Postherpetic Neuralgia
带状疱疹后遗神经痛 · dài zhuàng pào zhěn hòu yí shén jīng tòng+3 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Chronic Neuralgia Following A Shingles Outbreak, Long-lasting Nerve Pain After Herpes Zoster, Persistent Shingles Pain
The quality of your pain - whether it's sharp and fixed, dull and achy, or cold-sensitive and deep - tells a TCM practitioner exactly which pattern needs to be treated, and most patients see significant relief within 6 to 12 weeks when the correct pattern is addressed.
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 postherpetic 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.
Postherpetic neuralgia isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a family of three distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and its own treatment plan. The sharp, fixed pain that worsens with pressure is a stagnation pattern where old heat and toxins have left the channels blocked. The dull, lingering ache that eases with rest points to a deficiency pattern where the nerves are simply undernourished.
And the deep, cold-sensitive ache that flares in damp weather signals a painful obstruction rooted in Liver and Kidney weakness. Which one matches your experience changes everything about how a TCM practitioner approaches your care.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands postherpetic neuralgia
The Liver organ system plays a central role. The Liver is responsible for the smooth flow of Qi throughout the body and stores Blood. The intense stress, anger, or frustration that often accompanies a shingles outbreak can stagnate the Liver Qi. When Qi stagnates, Blood congeals, creating a fixed, stabbing pain that is worse with pressure. This is the Qi and Blood Stagnation pattern - the most common cause of PHN - where the original heat and toxins have left a stubborn blockage behind.
But not everyone has the same constitution. In people who are older or already depleted, the prolonged battle with the virus drains the body's Qi and Blood. Without enough nourishment, the channels and nerve endings become weak and hypersensitive, producing a dull, lingering ache that feels better after rest and worse with fatigue. This is the Qi and Blood Deficiency pattern, where the pain comes from undernourishment rather than obstruction.
A third pattern occurs when the body's foundation - the Kidney and Liver systems - is inherently weak. In these cases, cold and damp easily invade the depleted channels, creating a painful obstruction (Bi syndrome) where the pain is deep, aching, and worsens in cold or wet weather. This is more common in elderly patients whose vital energy is already low. So the same Western diagnosis of PHN can arise from three very different TCM mechanisms, and identifying the correct one is what makes treatment effective.
「缠腰火丹,一名蛇串疮,有干湿不同,红黄之异,皆如累累珠形。干者色红赤,形如云片,上起风粟,作痒发热,此属肝心二经风火。」
"Waist-girdling fire cinnabar, also called snake-like sore, has dry and wet types, red and yellow differences, all shaped like strings of pearls. The dry type is red, shaped like cloud patches, with itchy papules and fever, belonging to wind-fire of the Liver and Heart channels."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses postherpetic neuralgia
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by listening closely to how the pain feels and where it sits. A sharp, stabbing pain that stays in one fixed spot points toward Qi and Blood Stagnation, where residual heat and toxins have left the channels blocked. A dull, lingering ache that feels better after rest suggests Qi and Blood Deficiency, where the nerves are undernourished rather than obstructed.
If the pain worsens with cold or damp weather and the person feels generally weak, especially in the lower back and knees, the practitioner considers Painful Obstruction with Liver and Kidney Deficiency. This pattern is more common in older adults, whose underlying vitality is already lower, allowing cold-damp to invade the channels.
The tongue tells a clear story. A dark or purplish tongue with stasis spots confirms blood stagnation, while a pale, puffy tongue with a thin white coat points to deficiency. A tongue that is pale and maybe wet supports the cold-damp obstruction picture. The pulse adds another layer: a wiry or choppy pulse matches stagnation, a weak or thready pulse matches deficiency, and a deep, slow pulse matches cold obstruction.
Finally, the practitioner asks about accompanying signs. Irritability, chest tightness, or a bitter taste in the mouth can tip the balance toward stagnation with lingering heat. Shortness of breath, poor appetite, and a sallow complexion steer the diagnosis toward Qi and Blood Deficiency. Cold limbs and a history of chronic joint pain make the Painful Obstruction pattern more likely.
TCM Patterns for Postherpetic Neuralgia
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same postherpetic 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 bits of yourself in more than one pattern. Postherpetic neuralgia often involves a mix of stagnation and deficiency, especially after weeks or months of pain have drained your energy. You might notice a sharp, fixed pain (stagnation) but also feel deeply tired and pale (deficiency). That overlap is part of the healing process, not a mistake.
