Conditions · Reproductive

Acupuncture for menstrual pain: what the evidence says

Dysmenorrhea, irregular cycles, and endometriosis-related pain have moderate evidence for acupuncture. Often treated in cycles — 1–2 sessions before each period over several months — with durable improvements for many patients.

Moderate evidence

Menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea) — whether primary (no underlying condition) or secondary (caused by endometriosis, fibroids, or other conditions) — has moderate evidence for acupuncture. This is a condition many acupuncturists treat frequently, often with good results.

What the evidence shows

How a typical treatment plan works

When acupuncture is (and isn't) the right tool

Good fit: - Chronic menstrual pain that doesn't fully respond to NSAIDs - Irregular cycles without a clear medical cause - Endometriosis alongside conventional management - Menstrual pain in patients who can't take NSAIDs (some GI or kidney issues)

Needs medical workup first: - New, severe, or dramatically worsening pain - Heavy bleeding that might indicate fibroids, polyps, or other issues requiring evaluation - Cycles that have suddenly stopped (pregnancy, thyroid issues, etc.)

Acupuncture works well alongside gynecologic care. It doesn't replace proper evaluation.

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Related reading


This page is for educational purposes and is not medical advice. New, severe, or significantly changed menstrual symptoms warrant evaluation by a gynecologist or primary care physician.

Frequently asked questions

How is it different from just taking ibuprofen?

NSAIDs like ibuprofen are effective for most menstrual cramps, and for many patients they're enough. Acupuncture is typically useful when: NSAIDs aren't fully effective, pain is severe or disabling, cycles are irregular, or there's an underlying condition like endometriosis. Many patients end up using both — NSAIDs for acute management, acupuncture to reduce the baseline over time.

Does acupuncture help endometriosis?

Several small trials and larger observational studies have found acupuncture reduces pain and improves quality of life in endometriosis patients. It won't treat the underlying tissue pathology (that requires medical or surgical management), but it can meaningfully improve symptoms alongside conventional care.

When in my cycle should I come in?

Most practitioners recommend 1–2 sessions in the 7–10 days before each period for pain-focused protocols. For cycle regulation, weekly sessions across the entire cycle may be used. Your practitioner will structure this with you after the initial assessment.

How long before I notice a difference?

Typically 2–3 cycles. Track your cycles with a simple app — note pain intensity (1–10), duration, and how much it interferes with daily life. If nothing has changed by cycle 3, reassess.

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