Evidence behind this recommendation.
Selected studies from our library that inform the recommendations on this page. Evidence grade shown when available.
Acupuncture for female bladder pain syndrome: a randomized controlled trial
“Bladder pain syndrome, also known as interstitial cystitis, is a complex and challenging condition that affects millions of women worldwide. Characterized by bladder pain accompanied by urinary symptoms in the absence of infection or other...”
Acupuncture combined with biofeedback electrical stimulation for female stress urinary incontinence: a systematic review and meta-analysis
“This systematic review and meta-analysis represents an important milestone in understanding the treatment of stress urinary incontinence (SUI) in women, analyzing data from 33 randomized controlled trials that included 2,860 participants. ...”
Interstitial Cystitis / Painful Bladder Syndrome
Interstitial cystitis (IC), also called painful bladder syndrome (PBS), is a chronic condition characterized by persistent pelvic or suprapubic pain (>6 weeks) associated with intense urinary urgency and frequency, in the absence of urinary infection or other identifiable pathology. It predominantly affects women (90% of cases), with an estimated prevalence of 0.4%–2% of the adult population. Diagnosis is delayed (mean delay of 5–7 years) and the impact on quality of life is equivalent to that of conditions such as end-stage renal disease and severe rheumatoid arthritis.
The pathophysiology is multifactorial: deficiency of the urothelial glycosaminoglycan (GAG) layer (increases bladder permeability to irritating urinary substances); hyperactivated bladder mast cells (release histamine, tryptase, and NGF that sensitize suburothelial C fibers); and central sensitization (the CNS amplifies bladder impulses — dominant in the form without ulcer). Acupuncture acts especially on the immunological (mast cells) and neural (central and peripheral sensitization) components.
Conventional Treatments: A Difficult Condition to Treat
No available treatment is universally effective for IC. The approach is escalated and multimodal — starting with the least invasive measures. Acupuncture fits in as a second-line treatment before invasive interventions.
TREATMENTS FOR INTERSTITIAL CYSTITIS (BY LEVEL OF INVASIVENESS)
| TREATMENT | EFFICACY | LIMITATIONS |
|---|---|---|
| Diet and lifestyle modification | 20%–30% reduction in symptoms in 50% of patients | Extremely restrictive; not sufficient alone in most cases |
| Pentosan polysulfate (PPS 100 mg 3x/day) | Response in 30%–40% after 6 months | Slow response; pigmentary maculopathy with prolonged use — serious adverse effect; cost |
| Amitriptyline 10–75 mg/day | Response in 40%–50%; better profile than PPS | Drowsiness, weight gain; not specifically approved for IC in Brazil |
| Bladder instillation (DMSO, heparin, lidocaine) | Immediate response in 40%–60% of cases | Invasive procedure (catheterization); discomfort; cost; specialized resource |
| Cystoscopic hydrodistension | Transient improvement in 30%–50%; diagnostic and therapeutic | General anesthesia or sedation; risk of perforation; benefit limited to 6 months |
| Acupuncture | ICSI reduction reported in small studies; anti-inflammatory signaling described in case series with biopsy | Evidence still limited; does not replace indicated pharmacological therapy; variable access |
How Acupuncture Works in Interstitial Cystitis
Mechanisms in Interstitial Cystitis
Reduction of Bladder Mast Cell Activation
ST-36 and SP-6 reduce the degranulation of bladder mast cells — documented in follow-up biopsies of acupuncture studies for IC. Histamine and tryptase released by mast cells sensitize suburothelial C fibers; reducing mast cell activation breaks this inflammatory cycle.
Neuromodulation of Bladder C Fibers
BL-32+BL-33 (sacral foramina S2–S3) modulate the hypersensitized suburothelial C fibers — the main afferent pathway of pain in IC. EA at 2 Hz reduces the ectopic discharge of C fibers and progressively normalizes the bladder pain threshold.
Reduction of Central Sensitization
In IC without Hunner ulcer, central sensitization is dominant: the L1–S3 dorsal horn amplifies all bladder stimuli. Acupuncture reduces the expression of c-fos and NMDA-R in the dorsal horn — progressively desensitizing the central pain system that perpetuates symptoms even without active peripheral lesion.
Improvement of Bladder Epithelium via Parasympathetic Tone
CV-3 and KI-3 activate the S2–S4 parasympathetic, which improves bladder submucosal vascular flow. Better-perfused epithelium produces more glycosaminoglycans (GAG) — the protective component of the defective urothelial layer in IC. A slow but potentially modifying trophic effect on the urothelial barrier.
Main Points
BL32–BL33 — Sacral Bladder Neuromodulation
Sacral foramina S2–S3: access point to the pelvic nerve roots. EA at 2 Hz — same mechanism as implantable sacral neuromodulation, in a non-invasive way. Central point in the IC protocol.
CV3 — Front-Mu of the Bladder
Bladder alarm point in Chinese medicine. Located on the midline 2 cun above the pubic symphysis. Modulates bladder autonomic innervation and is the local point par excellence for IC and OAB.
Scientific Evidence
Modern Approach: Position of Acupuncture in the IC Algorithm
IC with Predominant Central Sensitization
IC without Hunner ulcer, with overlap of vulvodynia, IBS, or fibromyalgia: acupuncture is the most efficient approach — acts on the central mechanism common to all conditions. Combined protocols BL32+CV3+SP6+ST36 with EA.
Complementary Option with Favorable Safety Profile
Reports of pigmentary maculopathy associated with prolonged use of PPS reinforce the importance of individualized discussion with the urologist. Acupuncture, with no systemic toxicity described, can be useful as a complementary option — the decision to maintain, reduce, or substitute any drug always rests with the attending physician.
When to See a Medical Acupuncturist
Indications
IC with diagnosis confirmed by urologist; failure or intolerance of PPS; IC associated with vulvodynia or IBS (central sensitization syndrome); as alternative to PPS in the long term; complement to bladder instillations.
Integration with Urology
Diagnosis of IC requires cystoscopy to exclude Hunner ulcer, tumor, and lithiasis. The medical acupuncturist must have the diagnosis established by the urologist before starting. Parallel treatments (instillations, PPS) are compatible with acupuncture.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
There is no known cure for IC. Acupuncture — like all available treatments — controls symptoms, not the underlying disease. The goal is to reduce pain, urgency, and frequency to levels that allow a satisfactory quality of life. Acupuncture can maintain control with periodic maintenance sessions — without the long-term adverse effects of PPS.
Not necessarily — they are compatible treatments. If PPS is partially controlling symptoms and the physician indicated its continuation, it can be maintained during acupuncture treatment. The decision to reduce or discontinue PPS should be evaluated jointly by the urologist, especially considering the risk of retinal maculopathy with prolonged use.
Yes — and this is one of the most compelling cases for acupuncture. IC and IBS frequently coexist because they share the same underlying mechanism: central sensitization of visceral afferent pathways. The acupuncture protocol for IC (BL-32+CV-3+SP-6+ST-36) includes points (ST-25+ST-36) that also address IBS — treating both conditions through the common central mechanism.
Yes. Acupuncture can be started 1–2 weeks after cystoscopic hydrodistension, when the acute post-procedure symptoms have stabilized. Many specialists use the combination: hydrodistension for initial acute control + acupuncture for long-term maintenance — taking advantage of the strengths of each approach.