuralgia in TCM always aims to restore the free flow of Qi and Blood through the affected channels. For blockage patterns, we use herbs and acupuncture to invigorate Blood, dispel Cold, or transform Phlegm. For deficiency patterns, we nourish Qi, Blood, or Yin to properly feed the nerves. Because pain often results from a mix of excess and deficiency, formulas are carefully combined to address both. Acupuncture points are chosen along the specific channels that traverse the painful area, often with local points near the pain and distal points to regulate the underlying organ system.
What to expect from treatment
A typical treatment plan includes weekly acupuncture sessions and a daily herbal formula taken as tea, granules, or pills. During an acupuncture session, you may feel a dull ache or tingling around the needle, which is a sign of Qi arriving. Many patients notice a subtle easing of pain after the first few sessions, with more consistent improvement building over weeks. Herbal formulas are usually adjusted every 2-4 weeks as your pattern shifts. Consistency is key - missing doses or skipping appointments can slow progress. Your practitioner will also guide you on lifestyle and dietary changes that support recovery.
General dietary guidance
Regardless of your specific pattern, a diet that supports smooth Qi flow and nourishes the nerves is beneficial. Favour warm, cooked foods like soups, stews, and congees, which are easy to digest and gentle on the Spleen. Include moderate amounts of nerve-friendly foods such as leafy greens, whole grains, and small portions of lean protein. Avoid excessive cold or raw foods (ice water, salads) which can constrict channels and worsen pain. Reduce greasy, fried, and heavily spiced foods that generate Dampness and Heat. Alcohol and smoking are best minimized, as they can aggravate nerve inflammation.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely be used alongside conventional medications, but coordination is essential. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor about all treatments you are receiving. Some Blood-moving herbs (Dang Gui, Chuan Xiong, Tao Ren) may have mild blood-thinning effects, so caution is needed if you take anticoagulants like warfarin. Herbs that calm the Shen (spirit) may add to the sedative effects of nerve pain medications; your practitioner may adjust dosages accordingly. Never stop or reduce prescribed medication without your doctor's guidance, even if you feel better.
*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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Sudden, severe nerve pain with loss of motor function — such as weakness in an arm or leg, or difficulty walking - could indicate nerve compression or stroke.
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Loss of bowel or bladder control — accompanied by nerve pain - a sign of cauda equina syndrome, requiring emergency surgery.
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Nerve pain with fever and unexplained weight loss — may signal an infection or malignancy affecting the nerves.
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Pain after a traumatic injury — especially if there is numbness or tingling - fractures or spinal cord injury must be ruled out.
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Nerve pain with a rapidly spreading rash or blistering — could indicate acute shingles or a serious allergic reaction.
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Severe headache with stiff neck and light sensitivity — could be meningitis.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the body's Qi and Blood are naturally redirected to nourish the growing fetus. This makes deficiency patterns - especially Qi and Blood Deficiency - more common in pregnant women with neuralgia. Gentle tonics like Ba Zhen Tang may be used with careful modification, but blood-invigorating formulas such as Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang are absolutely contraindicated because they can stimulate uterine contractions and risk miscarriage.
Acupuncture is often the safest and most effective choice. A practitioner experienced in prenatal care will select distal points like Zusanli ST-36 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 (using only mild stimulation) to nourish and gently move Qi without endangering the pregnancy. Any herbal treatment must be prescribed by a qualified TCM obstetric specialist.
Herbs that clear Heat or move Blood can pass into breast milk and cause loose stools or digestive discomfort in the nursing infant. For neuralgia with Heat patterns, strong bitter-cold herbs like Long Dan Cao and Huang Lian should be avoided. For Blood Stagnation patterns, blood-moving herbs such as Hong Hua and Tao Ren are also best withheld.
Acupuncture provides an excellent alternative that carries no risk to the baby. Needling can be tailored to the mother's specific pattern - whether it is moving stagnant Liver Qi, warming Cold channels, or nourishing deficient Blood - without any transfer of medicinal substances through the milk. Dietary therapy and gentle moxibustion can also be safely integrated.
Neuralgia is rare in children, but when it does occur - for example, after shingles or a nerve injury - the patterns often differ from those in adults. External invasions of Wind-Cold or Phlegm obstructing the channels are more common, and children's developing bodies tend to respond more quickly to treatment.
Herbal dosages must be reduced to one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose, and strong dispersing or blood-moving formulas are generally avoided. Acupuncture can be challenging for young children; pediatric tuina (Chinese therapeutic massage) or gentle acupressure on points like Hegu LI-4 and Zusanli ST-36 are often better tolerated and can effectively unblock the channels and relieve pain.
In older adults, neuralgia is frequently rooted in underlying deficiency - Kidney Yin Deficiency with Empty-Heat, Qi and Blood Deficiency, or long-standing Blood Stagnation from chronic illness. Treatment must be gentler and more nourishing, with herbal dosages typically reduced to about two-thirds of the standard adult dose.
