Bell’s Palsy · Wind-Cold Attacking the Collaterals Pattern

Updated: June 23, 2026
Reviewed by: Dr. Li Wei, DACM
Reading Time: 7 min
Body Area: Head


Pattern Overview

Wind-Cold Attacking the Collaterals is the core pattern in acute Bell’s palsy, characterized by facial nerve edema compressing the facial nerve, sudden facial paralysis, facial cold pain, ear pain, chills, and neck stiffness. The core pathogenesis is invasion of Wind-Cold pathogens into the facial Yangming collaterals, causing nerve edema, ischemia, and facial muscle paralysis.


Key Symptoms and Differentiation Points

Differentiation DimensionManifestations
Primary SymptomsSudden facial paralysis, facial cold pain, ear pain, inability to close the eye
Associated SymptomsChills, neck stiffness, facial numbness, drooling, tearing
Tongue and PulsePale red tongue with thin white coating, floating and tense pulse
PathogenesisWind-Cold pathogens invading the facial Yangming collaterals
EtiologyCold exposure, sleeping with the face exposed, air conditioning drafts

Acupuncture Point Prescription

PointLocationFunction
Fengchi (GB20)Depression below the occipital bone, between the sternocleidomastoid and trapeziusDisperses Wind-Cold and clears the head
Hegu (LI4)Dorsum of the hand, between the 1st and 2nd metacarpalsDisperses Wind and unblocks collaterals
Dicang (ST4)About 0.4 cun lateral to the corner of the mouthTreats deviation of the mouth
Jiache (ST6)In the depression on the lower border of the zygomatic arch, about 1 cun anterior to the angle of the mandibleTreats facial paralysis
Yangbai (GB14)On the forehead, 1 cun above the midpoint of the eyebrowTreats inability to close the eye
Yifeng (TE17)Behind the ear, in the depression between the mastoid process and the mandibleTreats ear pain and facial paralysis

Clinical Recommendation: Filament needle, even method; during the acute phase (first 7 days), use gentle technique. Electro-acupuncture may be added during the recovery phase.


Herbal Formula

Base Formula: Qian Zheng San (牵正散) + Ma Huang Fu Zi Xi Xin Tang (麻黄附子细辛汤)

Composition:
White Aconite (Bai Fu Zi), Bombyx Batryticatus (Jiang Can), Scorpion (Quan Xie), Ephedra (Ma Huang), Asarum (Xi Xin), Saposhnikovia (Fang Feng), Angelica Dahurica (Bai Zhi), Licorice (Gan Cao)

Action: Disperses Wind-Cold, unblocks collaterals, and corrects facial deviation.

Modifications

Associated SymptomsAdditions/Subtractions
Severe facial cold painAdd Gui Zhi, Sheng Jiang to warm meridians
Ear painAdd Chuan Xiong, Chai Hu to disperse Wind and stop pain
TearingAdd Ju Hua, Sang Ye to disperse Wind and clear Heat
Neck stiffnessAdd Ge Gen to relax sinews and unblock collaterals
Qi deficiencyAdd Huang Qi, Dang Shen to supplement Qi and unblock collaterals

Western Mechanism Reference

Facial nerve edema compressing the facial nerve, with increased intraneural pressure and nerve ischemia. Wind-Cold Attacking the Collaterals corresponds to acute Bell’s palsy, where viral reactivation (HSV-1) and nerve inflammation cause facial nerve edema, increased intraneural pressure, and nerve ischemia.


References

  1. Internal Medicine of TCM - Facial Paralysis with Wind-Cold Attacking Collaterals.
  2. Zang-Fu Pattern Differentiation: Wind-Cold → Clearing Pathway.
  3. WHO. (2023). Neurological health. World Health Organization.

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