To narrow things down, pay attention to what makes the pain better or worse. If warmth and gentle movement ease the ache, deficiency is likely in the lead. If pressure or massage makes it worse, stagnation is more dominant. Cold weather making everything flare points to the Painful Obstruction pattern, while stress and emotional upset often aggravate Qi stagnation.
Because these patterns can blend and shift, a professional tongue and pulse examination is invaluable. A practitioner can detect subtle signs-like a tongue that is pale but has a few purple spots-and choose herbs and acupuncture points that address both the blockage and the underlying weakness at the same time.
If the pain is severe, keeps you from sleeping, or comes with new symptoms like fever or spreading rash, see a healthcare provider promptly. Self-massage or gentle heat may offer temporary relief, but persistent neuralgia benefits enormously from an integrated TCM approach that combines internal herbs, acupuncture, and dietary guidance tailored to your unique pattern.
Qi And Blood Stagnation
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address postherpetic neuralgia in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for postherpetic neuralgia
4 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 two-herb pain-relieving formula used to ease recurring pain in the chest, ribs, upper abdomen, or lower abdomen that is linked to emotional stress and internal heat. It works by soothing the Liver, clearing trapped heat, and improving the flow of Qi and Blood to stop pain.
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 for chronic joint and lower back pain caused by long-term exposure to cold and dampness, combined with underlying weakness of the Liver, Kidneys, Qi, and Blood. It works on two fronts: expelling cold, wind, and dampness from the joints and sinews while also strengthening the body's constitution to prevent recurrence. It is especially suited for older adults or anyone whose pain has persisted for a long time and is accompanied by weakness, stiffness, or numbness in the lower body.
Qi and Blood Stagnation patterns often respond within 4 to 8 weeks of weekly acupuncture combined with daily herbal formulas. Deficiency patterns - where the body needs to rebuild Qi and Blood - typically require a longer commitment of 3 to 6 months. The Painful Obstruction with Liver and Kidney Deficiency pattern, common in older adults, may take 2 to 4 months to see meaningful improvement, but steady progress is the norm once the right warming and nourishing treatment is established.
Treatment principles
What to expect from treatment
General dietary guidance
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
*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 worsening of pain or a dramatic change in pain quality — May indicate a new nerve injury or another underlying condition that needs immediate evaluation.
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New blisters or rash appearing in the same or a different area — Could signal a recurrent shingles outbreak, which requires prompt antiviral treatment.
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Fever, confusion, stiff neck, or severe headache accompanying the pain — These may be signs of meningitis or encephalitis, which are medical emergencies.
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Vision changes, eye pain, or pain near the eye — If shingles originally affected the eye area, any new eye symptoms need urgent ophthalmologic assessment to prevent vision loss.
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Unexplained weight loss, night sweats, or pain that spreads to new areas — These constitutional symptoms could indicate a more serious underlying illness requiring thorough investigation.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the Qi and Blood Stagnation pattern must be treated with great caution. Strong blood-moving herbs like Tao Ren, Hong Hua, and Ru Xiang are contraindicated because they may stimulate uterine contractions. Milder alternatives such as Yan Hu Suo can be used under professional guidance, but acupuncture is often the safer first-line choice. Points like Hegu (LI-4) and Sanyinjiao (SP-6), though effective for pain, are traditionally avoided during pregnancy unless used by an experienced practitioner for labor induction - so they are generally omitted. Instead, distal points on the arms and legs that do not carry such risk are selected.
While many gentle tonic herbs are safe during breastfeeding, strong blood-moving or bitter-cold herbs used for postherpetic neuralgia can pass into breast milk and affect the baby. Formulas like Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang should be used only under close supervision. Acupuncture is an excellent alternative because it carries no risk of herbal transmission to the infant. Moxibustion can also be safely applied to warm the channels and ease pain without affecting milk supply.
Postherpetic neuralgia is overwhelmingly a condition of older adults, and the Painful Obstruction with Liver and Kidney Deficiency pattern is the most common. Treatment must emphasize gentle tonification rather than aggressive dispersion. Formulas like Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang are ideal because they strengthen the Liver and Kidneys while expelling wind-damp and stopping pain. Dosages are typically reduced to about two-thirds of the standard adult dose to protect the digestive system.
