Shoulder Stiffness in Traditional Chinese Medicine

Understanding different shoulder stiffness patterns according to TCM theory

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2
TCM Patterns
19
Formulas
Overview
What causes it 2 TCM patterns documented
How to recognize Symptoms specific to each shoulder stiffness pattern
Classical remedies 19 herbal formulas documented

Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) approaches shoulder stiffness as an obstruction within the body’s meridian system, specifically the pathways that regulate Qi, or vital energy, and blood flow to the shoulder. TCM emphasizes that such physical symptoms are often signs of deeper imbalances, potentially stemming from external pathogenic factors or internal organ disharmonies.

Treatment focuses on identifying the unique pattern of disharmony for each individual, thereby enabling a tailored approach that seeks to restore the body’s natural flow of energy and alleviate symptoms.

TCM Patterns for Shoulder Stiffness

Each pattern represents a distinct underlying imbalance that can cause shoulder stiffness

Blood Stasis

Blood Stagnation

Symptoms 9
Formulas 10

Diagnostic signs

Pulse

Choppy (Se), Firm (Lao), Wiry (Xian)

Tongue

The hallmark tongue finding is a dark purple or dusky body colour, which may be uniform or patchy. Stasis spots (purple or dark dots) can appear anywhere on the tongue surface. The underside of the tongue is especially important: the two sublingual veins are typically engorged, tortuous, and dark purple or even blackish. The tongue coating itself is usually thin and white and is not the primary diagnostic feature. In long-standing cases, the tongue may become somewhat dry if fluids are also affected.

Accompanying symptoms you may experience

Dark face Purple lips Stabbing fixed pain Abdominal masses Purple nails Menstrual cramps Dark menstrual clots Dark menstrual blood
Symptoms 14
Formulas 6

Diagnostic signs

Pulse

Wiry (Xian), Fine (Xi), Rapid (Shu)

Tongue

The classic tongue for this pattern is red with little coating (or a thin, dry yellow coat), reflecting Yin deficiency below and Yang excess above. The sides of the tongue (corresponding to the Liver area) are often redder than the rest. In cases with more marked Yin depletion, the tongue may appear dry and somewhat shrunken, with little or no coating. If the pattern leans more toward excess, a thin yellow coating may be present. Occasionally a slight trembling of the tongue body can be observed, hinting at early stirring of internal Wind. The sublingual veins are not typically distended unless Blood Stasis has developed as a secondary change.

Accompanying symptoms you may experience

Headaches Dizziness Tinnitus Deafness Blurry vision Dry mouth Dry throat Insomnia

Herbal Formulas for Shoulder Stiffness

Traditional Chinese Medicine formulas used to address shoulder stiffness

Da Chai Hu Tang

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Yang Excess

Da Huang Mu Dan Pi Tang

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Blood Stasis

Da Huang Zhe Chong Wan

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Blood Stasis

Dan Shen Yin

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Blood Stasis

Di Dang Tang

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Blood Stasis

Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Blood Stasis

Hai Tong Pi Tang

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Blood Stasis

Huang Qi Gui Zhi Wu Wu Tang

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Blood Stasis

Ling Jiao Gou Teng Tang

Addresses these shoulder stiffness patterns:

Yang Excess