Mud Moxibustion for Women’s Cycle Pain: What Three

child in gray jacket and red pants riding red bicycle on brown sand during daytime

There is a kind of period pain that no painkiller fully reaches. It begins in the lower back, wraps around through the lower abdomen, and settles deep behind the pubic bone. Heat helps for an hour. Ibuprofen takes the sharpest edge off. But the underlying ache stays, a heavy gripping presence, sometimes for two or three days each month. Women who have lived with this for years often describe it not as pain exactly but as an exhausting hostage situation — the body holding the rest of life captive until the cycle releases it.

About one in three women experiences cycle pain severe enough to interfere with daily activities at least one day a month. About one in eight experiences it severely enough that it shapes how they plan their work, their social life, their travel. Some of these cases have an identifiable medical cause — endometriosis, fibroids, adenomyosis — for which the correct first step is gynaecological investigation. But many do not. The medical workup comes back unremarkable. The pain persists. The woman is told it is “normal.”

This pattern, in Chinese medicine, is one of the most clearly described conditions in the classical texts. The diagnosis is usually some variation of xuhan tongjing — cold-deficiency painful periods — and the treatment has not changed substantially in eight hundred years, because what was developed eight hundred years ago worked, and continues to.

What the body is doing during a painful period

The uterus is a muscle. During menstruation, it contracts to expel its lining. In most women these contractions are mild enough to be barely noticeable; the cervix has dilated slightly, blood flow to the uterine wall is adequate, the contractions are coordinated.

In dysmenorrhoea, the contractions are either too strong, too sustained, or insufficiently coordinated. The uterine muscle goes into something close to a localised cramp state. Blood flow into the muscle itself can be temporarily reduced, which causes the muscle to release more pain-signalling chemicals (prostaglandins), which causes more contraction, which further reduces blood flow. The cycle perpetuates itself until the menstrual flow runs its course.

There are several reasons this can happen. In some women, there is simply a higher baseline level of inflammatory signalling. In others, the issue is hormonal — the relative balance of oestrogen and progesterone, particularly in the days before the period begins. In others — and this is the group where mud moxibustion is most effective — the pattern is one of insufficient warmth and movement in the pelvic region, a chronic baseline of poor circulation that becomes acutely problematic when the uterus is asked to work hard during menstruation. (For women approaching pregnancy or post-partum, there is a related piece on Chinese massage in pregnancy and fertility that sits in the same broader picture.)

Why warmth changes the picture

The single best home thing a woman can do for cycle pain — and this is something every traditional culture I have ever read about figured out long ago — is to apply heat to the lower belly and lower back. Hot water bottles, warm towels, heated wheat bags, sitting close to the stove. Doctors I have spoken with say that heat works about as well as ibuprofen for this kind of pain, with no side effects. Grandmothers knew this, of course, without anyone needing to confirm it for them.

But heat from a hot water bottle is shallow and brief. It addresses the symptom for the duration of the contact, and then the body returns to its previous state.

Mud moxibustion does what a hot water bottle does, but at three different levels at once.

Surface and middle-layer warmth: similar to but more even than a hot water bottle, sustained for forty-five minutes, deep enough to relax the abdominal wall and influence underlying tissue.

Deep penetrating warmth: through the moxa smoke and volatile herbal compounds, reaching the underlying pelvic organs and nervous structures in a way that surface heat cannot.

Cumulative effect over a treatment course: the changes produced by a single session do not vanish when the session ends. Over three to five treatments, the baseline pelvic blood flow improves, the autonomic regulation of uterine function shifts toward better coordination, and the inflammatory baseline drops. The next several cycles tend to be progressively less painful.

This is the part conventional treatment cannot easily replicate. Painkillers treat the episode. Hormonal contraception suppresses the cycle entirely. Heat helps for an hour. Mud moxibustion is one of the few interventions that addresses the underlying pattern in a way that produces persistent improvement.

A small case from last spring

A young woman — twenty-six, working in tourism in Tirana — came in last March. Severe cycle pain for ten years, becoming worse rather than better as she had moved through her twenties. Her gynaecologist had ruled out endometriosis with ultrasound and clinical examination. She had been on a low-dose combined contraceptive pill for three years, which had reduced but not eliminated the pain, and which she wanted to come off because she was hoping to start a family within the next two years.

Her cycle pain was, in TCM terms, almost a textbook cold-stagnation presentation. Cold hands and feet generally. Pain that responded to heat much more than to medication. Pain that was worse when she had been working long days standing up (she was in retail tourism). Pain that was worse in winter than in summer.

We did five sessions of mud moxibustion across two cycles. Once per week for three weeks, then a gap, then twice more in the second cycle, timed to the days before her period began.

First cycle after starting treatment: pain still present, but the worst day was a six out of ten instead of a nine, and she did not need to take time off work.

Second cycle: worst day a four, two days of mild discomfort instead of the usual four.

Third cycle (no treatment that month, to see if the changes held): worst day a five, but the pattern of discomfort had shortened from four days to two.

She continues to come in for a single maintenance session every other cycle, in the week before the period begins. She came off the contraceptive pill six months ago. Her cycles have been manageable since.

This is a typical course of treatment for this presentation. Not all women respond this well; some respond better, some less well. The response rate, in my own practice, is about three women out of four, with full responders (significant lasting improvement) and partial responders (some improvement, less dramatic) roughly evenly split.

Mamica’s quiet endurance

There is something I find moving about treating cycle pain. Most women who walk into the parlour with this complaint have been carrying it for years, sometimes decades. They have learned to manage it, to plan around it, to hide it at work, to be reliable in their lives despite a recurring physical event that costs them something every single month. This is a quiet kind of endurance.

The Albanian historical figure I find myself thinking of when I work with these clients is Mamica Kastrioti — Skanderbeg’s sister, whose name appears far less often in schoolbooks than her brother’s but whose composure in difficult circumstances was, in the chronicles, equally remarkable. She held what she held without making noise about it.

Women with chronic cycle pain do the same. They hold something heavy every month, often without making noise about it, often without even being fully heard when they describe it. Part of what I want this treatment to offer is the simple acknowledgement that the pain is real, that there is a coherent explanation for it, and that something can be done.

A practical note on timing

For best results, the first treatment in a course should be scheduled about a week before the period is due to begin. The subsequent treatments are usually scheduled in the same window relative to the cycle. This timing allows the warming and circulatory effects of the treatment to be present during the days when the body most needs them.

I always combine the in-parlour treatment with a few simple home practices: drinking warm rather than iced liquids in the week before the period, avoiding sitting on cold surfaces for long periods, and a small warm-water foot bath in the evenings during the days before menstruation. These small practices amplify the effect of the in-parlour sessions considerably.

For women who have tried everything and found nothing that works well, mud moxibustion is worth a real attempt. Five sessions across two cycles is usually enough to know whether your particular pattern is going to respond.

The grandmothers, after all, had been doing some version of this for centuries before we brought it into a parlour like ours. They knew what they were doing.


Yang Wang practises Chinese medicine at Chinese Massage – Tai Chi Tirana. Names and details in client stories have been changed.

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