Frozen shoulder — or adhesive capsulitis — is one of the most painful and debilitating shoulder conditions. TCM offers effective treatment that significantly shortens recovery time.
Frozen shoulder, medically known as adhesive capsulitis, is a condition where the shoulder joint capsule thickens, tightens, and develops adhesive scar tissue — progressively restricting movement and causing severe pain. It typically develops through three stages: a painful freezing phase (6–9 months), a frozen phase of stiffness (4–12 months), and a thawing phase of gradual recovery (6–24 months). Left untreated, full recovery can take two to three years. Acupuncture and TCM significantly accelerate this process.
In TCM, frozen shoulder is typically diagnosed as a Wind-Cold-Damp Bi syndrome affecting the shoulder joint, often combined with Qi and Blood stagnation from the gradual loss of movement. The shoulder region is traversed by three primary meridians — the Large Intestine, Small Intestine, and San Jiao (Triple Warmer) channels — and obstruction of these channels produces the characteristic stiffness and pain of frozen shoulder. In older patients, Kidney and Liver deficiency (insufficient Jing to nourish tendons and joints) often underlies the condition.
Acupuncture for frozen shoulder combines local needling at the shoulder (targeting the joint capsule and surrounding musculature) with distal points on the arm and leg that strongly open the shoulder meridians. A key technique is needling while the patient performs gentle shoulder movements — this active needling approach has been shown to dramatically improve range of motion in a single session in some patients.
Cupping along the upper back, neck, and arm releases deep fascial tension contributing to restricted movement. Moxibustion warms the joint and expels Cold-Damp obstruction. Medical Tuina massage is used to mobilize the joint and break down adhesions.
We often see patients achieve in 2–3 months what would otherwise take 12–18 months of natural recovery.