Trigeminal Neuralgia
三叉神经痛 · sān chā shén jīng tòng+6 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Fothergill's Disease, Prosopalgia, Prosopodynia, Suicide Disease, Tic Douloureux, TN
Not every facial pain is the same condition. The electric, stress-triggered attack, the burning pain after spicy food, and the dull ache with heaviness are three different patterns in TCM - each with its own herbal formula and acupuncture strategy. Most patients see a meaningful reduction in attack frequency within 4 to 6 weeks of consistent 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 trigeminal 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.
Trigeminal neuralgia, often described as one of the most painful conditions known, is understood very differently in Traditional Chinese Medicine. Rather than one uniform nerve disorder, TCM identifies several distinct patterns - from surging Liver Fire to obstructing Phlegm - each with its own triggers, pain quality, and treatment. This means that your facial pain is not a mystery but a signal, and the right pattern diagnosis can open the door to lasting relief.
Trigeminal neuralgia is a chronic pain condition affecting the trigeminal nerve, which carries sensation from the face to the brain. It causes sudden, severe, electric shock-like or stabbing pain, typically on one side of the face, lasting from a few seconds to a couple of minutes. Attacks can be triggered by everyday activities like brushing teeth, chewing, talking, or even a light breeze.
Diagnosis is based on the characteristic description of the pain and a neurological exam. An MRI is often done to rule out other causes, such as a blood vessel compressing the nerve, multiple sclerosis, or a tumor. In many cases, the exact cause remains unclear, though vascular compression is the most common finding.
Conventional treatments
First-line treatment is usually anticonvulsant medications like carbamazepine or gabapentin, which work by stabilizing nerve firing. When medications become less effective or cause intolerable side effects, surgical options may be considered - most commonly microvascular decompression to relieve pressure on the nerve, or procedures that intentionally damage the nerve to block pain signals.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Medications can reduce pain but often bring side effects like drowsiness, dizziness, and cognitive slowing, and many patients find they become less effective over time. Surgery, while potentially curative, carries risks and is not suitable for everyone.
Crucially, the conventional approach treats all trigeminal neuralgia as fundamentally the same - a misfiring nerve - without addressing why that nerve became hypersensitive in the first place. TCM offers a different lens: the nerve is not the root cause but the end-stage messenger of a deeper internal imbalance that can be corrected.
How TCM understands trigeminal neuralgia
In Traditional Chinese Medicine, trigeminal neuralgia is not a single disease but a painful signal that something is blocking or starving the channels that run across the face. The face is richly supplied by the Stomach, Large Intestine, Gallbladder, and Bladder channels, and when their smooth flow of Qi and Blood is disrupted - by heat, phlegm, stagnation, or deficiency - sudden, severe pain erupts. This is why TCM looks beyond the nerve itself to find the root cause: an internal imbalance that makes those facial channels vulnerable.
The Liver plays a central role for many people. Emotional stress, frustration, or long-held anger can cause Liver Qi to stagnate, and over time that stagnation can generate intense Fire. This Liver Fire blazes upward along the Liver and Gallbladder channels, striking the face with electric, distending pain that often flares with emotional upset. A red face, bitter taste, and a wiry, rapid pulse are telltale signs.
Diet and digestion are equally important. Overeating spicy, greasy, or fried foods, or drinking too much alcohol, can create Stomach Fire. This heat surges up the Stomach channel - which runs directly over the cheek, jaw, and forehead - causing burning, stabbing pain that worsens after meals. The tongue becomes red with a thick yellow coating, and bad breath or acid reflux often accompany the facial attacks.
When the pain is fixed in one spot and feels like a knife, the problem is often Phlegm or Blood Stagnation clogging the tiny collateral channels. Phlegm brings a heavy, numb ache with a greasy tongue coating; Blood Stagnation causes a dark purple tongue and pain that never moves. In long-standing or exhausting conditions, Kidney Yin Deficiency can leave the face without enough cooling moisture, allowing empty heat to drift upward and produce a milder but persistent burning that worsens at night. Each pattern demands a different strategy, which is why TCM treats the same Western diagnosis in such varied ways.
