Fibromyalgia - Blood Stasis Pattern

TCM differentiation and treatment for fibromyalgia with

Fibromyalgia · Blood Stasis Pattern

Updated: June 23, 2026

Reviewed by: Dr. Li Wei, DACM

Reading Time: 7 min

Body Area: Whole Body


Pattern Overview

Blood Stasis is a chronic pattern in fibromyalgia, characterized by

**chronic pain with fixed locations, aggravation at night, and dark

complexion. The core pathogenesis is stagnation of blood in the

collaterals**, leading to fixed pain points and impaired tissue

nourishment throughout the body.


Key Symptoms and Differentiation Points

Differentiation Dimension Manifestations
Primary Symptoms

night |

Associated Symptoms

palpable nodules |

Tongue and Pulse

coating, hesitant pulse |

Pathogenesis Blood stasis obstructing the body's collaterals
Etiology Chronic pain, prolonged illness, trauma, inactivity

Acupuncture Point Prescription

Point Location Function
BL17 Geshu Lower back, 1.5 cun lateral to T7

the Blood; invigorates Blood and resolves stasis |

SP10 Xuehai On the medial thigh, 2 cun above the patella

Invigorates blood and resolves stasis |

BL40 Weizhong Midpoint of the popliteal crease

Bladder meridian; treats back and leg pain |

Ashi points Tender spots throughout the body

invigoration and pain relief |

Clinical Recommendation: Filiform needle, reducing method; cupping

at Ashi points may be used to enhance blood stasis resolution.


Herbal Formula

Base Formula: Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang (血府逐瘀汤)

Composition:

Peach Kernel (Tao Ren), Safflower (Hong Hua), Angelica (Dang Gui),

Chuanxiong (Chuan Xiong), Red Peony (Chi Shao), Rehmannia (Sheng Di),

Bupleurum (Chai Hu), Platycodon (Jie Geng), Licorice (Gan Cao)

Action: Invigorates blood, resolves stasis, regulates Qi, and

relieves pain.

Modifications

Associated Symptoms Additions/Subtractions
Severe pain Add Ru Xiang, Mo Yao to relieve pain
Fixed tender points Add Dan Shen, San Leng to break up stasis
Fatigue Add Huang Qi, Dang Shen to supplement Qi

Western Mechanism Reference

Chronic pain with fixed locations, microcirculatory disturbance, and

impaired tissue perfusion. Blood Stasis corresponds to fibromyalgia with

prominent tender points and poor tissue perfusion, where chronic

inflammation and microcirculatory dysfunction contribute to persistent

pain.


References

1. Textbook Standard.

2. WHO. (2023). Fibromyalgia fact sheet. World Health Organization.


Explore More

Personalized herbal protocols and acupressure tools for widespread pain

relief.

research papers and clinical case studies on TCM chronic pain

management.


Last reviewed: June 2026 | Lead author: Dr. Li Wei, DACM | Content updated: Monthly

Disclaimer: This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting any treatment.