Tension Headache - Qi-Blood Deficiency Pattern

TCM differentiation and treatment for tension headache

Tension Headache · Qi-Blood Deficiency Pattern

Updated: June 23, 2026

Reviewed by: Dr. Li Wei, DACM

Reading Time: 7 min

Body Area: Head


Pattern Overview

Qi-Blood Deficiency is a chronic pattern in tension headache,

characterized by **chronic fatigue with hyperalgesia, reduced cerebral

perfusion, low 5-HT function, and decreased pain modulation**. The core

pathogenesis is Qi-Blood deficiency failing to nourish the head,

leading to reduced cerebral perfusion, hyperalgesia, and chronic

headache.


Key Symptoms and Differentiation Points

Differentiation Dimension Manifestations
Primary Symptoms

complexion, dizziness |

Associated Symptoms

sleep, cold limbs |

Tongue and Pulse

and weak pulse |

Pathogenesis Qi-Blood deficiency failing to nourish the head
Etiology

weakness |


Acupuncture Point Prescription

Point Location Function
Zusanli (ST36)

to the tibial crest | Strengthens Spleen and Stomach; tonifies Qi and

Blood |

Pishu (BL20) Lower back, 1.5 cun lateral to T11

of Spleen meridian; strengthens Spleen-Qi |

Qihai (RN6) 1.5 cun below the umbilicus

strengthens the body |

Baihui (GV20)

anterior hairline | Lifts Qi and clears the head |

Sanyinjiao (SP6) 3 cun above the medial malleolus

Blood and Yin; regulates the Spleen and Kidney |

Clinical Recommendation: Filament needle, reinforcing method;

moxibustion may be applied to Zusanli and Qihai to warm and tonify Qi

and Blood.


Herbal Formula

Base Formula: Ba Zhen Tang (八珍汤) or Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang

(补中益气汤)

Composition:

Ginseng (Ren Shen), Astragalus (Huang Qi), Atractylodes (Bai Zhu), Poria

(Fu Ling), Angelica (Dang Gui), White Peony (Bai Shao), Chuanxiong

(Chuan Xiong), Rehmannia (Shu Di), Cimicifuga (Sheng Ma), Bupleurum

(Chai Hu), Licorice (Gan Cao)

Action: Supplements Qi and Blood, lifts Yang, and nourishes the

head.

Modifications

Associated Symptoms Additions/Subtractions
Severe fatigue Add Huang Qi to enhance Qi supplementation
Dizziness Add Tian Ma, Gou Teng to calm Liver Wind
Poor sleep Add Suan Zao Ren, Yuan Zhi to calm the spirit
Cold limbs Add Gui Zhi, Sheng Jiang to warm the meridians

Western Mechanism Reference

Chronic fatigue with hyperalgesia, reduced cerebral perfusion, low 5-HT

function, and decreased pain modulation. Qi-Blood Deficiency corresponds

to chronic tension headache with fatigue and hyperalgesia, where reduced

cerebral perfusion and low 5-HT function contribute to decreased pain

modulation and persistent headache.


References

1. Internal Medicine of TCM - Headache with Qi-Blood Deficiency.

2. Zang-Fu Pattern Differentiation: Qi Deficiency + Blood Deficiency.

3. WHO. (2023). Headache disorders. World Health Organization.


Explore More

Personalized herbal protocols and acupressure tools for headache relief.

research papers and clinical case studies on TCM headache 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.