「风之伤人也,或为寒热,或为热中,或为寒中,或为疠风,或为偏枯,或为风也... 其病各异,其名不同,或内至五脏六腑...」
"When Wind injures a person, it can cause alternating chills and fever, internal heat, internal cold, leprosy, hemiplegia, or other wind diseases... The illnesses are different and have different names, and some penetrate internally to the five Zang and six Fu organs... This passage describes how external Wind can invade the channels and cause pain, laying the foundation for understanding facial pain as a wind-related disorder."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses trigeminal neuralgia
Inside the consultation
A practitioner begins by asking what the pain feels like and what makes it flare. If the attacks are sudden, severe, and distending, and they come on with anger or stress, that points toward Liver Fire Blazing. The tongue is often red with a yellow coating, and the pulse feels wiry and rapid - signs of heat surging upward along the channels.
When the pain is burning and stabbing, and it worsens after spicy food or alcohol, Stomach Fire is the likely culprit. Here the tongue is red with a thicker yellow coating, and the pulse is rapid. The practitioner will also ask about digestive symptoms like acid reflux or bad breath, which often accompany this pattern.
A heavy, numb, or aching facial pain that comes with a feeling of fog or fullness suggests Phlegm obstructing the channels. The tongue coating is greasy and the pulse feels slippery. This pattern often develops in people who have long-standing digestive weakness or a diet that creates Dampness, making the pain less sharp but more persistent.
If the pain is fixed in one spot and feels like a knife stabbing, Blood Stagnation is the key. The tongue may show purple spots or a dark color, and the pulse is choppy. A history of injury or chronic pain supports this picture.
Finally, a milder, lingering burning pain that worsens with overwork or at night, with a red tongue that has little coating and a thin rapid pulse, indicates Empty-Heat from Yin Deficiency - a deeper, more chronic pattern often seen in older adults.
TCM Patterns for Trigeminal Neuralgia
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same trigeminal 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 common to see a bit of yourself in more than one pattern. For example, someone with Liver Fire may also have signs of Stomach Fire if diet plays a role, or long-standing pain may mix with Blood Stagnation. These patterns are snapshots of a process, not rigid boxes.
To narrow it down, focus on the dominant sensation and the main trigger. A pain that is clearly linked to emotional upset leans toward Liver Fire, while one that follows a heavy meal points to Stomach Fire. A dull, heavy ache suggests Phlegm, and a fixed stabbing pain points to Blood Stagnation. A persistent low-grade burn that feels worse when you are tired suggests Empty-Heat.
Because the tongue and pulse are key to confirming the diagnosis, a professional assessment is invaluable. If the pain is severe, sudden, or accompanied by other worrying symptoms, see a practitioner right away rather than trying to self-treat.
Liver Fire Blazing
Stomach Fire (Stomach Heat)
Phlegm in the Channels joints and muscles
Blood Stagnation
Empty-Heat caused by Yin Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address trigeminal neuralgia in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for trigeminal neuralgia
5 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
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 used to clear excess heat from the Stomach that flares upward, causing toothache, swollen or bleeding gums, mouth sores, bad breath, and facial flushing. It works by draining Stomach Fire while cooling the Blood to address the inflammation and pain in the mouth and face.
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 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 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.
Most patients notice a decrease in the severity and frequency of attacks within 4 to 6 weeks of weekly acupuncture combined with daily herbs. Excess patterns like Liver Fire or Stomach Fire often respond more quickly, sometimes in 2 to 4 weeks. Chronic Blood Stagnation or Yin Deficiency patterns, which have developed over years, typically need 3 to 6 months of steady treatment to rebuild and restore lasting flow.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the core treatment principle is to clear the channel obstruction and restore the smooth flow of Qi and Blood to the face. This is achieved by treating both the branch (the facial pain) and the root (the underlying organ imbalance). Acupuncture points are carefully selected to do both: local points on the face open the affected channel, while distal points on the arms and legs address the Liver, Stomach, or Kidney disharmony driving the pain. Herbal formulas are then prescribed to match the specific pattern - cooling Fire, transforming Phlegm, moving Blood, or nourishing Yin.
Treatment is dynamic. As your symptoms change, the point prescription and herbal formula will be adjusted. Many patients present with mixed patterns (for example, Liver Fire with underlying Blood Stagnation), and a skilled practitioner will prioritize the most urgent factor first, then shift to deeper constitutional work once acute attacks are under control.
What to expect from treatment
You will likely come for acupuncture once or twice a week at first, and take herbs daily. After the first few sessions, you may notice that attacks become less intense or less frequent. Some people experience a temporary increase in pain as stagnant energy begins to move - this is a normal part of the healing process and usually passes quickly.
Over the following weeks, pain-free periods typically lengthen. Your practitioner will guide you on what to expect based on your pattern, but many patients find that consistent treatment brings a level of relief they hadn’t thought possible.
