Chinese medicine offers a nuanced, deeply personalised approach to the hormonal transition — addressing root Kidney deficiency patterns and restoring balance to body and mind.
The TCM View of Menopause
In Chinese medicine, menopause is not regarded as a disease to be treated but as a profound natural transition in a woman's life — a shift from the outward, reproductive phase of life toward a time of inward wisdom and conservation of essence. The classical text Huang Di Nei Jing describes how, at around the age of 49 (seven times seven), the Tian Gui (Heavenly Water — the menstrual substance rooted in Kidney Essence) begins to decline, the Chong and Ren vessels diminish in fullness, and menstruation naturally ceases.
The symptoms that many women experience during perimenopause and menopause — hot flushes, night sweats, insomnia, mood changes, vaginal dryness, memory fog — arise in TCM when this natural decline of Kidney Yin and Kidney Yang becomes imbalanced. If Yin declines faster than Yang, Empty Heat rises upward and outward, producing the characteristic heat symptoms. If Yang is the more affected, Cold, fatigue and oedema may predominate.
Dr Christine Shen's approach is to identify each woman's unique constitutional picture and address the root pattern — not simply to suppress symptoms, but to support a smoother, more integrated transition through this important life stage.
Acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine have been used traditionally to support women through menopausal transition for over two millennia. Modern research increasingly documents the experience of women using these approaches alongside — or as an alternative to — hormone replacement therapy.
Dr Christine Shen takes a thorough intake at the first consultation covering the full symptom picture, medical history, emotional state, sleep quality, digestive function and constitutional indicators. Tongue and pulse diagnosis provides real-time physiological information that guides pattern differentiation and treatment planning.
TCM Pattern Differentiation
The two principal patterns in menopausal transition represent opposite ends of the Yin-Yang spectrum, though they often overlap. Accurate differentiation guides both acupuncture point selection and herbal formula choice.
Yin represents the cooling, moistening, nourishing aspect of the body. When Kidney Yin declines, its ability to anchor Yang and cool the interior is compromised. Empty Heat — the relative excess of Yang when Yin is insufficient — rises upward, producing:
Tongue: red, peeled or with scanty coat. Pulse: thready, rapid.
Yang provides the warming, activating, transforming energy. When Kidney Yang declines, the body's metabolic fire diminishes, producing a colder, more deficient presentation:
Tongue: pale, swollen with tooth marks. Pulse: deep, slow, weak in the chi position.
Many women present with a mixed Yin and Yang deficiency — hot by day, cold by night, with concurrent heat and cold symptoms at different times or in different parts of the body. This complexity demands careful, nuanced prescribing.
Common Symptoms
Acupuncture has been used traditionally to moderate the frequency and intensity of hot flushes. Phase-based treatment targeting Kidney and Heart channels is commonly employed.
Night sweats in TCM arise when Yin is insufficient to anchor Yang at night. Nourishing Yin and clearing Empty Heat is the primary treatment principle.
Sleep disruption is extremely common in perimenopause. Heart-Kidney disharmony and Yin deficiency disturb the Shen (spirit), which must be settled for sleep to be restful.
Emotional volatility reflects both the Liver's loss of smooth Qi flow and the Heart's inability to anchor the Shen when Yin-Blood is insufficient.
Memory difficulty and poor concentration are attributed to declining Kidney Essence failing to nourish the brain (Sea of Marrow) and Heart-Blood deficiency.
Declining Liver Blood and Kidney Essence fail to nourish the sinews and bones, contributing to stiffness, achiness and reduced flexibility.
Chinese Herbal Medicine
One of the most researched classical formulas for menopausal transition, Er Xian Tang is specifically designed to address the concurrent Kidney Yin and Yang deficiency seen in many women during perimenopause. It simultaneously tonifies Kidney Yang (with Xian Mao and Yin Yang Huo), nourishes Kidney Yin and Jing (with Huang Bai and Zhi Mu cooling Empty Heat), and regulates the Chong and Ren vessels. This formula is particularly indicated for hot flushes alongside fatigue, low back weakness and mood instability.
The foundational formula for Kidney Yin deficiency, Liu Wei Di Huang Wan has been in clinical use for nearly a thousand years. Built around the sweet, nourishing Shu Di Huang (prepared Rehmannia), it replenishes the Kidney-Liver Yin axis, moistens dryness and clears Empty Heat when combined with Zhi Mu and Huang Bai (as in Zhi Bai Di Huang Wan). Indicated where Yin deficiency predominates with dryness, heat, tinnitus and low back aching.
For women where Kidney Yang deficiency is the dominant pattern — presenting with cold limbs, low motivation, urinary frequency and oedema — You Gui Wan warms and supplements the Kidney Yang and Mingmen Fire (Gate of Vitality). It combines warming herbs such as Rou Gui (cinnamon bark) and Fu Zi (prepared aconite) with Yin and Blood tonics to ensure Yang is nourished without damaging Yin, preventing the pendulum from swinging too far in the other direction.
All formulas are prescribed based on individual pattern diagnosis and modified according to secondary patterns and changing presentation across the treatment course. Dr Christine Shen sources all herbs from TGA-registered suppliers.
Acupuncture Treatment
Acupuncture for menopausal symptoms works through the meridian system to address root deficiency patterns and regulate the Yin-Yang balance. Sessions are typically weekly during the active treatment phase, with many patients transitioning to fortnightly or monthly maintenance as symptoms stabilise.
Commonly used acupoints include:
Ear acupuncture (auricular therapy) may be used as an adjunct, particularly for insomnia and hot flushes. Moxa is used where Yang deficiency is present to warm the Mingmen and Kidney channel.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Care
Book a consultation with Dr Christine Shen for a thorough assessment of your menopausal symptoms and an individualised treatment plan.
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