Painful Periods (Dysmenorrhea)
Menstrual pain is among the most common presentations Taylor works with and among the most consistently responsive to Chinese medicine treatment. In Chinese medicine, painful periods are understood as a failure of free flow — Qi and Blood that are not moving smoothly through the reproductive system, producing the cramping and pain that characterize dysmenorrhea. The diagnostic question is why the flow is restricted — whether from Cold, from stagnation, from deficiency — and the treatment is tailored to the specific pattern rather than applied generically.
Both primary dysmenorrhea (painful periods without identifiable structural cause) and secondary dysmenorrhea (painful periods associated with endometriosis, fibroids, or other structural conditions) respond to acupuncture treatment, though the treatment approach and expected timeline differ. For women with endometriosis-related pain specifically, acupuncture and herbal medicine address both the pain and the underlying inflammatory process that drives endometriosis progression.
Irregular Periods
Irregular periods — cycles that are unpredictably long or short, that arrive without regularity, or that vary significantly in duration and flow — reflect an underlying imbalance in the hormonal regulation that governs the menstrual cycle. Chinese medicine’s pulse diagnosis and pattern differentiation allow Taylor to identify the specific constitutional imbalance driving the irregularity and address it at the root.
Irregular periods are among the most diagnostically informative presentations in Chinese medicine — the pattern of irregularity tells the practitioner a great deal about the patient’s overall constitutional health and the direction of treatment. For women trying to conceive, regular predictable cycles are a prerequisite for natural conception and for optimizing timing with assisted reproductive technologies.
PMS & Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder
The premenstrual phase — the week or two before the period arrives — produces a characteristic set of symptoms in many women: mood changes, irritability, bloating, breast tenderness, headaches, food cravings, fatigue. In Chinese medicine, these premenstrual symptoms reflect the Liver’s difficulty in smoothly transitioning into the menstrual phase — a pattern of Liver Qi stagnation that is both one of the most common presentations in modern women and one of the most responsive to acupuncture treatment.
For women with premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) — a severe form of PMS involving significant mood disruption that impairs daily functioning — acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine offer a non-pharmaceutical approach that addresses the pattern rather than managing it with SSRIs or other mood medications.
For patients whose premenstrual mood symptoms intersect with anxiety or depression outside the premenstrual window, see:
Acupuncture for Anxiety & Emotional Health in Richmond, VA
PCOS (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome)
Polycystic ovarian syndrome is one of the most common hormonal disorders in women of reproductive age and one of the most complex presentations in clinical practice. PCOS involves a combination of hormonal dysregulation — typically elevated androgens, disrupted LH/FSH ratios, and insulin resistance — that produces the characteristic constellation of irregular or absent periods, polycystic ovaries, acne, excess hair growth, and weight management challenges.
Acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine address PCOS through multiple mechanisms: regulating the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis that governs hormonal production, improving insulin sensitivity, reducing androgen levels, and restoring normal ovarian function. For women with PCOS who are trying to conceive, these interventions can restore ovulatory function and create the conditions for natural conception. For women who are not trying to conceive, they address the metabolic and hormonal dimensions of PCOS that affect quality of life and long-term health.
Perimenopause & Menopause
The hormonal transition of perimenopause and menopause produces a range of symptoms — hot flashes, night sweats, sleep disruption, mood changes, vaginal dryness, brain fog, joint pain — that significantly affect quality of life and for which many women prefer non-hormonal management. Acupuncture has a growing evidence base for menopausal symptom management, with multiple randomized controlled trials documenting its effectiveness for hot flashes, sleep disruption, and mood symptoms specifically.
Chinese medicine understands the menopausal transition as a natural but sometimes turbulent shift in the body’s fundamental constitutional balance — one that can be supported and smoothed through treatment rather than simply suppressed through hormone replacement. Taylor’s approach supports the transition while addressing the specific symptoms that are most disruptive for each patient.
Heavy Bleeding (Menorrhagia)
Heavy menstrual bleeding — prolonged periods, flooding, or blood loss significant enough to cause fatigue, anemia, or social disruption — has specific Chinese medicine presentations that respond well to herbal medicine in particular. The combination of acupuncture and targeted herbal formulas addresses both the immediate excess of blood loss and the underlying constitutional pattern that is producing it.