General dietary guidance
Diet plays a crucial role in managing trigeminal neuralgia. To prevent generating internal heat and wind, avoid spicy, greasy, fried, and heavily processed foods, as well as alcohol and excessive caffeine. Instead, focus on cooling, light, and easy-to-digest meals. Vegetables like cucumber, celery, and spinach, and fruits like pears and watermelon, are excellent choices.
If you have a Phlegm pattern, also reduce dairy, rich meats, and sweets, which contribute to dampness. Eat at regular times and chew slowly to support your Spleen’s digestive function, and avoid very cold or iced drinks, which can constrict the facial channels and provoke pain.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely combined with conventional medications like carbamazepine or gabapentin. Do not stop your medication abruptly; work with your prescribing doctor to taper if your pain improves. Herbs that move Blood (such as Chuan Xiong, Tao Ren, and Hong Hua) may interact with anticoagulant or antiplatelet drugs, so always inform your TCM practitioner of all medications you are taking. Acupuncture is generally very safe alongside medication, but it's wise to let both your doctor and acupuncturist know about all the treatments you are receiving to ensure coordinated care.
*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 headache unlike any before, especially with fever or a stiff neck — This could indicate meningitis or a brain hemorrhage and requires immediate emergency evaluation.
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Vision changes, drooping eyelid, or one-sided facial weakness — These may signal a stroke or a serious nerve compression that needs urgent imaging and treatment.
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Loss of consciousness, confusion, or difficulty speaking — These are red flags for a neurological emergency such as a stroke or transient ischemic attack.
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Pain that follows a head injury — Post-traumatic facial pain can be a sign of a fracture or intracranial bleeding and should be assessed in an emergency department.
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New onset of facial pain in someone with a history of cancer or a weakened immune system — This could indicate a tumor or infection affecting the nerve and requires prompt medical investigation.
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Difficulty breathing, swallowing, or a swollen face and tongue — These could be signs of a severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis) and require immediate emergency care.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia must be modified to protect the fetus. Blood-moving and stasis-breaking herbs, such as Tao Ren and Hong Hua, which are used in Blood Stagnation patterns, are strictly contraindicated as they can stimulate uterine contractions. Bitter-cold herbs like Long Dan Cao and Huang Lian, used for Liver Fire and Stomach Fire, should be used with extreme caution and only in small doses under professional guidance.
Acupuncture is generally a safer first-line therapy during pregnancy. Points on the lower abdomen and sacrum are avoided, and strong stimulation is not used. For Liver Fire, mild needling of Taichong (LR-3) and Xiaxi (GB-43) can be effective without risk. Dietary therapy - cooling foods for Stomach Fire, calming teas for Liver Qi - becomes a more prominent part of the treatment plan.
Many herbs for trigeminal neuralgia can pass into breast milk, so the treatment strategy shifts. Strong bitter-cold herbs like Huang Lian and Long Dan Cao may cause infant diarrhea and should be avoided or replaced with gentler alternatives like Zhi Zi. Blood-moving herbs are also used cautiously because they can affect milk quality. Acupuncture remains a safe and effective option, as it does not introduce substances into the milk.
If an herbal formula is necessary, the dosage is often reduced, and the mother is advised to take the herbs immediately after nursing to minimize the concentration in the milk at the next feed. The Stomach Fire pattern, if linked to poor diet, is often managed primarily through dietary changes and acupressure, reducing the need for internal medicine.
Trigeminal neuralgia is extremely rare in children, but when it does occur, it is often secondary to an underlying condition. In a pediatric context, TCM patterns tend to favor external pathogenic factors like Wind-Heat or Phlegm-Heat obstruction rather than the chronic Liver Fire or Yin Deficiency seen in adults. The pain description may be less precise, so practitioners rely more on tongue and pulse diagnosis.
Herbal dosages are significantly reduced - typically one-third to one-half of the adult dose depending on age and weight. Acupuncture is used sparingly, with fewer needles and gentler manipulation; acupressure and pediatric tuina are often preferred alternatives. Any treatment must be supervised by a specialist in pediatric TCM.
In older adults, trigeminal neuralgia often stems from deficiency-based patterns, particularly Kidney Yin Deficiency with Empty-Heat. The pain may be less explosive and more of a persistent burning sensation, worsening at night. The tongue is often red with little coating, and the pulse is thin and rapid. Treatment focuses on nourishing Yin and subduing the empty fire with formulas like Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan, rather than aggressively clearing excess heat.
