FAQs › What Is Gua Sha and What Does It Treat?
Gua sha involves firm scraping of lubricated skin with a smooth tool to release myofascial tension, improve blood circulation, reduce inflammation, and address muscle tightness — particularly in the neck, shoulders, and upper back.
Gua sha (meaning 'scrape petechiae') is performed with a smooth-edged tool — traditionally jade, horn, or ceramic — on oil-lubricated skin. The firm strokes create micro-trauma in the superficial fascia, triggering a local anti-inflammatory response, releasing fascial adhesions, and significantly improving local blood flow.
Research has confirmed that gua sha significantly reduces creatine kinase (a marker of muscle damage and inflammation) in athletes within 24 hours of treatment. It also upregulates HO-1 (heme oxygenase-1), an enzyme with potent anti-inflammatory and cytoprotective effects — a mechanism that may explain gua sha's traditional use for systemic inflammatory conditions.
Gua sha is most commonly applied to the upper back, neck, and shoulders — areas where cupping is impractical due to contour. It is also used along the IT band, forearms (tennis elbow), and calves.
Clinical applications include: myofascial pain and tightness, neck pain and headaches, upper respiratory tract infections (traditional use for fever and early-stage illness — the scraping brings pathogens to the surface for dispersion), sports recovery, and as part of cosmetic protocols (gentle facial gua sha for lymphatic drainage and brightening).
Ask about adding gua sha to your next treatment — particularly effective for neck and shoulder tension.
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