Polypharmacy is a real concern, so a TCM practitioner will carefully screen for potential herb-drug interactions, especially with blood-thinning or diabetes medications. Acupuncture is often the ideal primary therapy: it is well-tolerated, can be given with mild stimulation, and when combined with moxibustion, it warms and nourishes without taxing the body. Although recovery may be slower, consistent treatment can yield meaningful, sustained relief without the side effects of long-term painkillers.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture has the strongest evidence base for neuralgia. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials indicate that acupuncture can significantly reduce pain intensity and attack frequency in trigeminal neuralgia and postherpetic neuralgia, often with fewer side effects than conventional medications like carbamazepine. The quality of these studies is generally moderate, with many trials conducted in China and limited blinding.
Chinese herbal medicine also shows promise. Formulas that move Blood and unblock channels, such as Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang, have been studied for postherpetic neuralgia and other nerve pain conditions, with several meta-analyses reporting significant improvements in pain scores. However, the overall evidence is still limited by small sample sizes and methodological weaknesses. More large-scale, rigorously designed international trials are needed to confirm these benefits.
Key clinical studies
This meta-analysis pooled data from multiple randomized controlled trials and found that acupuncture significantly reduced pain intensity and frequency of trigeminal neuralgia attacks compared to conventional medication, with a lower rate of adverse events. The authors concluded that acupuncture is an effective and safe therapy, though higher-quality trials are still needed.
Acupuncture for trigeminal neuralgia: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Liu H, Li H, Xu M, et al. Acupuncture for trigeminal neuralgia: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Medicine (Baltimore). 2017;96(5):e5957.
This review evaluated oral and topical Chinese herbal formulas for postherpetic neuralgia. The analysis showed that herbal medicine significantly reduced pain scores and improved quality of life compared to placebo or conventional analgesics, with formulas containing Chuan Xiong, Tao Ren, and Hong Hua showing notable effects. The evidence was graded as moderate due to risk of bias in included studies.
Chinese herbal medicine for postherpetic neuralgia: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Li X, Zhang Y, Wang J, et al. Chinese herbal medicine for postherpetic neuralgia: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Front Pharmacol. 2020;11:696.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「寒则筋挛,筋挛则痛。」
"Cold causes the sinews to contract, and contraction of the sinews leads to pain."
Ling Shu
Chapter 13, Jing Jin (Sinew Channels)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for neuralgia.
Acupuncture stimulates specific points along the channels to unblock the stagnation of Qi and Blood that is causing the pain. It also prompts your body to release natural pain-killing substances like endorphins and can calm overactive nerve signaling. Many patients describe the sensation as a deep, dull ache or a pleasant tingling that signals the arrival of Qi to the area. The effect is often immediate for some, but it builds cumulatively over several sessions.
Not immediately, and never without your doctor's supervision. Herbal formulas work to correct the underlying pattern that makes you susceptible to nerve pain, but they often work best alongside conventional medication in the early stages. Over time, as your condition improves, you and your doctor may discuss gradually reducing your medication. Stopping prescribed drugs abruptly can cause withdrawal or a flare-up of pain, so always coordinate closely with both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing physician.
Most people notice some reduction in pain intensity or frequency within 2-4 weeks of starting weekly acupuncture and daily herbs. The initial changes might be small - a better night's sleep, a shorter pain episode - but they signal that the pattern is shifting. Full correction of the root imbalance, especially for chronic conditions that have been present for years, can take 3-6 months. Consistency with herbs and appointments is the single biggest factor in how fast you improve.
When prescribed by a qualified TCM practitioner based on your specific pattern, side effects are rare and usually mild - perhaps a brief digestive adjustment as your body adapts. The formulas are tailored to your constitution, so they should feel supportive. Self-prescribing or taking random herbs without a diagnosis is dangerous because you might take a warming formula for a heat pattern, which would make the pain worse. Always work with a licensed professional.
Yes, TCM has a very strong track record with postherpetic neuralgia. The burning, stabbing pain that lingers after shingles is often a combination of residual Heat and Blood Stagnation in the channels. Formulas like Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang (Drive Out Stasis in the Mansion of Blood Decoction) and acupuncture points along the affected nerve pathway can significantly reduce pain and help the nerve heal. Many patients who have tried multiple medications without relief find TCM to be a turning point.
You don't need a rigid diet, but a few general adjustments can make a big difference. Avoid foods that create Dampness and Phlegm - think dairy, greasy fried foods, and excessive sugar - which can clog the channels and worsen pain. Cold or raw foods (ice water, salads) can constrict the channels and aggravate cold-type or deficiency-type pain. Instead, favor warm, cooked meals like soups and stews that are easy to digest and support the Spleen. Your practitioner will give you more specific advice based on your pattern.
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