Acupuncture in the elderly should use thin needles and mild stimulation, often with moxibustion added for warmth. Points like Taixi (KI-3) and Zusanli (ST-36) support the underlying deficiency. Because many older patients take multiple medications, herbal treatment must be carefully coordinated to avoid interactions. The healing timeline is often longer, requiring patience and consistent treatment over several months.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture for postherpetic neuralgia has a growing body of evidence. Several randomized controlled trials and systematic reviews indicate that electrical acupuncture at Huatuojiaji points can significantly reduce pain intensity and improve quality of life compared to conventional medication alone. The effect is thought to come from local pain modulation and improved nerve microcirculation.
Chinese herbal medicine also shows promise, particularly formulas that invigorate blood and dispel stasis such as Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang. However, most studies are published in Chinese-language journals with small sample sizes and methodological limitations. High-quality, placebo-controlled trials in English are still scarce, so while the clinical tradition is rich, the evidence base remains moderate and needs further rigorous investigation.
Key clinical studies
This meta-analysis pooled data from 15 RCTs involving over 1,200 patients and found that acupuncture, especially when combined with electrical stimulation at Huatuojiaji points, reduced pain scores significantly more than medication alone. The number needed to treat for 50% pain relief was 4.
Acupuncture for postherpetic neuralgia: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Li X, et al. Pain Medicine. 2019;20(8):1582-1593.
In a randomized controlled trial of 80 patients, the combination of Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang and acupuncture achieved a 87.5% effective rate compared to 65% with gabapentin alone. Pain VAS scores dropped significantly faster in the TCM group.
Clinical observation of Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang combined with acupuncture for postherpetic neuralgia
Wang Y, et al. Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine. 2021;27(3):210-215.
A prospective cohort study of 60 elderly patients showed that Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang combined with moxibustion reduced pain and improved lower back and knee weakness over 8 weeks. The treatment was well tolerated with no serious adverse events.
Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang for postherpetic neuralgia in elderly patients with Liver and Kidney deficiency
Zhang H, et al. Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine. 2022;42(1):112-117.
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for postherpetic neuralgia.
Yes, acupuncture is one of the most studied TCM treatments for postherpetic neuralgia and can be highly effective. By inserting fine needles at specific points - often Huatuojiaji points along the spine corresponding to the affected nerve - acupuncture helps unblock stagnant Qi and Blood, reduce inflammation, and encourage the body's own pain-relieving mechanisms. Many patients report a noticeable reduction in pain intensity and frequency after a few sessions, though a full course of 8 to 12 treatments is typical.
In most cases, yes, TCM herbal formulas can be used safely alongside conventional medications like gabapentin, pregabalin, or amitriptyline. There are no known direct interactions, but some herbs have mild sedative or analgesic effects that could amplify the effects of your medication. Always inform both your prescribing doctor and your TCM practitioner about everything you are taking. Never stop or reduce your conventional medication abruptly - if your pain improves, work with your doctor to adjust dosages gradually.
Herbal formulas for postherpetic neuralgia begin working internally within days, but noticeable pain relief typically builds over 2 to 4 weeks of consistent daily use. For stagnation patterns, you may feel a subtle shift in the quality of the pain - from sharp to more diffuse - within the first week. For deficiency patterns, improvement is gradual, like a slow tide coming in, and becomes more evident after a month of treatment. Herbs are not a quick fix but a steady rebuilding process.
One of the goals of TCM is to correct the underlying imbalance so that the pain does not return. When the root pattern - be it stagnation, deficiency, or cold obstruction - is fully resolved, the pain typically stays away. However, if the underlying constitution is weak or a new stressor triggers a flare, some maintenance treatments may be recommended. Many patients find that even if mild symptoms recur, they are far less intense and respond quickly to a short course of treatment.
Dietary adjustments can significantly support your recovery. In general, avoid cold and raw foods, which can further weaken digestion and aggravate deficiency patterns. Spicy, greasy, and heavily processed foods can stir up residual heat and dampness, making stagnation worse. Instead, focus on warm, cooked meals like soups, congees, and stews that are easy to digest and nourish Qi and Blood. Your practitioner may give you more specific guidance based on your pattern.
Acupuncture itself uses extremely fine needles and is typically not painful - you may feel a slight pinch or a dull ache when the needle reaches the correct depth, which is a sign of Qi activation. For postherpetic neuralgia, some points may be located in sensitive areas, but your practitioner will work gently and within your comfort level. Many patients find the sessions deeply relaxing, and the relief that follows far outweighs any momentary discomfort.
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