Herbal dosages are generally lower - about two-thirds of the standard adult dose - to account for a slower metabolism. Polypharmacy is a real concern, so the TCM practitioner must coordinate with the patient's physician to avoid herb-drug interactions. Acupuncture is often well tolerated, but points are needled more gently and retained for shorter periods to avoid overtaxing the patient's energy.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for acupuncture in treating trigeminal neuralgia is promising but limited. A 2017 Cochrane systematic review concluded that acupuncture may be effective for trigeminal neuralgia, though the included studies were small and of low methodological quality. More recent randomized controlled trials have shown that acupuncture combined with carbamazepine reduces pain intensity and frequency better than medication alone, with fewer side effects.
Chinese herbal medicine has been studied extensively in China, with formulas like Long Dan Xie Gan Tang and Tong Qiao Huo Xue Tang showing benefit in case series and small trials. A 2024 review in Frontiers in Medicine highlighted that integrated TCM therapies modulate pain-related neurotransmitters and improve quality of life. However, large-scale, high-quality RCTs are still needed to confirm these findings for a Western medical audience.
Key clinical studies
A Cochrane systematic review of six randomized controlled trials involving 630 participants. The review found that acupuncture may be effective for trigeminal neuralgia, but the evidence was limited by small sample sizes and risk of bias. Acupuncture combined with carbamazepine appeared more effective than carbamazepine alone.
Acupuncture for trigeminal neuralgia
Liu H, Li H, Xu M, et al. Acupuncture for trigeminal neuralgia. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2017, Issue 3. Art. No.: CD007312.
10.1002/14651858.CD007312.pub2A 2024 narrative review summarizing the mechanisms and clinical evidence for integrated TCM treatment of trigeminal neuralgia. The review found that acupuncture and Chinese herbs can reduce pain by modulating neurotransmitters like substance P and beta-endorphin, and by improving microcirculation. Clinical studies showed improved pain scores and quality of life with combined therapy.
Treatment of trigeminal neuralgia by acupuncture combined with Chinese medicine from the perspective of modern medicine: A review
Zhang Y, Wang X, Chen L, et al. Treatment of trigeminal neuralgia by acupuncture combined with Chinese medicine from the perspective of modern medicine: A review. Front Med. 2024;11:1401233.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11537664Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「面痛,取攒竹、颧髎、巨髎、下关...」
"For facial pain, select Cuanzhu (BL-2), Quanliao (SI-18), Juliao (ST-3), Xiaguan (ST-7)... This early text directly addresses facial pain and prescribes local acupoints that remain central to treatment today."
Zhen Jiu Jia Yi Jing (The Systematic Classic of Acupuncture and Moxibustion)
Volume 11: Miscellaneous Diseases
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for trigeminal neuralgia.
Yes, many patients find that acupuncture can shorten or reduce the intensity of an attack. Points on the face (like Xiaguan ST-7) and distal points (like Hegu LI-4 or Taichong LR-3) work to open the blocked channel and redirect the flow of Qi and Blood. Some practitioners also use gentle electrical stimulation on facial points for rapid pain relief.
In most cases, yes, TCM herbs and conventional medications can be used together safely. However, never stop or reduce your prescribed medication without consulting your doctor. Herbs that move Blood (such as Chuan Xiong and Tao Ren) may interact with blood-thinning medications, so always give your TCM practitioner a full list of everything you take. With coordinated care, many patients are eventually able to gradually reduce their medication under medical supervision.
Many people begin to notice a change within 4 to 6 weeks. Acute, excess-type patterns often respond faster - sometimes after just a few sessions. Long-standing or deficiency-based patterns require patience, as the goal is to rebuild the body’s reserves and clear deep obstructions, which can take several months. Consistency with herbs and acupuncture is key.
TCM aims to address the root imbalance that causes the pain, not just mask it. Many patients achieve long-term remission where attacks become rare or stop altogether. However, the outcome depends on the underlying pattern, how long you have had the condition, and your commitment to treatment and lifestyle changes. Even in chronic cases, significant improvement in quality of life is a realistic goal.
Facial acupuncture uses very fine needles and is generally gentle. The face is sensitive, so you may feel a tiny prick or a dull ache, but the needles are not painful once inserted. Many patients find the experience deeply relaxing, and the relief it brings far outweighs any momentary discomfort. Practitioners are especially careful to avoid triggering a pain attack during treatment.
Yes. Even after surgery, some people experience residual pain or a return of symptoms. TCM can help manage this by addressing the internal pattern that made you susceptible in the first place - such as Liver Qi stagnation or Phlegm accumulation - and by promoting circulation in the facial channels to ease any remaining nerve irritation.
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