Bell’s Palsy · 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 Bell’s palsy, characterized by slow facial nerve regeneration, delayed Wallerian degeneration recovery, fatigue, poor healing, and pale complexion. The core pathogenesis is Qi-Blood deficiency failing to nourish the facial nerve, leading to slow nerve regeneration and delayed recovery.


Key Symptoms and Differentiation Points

Differentiation DimensionManifestations
Primary SymptomsSlow facial nerve recovery, persistent paralysis, fatigue
Associated SymptomsPale complexion, shortness of breath, palpitations, poor appetite
Tongue and PulsePale tongue with thin white coating, thready and weak pulse
PathogenesisQi-Blood deficiency failing to nourish the facial nerve
EtiologyChronic illness, poor nutrition, postpartum weakness, aging, prolonged recovery

Acupuncture Point Prescription

PointLocationFunction
Zusanli (ST36)3 cun below the patella, 1 finger-width lateral to the tibial crestStrengthens Spleen and Stomach; tonifies Qi and Blood
Pishu (BL20)Lower back, 1.5 cun lateral to T11Back-Shu point of Spleen meridian; strengthens Spleen-Qi
Qihai (RN6)1.5 cun below the umbilicusTonifies Qi and strengthens the body
Yangbai (GB14)On the forehead, 1 cun above the midpoint of the eyebrowTreats inability to close the eye
Dicang (ST4)About 0.4 cun lateral to the corner of the mouthTreats deviation of the mouth
Hegu (LI4)Dorsum of the hand, between the 1st and 2nd metacarpalsRegulates Qi and unblocks collaterals

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: Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang (补中益气汤) + Qian Zheng San (牵正散)

Composition:
Ginseng (Ren Shen), Astragalus (Huang Qi), Atractylodes (Bai Zhu), Angelica (Dang Gui), Cimicifuga (Sheng Ma), Bupleurum (Chai Hu), White Aconite (Bai Fu Zi), Bombyx Batryticatus (Jiang Can), Scorpion (Quan Xie), Licorice (Gan Cao)

Action: Supplements Qi and Blood, lifts Yang, and unblocks collaterals.

Modifications

Associated SymptomsAdditions/Subtractions
Severe fatigueAdd Huang Qi to enhance Qi supplementation
Slow recoveryAdd Dang Gui, Shu Di to nourish Blood
Poor appetiteAdd Sha Ren, Mu Xiang to harmonize the Stomach
Cold limbsAdd Gui Zhi, Sheng Jiang to warm the meridians

Western Mechanism Reference

Slow facial nerve regeneration, delayed Wallerian degeneration recovery, and reduced nerve repair capacity. Qi-Blood Deficiency corresponds to Bell’s palsy with poor recovery, where reduced nerve growth factor activity and impaired microcirculation contribute to slow nerve regeneration.


References

  1. Internal Medicine of TCM - Facial Paralysis with Qi-Blood Deficiency.
  2. Xiong Jibai: Qi Deficiency uses Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang.
  3. WHO. (2023). Neurological health. World Health Organization.

Explore More

  • Find your solution at MendGod.com – Personalized herbal protocols and acupressure tools for facial nerve health.
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