TCM Pattern Diagnosis
We consider channel relationships, pulse, tongue, palpation, symptom patterns, constitutional tendencies, and the relationship between internal systems.
Our Clinical Approach
We approach acupuncture as a system of pattern recognition, sensory input, and systemic regulation. The result is care that honors classical medicine while speaking clearly to modern physiology.
Philosophy
Traditional Chinese Medicine gives us a sophisticated way to understand patterns: how pain, digestion, sleep, stress, hormones, temperature, fatigue, and emotional strain may relate to one another in a person’s lived experience.
Modern neuroscience adds another lens: peripheral nerve stimulation, spinal segmental relationships, autonomic tone, sensory processing, pain modulation, neuroplasticity, and brain-body communication.
Our approach does not reduce the rich benefits of acupuncture to what can only be defined anatomically, and it does not ask patients to think only in terms of abstract explanations. It uses both models with humility: clinically useful traditional reasoning, paired with clear modern language.
The Framework
Every treatment is individualized. These lenses help determine which points, techniques, and modalities may be most appropriate for the person in front of us.
We consider channel relationships, pulse, tongue, palpation, symptom patterns, constitutional tendencies, and the relationship between internal systems.
Symptoms are often shaped by sensory input, autonomic tone, pain processing, stress physiology, and how the brain and body communicate.
Point selection may consider dermatomes, myotomes, peripheral nerves, spinal segments, and organ-somatic relationships where clinically relevant.
Movement, posture, local tissue sensitivity, orthopedic context, and muscle relationships help inform how a pain or mobility pattern is behaving.
Needling style, manual stimulation, electroacupuncture, scalp acupuncture, moxibustion, or gentler approaches are selected based on tolerance and goals.
Research helps shape expectations and clinical decisions.
Guiding Principles
The focus of our practice is to provide a patient experience that is human, careful, and individualized. These principles shape the patient experience.
Pain, digestion, sleep, stress, and hormonal changes may be connected. We look for the broader pattern while still respecting the main complaint.
More stimulation is not always better. Treatment intensity should match the patient’s sensitivity, stage of care, and nervous system irritability.
Many chronic conditions involve dysregulation: protective muscle tone, heightened pain sensitivity, digestive reactivity, poor sleep, or stress load.
Acupuncture is complementary care. We encourage appropriate medical evaluation, red-flag awareness, and collaboration when needed.
Changes in pain intensity, frequency, sleep, function, flare recovery, and daily tolerance help guide the treatment plan.
Patients deserve language that makes sense. We aim to explain care without mystifying it or stripping away the value of traditional medicine.
Clinical Process
The appointment process is structured enough to be clinically useful, but flexible enough to meet the patient where they are that day.
We start with your main concern, health history, symptom behavior, triggers, relief factors, prior care, and what matters most to your quality of life.
We look for TCM patterns, channel involvement, local tissue findings, neurological features, autonomic signs, and functional relationships.
Manual acupuncture, scalp acupuncture, electroacupuncture, moxibustion, or gentler point strategies are chosen based on clinical fit.
Response to treatment helps shape future sessions. The plan evolves based on changes in symptoms, function, tolerance, and overall regulation.
Integration
Rather than forcing TCM and neuroscience to say the exact same thing, we use them as complementary maps. Each offers a different kind of clinical information.
Safety & Boundaries
A serious integrative practice should be honest about what acupuncture can support, what requires medical evaluation, and when referral is appropriate.
Acupuncture can be part of a broader care plan, but it does not replace emergency care, diagnostic imaging, labs, medication management, or physician evaluation when needed.
Severe, sudden, progressive, or unexplained symptoms may require referral. Neurological changes, chest pain, infection signs, or traumatic injury should be assessed medically.
Needling style, stimulation, moxibustion, and electroacupuncture are adapted to the patient’s sensitivity, medical history, comfort, and clinical presentation.
Begin Care
Schedule a first visit to review your clinical history, discuss your goals, and begin treatment.