The Power of Acupuncture for Women’s Health

Published On: March 9, 2026Categories: Acupuncture

When people think of acupuncture, they often picture treatment for sports injuries or muscle pain. But acupuncture has a long history of supporting women’s health — from menstrual cycles and fertility to perimenopause and menopause.

The Power of Acupuncture for Women’s Health

Acupuncture tends to be a modality that many people turn to for natural pain relief or sports injuries. However, acupuncture goes far beyond that. It has long been used to support digestive disturbances, calm an overstimulated nervous system, and restore overall balance in the body.

What many people don’t realize is just how powerful acupuncture can be when it comes to supporting women’s health — from irregular or painful cycles, PMS, fertility support, and even post-birth control, to navigating menopause.

Acupuncture goes deeper than symptom relief — it is about restoring balance within the whole body.

Understanding the Female Body

Women’s bodies are physiologically cyclical. Our hormones shift monthly across roughly a 28-day cycle, and they continue to change throughout different stages of life — from menstruation to fertility, pregnancy, postpartum, and of course menopause.

This is very different from our male counterparts, whose hormones fluctuate within a 24-hour period.

Because women’s hormones follow a longer, more intricate cycle, they can be more sensitive to stress, lifestyle changes, emotional strain, and environmental factors. Even subtle shifts can disrupt the body’s rhythm and show up as:

• Painful or irregular periods
• PMS, mood swings, or anxiety
• Difficulty conceiving
• Fatigue and brain fog
• Feeling “not quite yourself”

At its core, acupuncture works by supporting the body’s natural regulatory systems — calming the nervous system, improving circulation, and gently encouraging hormonal balance.

What Does the Research Say?

Research suggests that acupuncture may support women’s reproductive health through its effects on circulation, nervous system regulation, and hormonal signaling.

By influencing uterine and ovarian blood flow, supporting sympathetic nervous system balance, and promoting endorphin release, acupuncture may contribute to improved fertility, ovulation, menstrual cycle regulation, and symptom management across different stages of reproductive health.

Below is a breakdown of how acupuncture may support different aspects of women’s health.

Fertility

Research suggests acupuncture may influence fertility through three primary mechanisms (1):

Neurotransmitter Regulation

Acupuncture has been shown to affect neurotransmitter activity, including supporting the secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) (1). This hormone plays a central role in regulating the menstrual cycle, ovulation, and fertility (1).

Improved Uterine Blood Flow

By increasing blood flow to the uterus and ovaries, acupuncture may support healthy growth of the uterine lining and improve the internal environment for implantation (1).

Stress Reduction

Stress has been known to significantly impact reproductive hormones (1). Acupuncture has been shown to regulate stress hormones and increase endorphin release, helping to calm the nervous system and create conditions more supportive of conception (1).

Ovulation

Research indicates that repeated acupuncture treatments may stimulate the return of ovulation in some individuals (1).

Studies suggest that acupuncture may:

• Regulate sympathetic nervous system activity
• Support endocrine system balance
• Improve hormonal communication
• Increase the likelihood of ovulation in those experiencing anovulation

There is also evidence suggesting that patients with reduced sympathetic nervous system overactivity (which, in TCM, may be described as improved flow of qi and blood) are more likely to ovulate following acupuncture treatments (1).

Cycle Regulation & PCOS

Acupuncture has demonstrated regulatory effects on:

• Endocrine system
• Glucose metabolism
• Lipid metabolism (1)

For individuals with PCOS, research suggests that acupuncture may improve menstrual frequency, support more regular cycles, improve LH/FSH ratios, and help re-establish cycle regularity in cases of amenorrhea (1).

By influencing hormonal balance and supporting metabolic markers, acupuncture may offer a supportive natural approach to regulating the menstrual cycle (1).

Dysmenorrhea (Menstrual Pain)

Acupuncture’s analgesic (pain-relieving) effects are well documented (1). By stimulating the release of endorphins during treatment, acupuncture can reduce pain perception (1).

In cases of dysmenorrhea, research has shown that acupuncture — including the use of points such as LI4 and SP6 — over multiple cycles resulted in significant reductions in both the severity and frequency of pain.

This supports why acupuncture is commonly used for menstrual pain, as well as pain conditions more broadly.

Menopause

Research has shown that acupuncture can have a significant positive effect on menopausal symptoms, including:

• Hot flushes
• Sleep disturbances
• Memory concerns
• Anxiety (2)

Studies indicate that not only were symptoms reduced during the course of treatment, but many of the benefits were maintained for up to six months following completion of acupuncture sessions (2).

While individual results vary, research continues to demonstrate that acupuncture may play a valuable role in supporting fertility, cycle regulation, ovulation, menstrual pain, and menopause through its effects on circulation, nervous system regulation, and whole-body support.

Who Can Benefit From Acupuncture for Women’s Health?

Acupuncture may support women experiencing:

• Irregular or missing periods
• Painful or heavy cycles
• PMS, mood swings, or anxiety
• PCOS
• Fertility challenges
• Post-birth control symptoms
• Postpartum hormone shifts
• Perimenopause and menopause symptoms

While research continues to grow, studies suggest acupuncture can play a valuable role in supporting fertility, cycle regulation, menstrual pain, and menopause through its effects on circulation and whole-body regulation.

As a complementary therapy, results vary from person to person and treatment works best when used consistently and alongside appropriate medical care.

What to Expect During Treatment

Treatment begins with a thorough health intake — looking beyond symptoms and considering:

• Menstrual cycle — viscosity, flow, color, vaginal discharge, pain, length of bleed, cycle length, spotting
• Stress levels
• Sleep patterns — waking up at night, falling asleep, racing thoughts
• Digestion — food in stools, indigestion, acid reflux, bloating
• Energy
• Other lifestyle factors

The first session is 90 minutes, and follow-up sessions typically last 45–60 minutes based on your constitution.

A personalized plan is created so you understand what to expect and how to measure progress.

Frequently Asked Questions

How Many Sessions Will I Need?

This is one of the most common questions I am asked.

While some people notice shifts within a few treatments, hormonal health and cycle regulation are rarely quick fixes. These patterns often develop over months or years, and the body needs time to recalibrate.

For concerns such as fertility, irregular cycles, or PCOS, we typically work across at least three cycles to see consistent and sustainable changes.

Acupuncture works cumulatively — just as hormones shift gradually, balance is restored gradually. The aim is not temporary relief, but long-term regulation.

The treatment plan will always be individualized and discussed clearly so you know what to expect.

Does Acupuncture Hurt?

Most people are surprised at how gentle treatments feel. Many individuals describe sessions as deeply relaxing.

Some people experience what is known as “qi” sensations, which may include:

• Muscle twitching
• Numbness
• Tingling
• Aching
• A brief “zap” sensation

These sensations typically last only a few seconds.

Can Acupuncture Be Used Alongside Medical Care?

Yes. Acupuncture should be used alongside medical care. It is designed to work collaboratively with your doctor and is not meant to replace appropriate medical treatment.

A Personal Note

Supporting women’s health is something I feel deeply passionate about because I, too, have been a woman who struggled with her hormones, fertility, and feeling like myself postpartum.

I’ve been at a point where I lost my period. I felt like what I would call a “hormonal mess.” I didn’t feel grounded in my body, and I did not feel like myself. I felt lost — both as a person and as a woman.

But acupuncture paved a way forward for me, both professionally and personally.

Through treatment, I began to understand my cycle, reconnect with my body, and restore balance in a way that felt both sustainable and supportive.

I have since seen how powerful it can be when women begin to understand their cycles, their bodies, and feel truly supported and heard — especially when they finally experience relief from symptoms they’ve been told to “just live with.”

There is something incredibly meaningful and rewarding about helping women reconnect with their bodies and feel back in rhythm with themselves.

If you have been feeling out of sync — whether in your cycle, your energy, or your fertility journey — acupuncture may offer a gentle and supportive option.

Women’s health deserves time, care, and a whole-body approach.

If you would like to learn more or explore whether acupuncture is right for you, I would love to have that conversation.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dr. Breanna is here to meet you and answer questions you may have.  Dr. Breanna offers complimentary Meet & Greet appointments, both in-person and virtually by clicking HERE.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

References

  1. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3962314/
  2. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4874921/