Evidence behind this recommendation.
Selected studies from our library that inform the recommendations on this page. Evidence grade shown when available.
Effect of acupuncture on pregnancy related low back pain and pelvic pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis
“Low back pain and pelvic pain during pregnancy are extremely common complaints that significantly affect the quality of life of pregnant and postpartum women. These conditions can manifest from the first trimester, with a tendency to intensify...”
Analgesic Efficacy of Acupuncture on Chronic Pelvic Pain: A Systemic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
“Chronic pelvic pain represents one of the most complex challenges of modern medicine, affecting millions of people around the world and causing significant impacts on both patient quality of life and healthcare systems. Defined as...”
Dyspareunia: Pain During Intercourse and Its Multiple Origins
Dyspareunia is defined as persistent or recurrent pain during or after sexual intercourse, with intensity sufficient to cause personal suffering or relational dysfunction. It affects 10%–20% of women at some point in reproductive life, with a peak in perimenopause (vulvovaginal atrophy) and in women with endometriosis. In men it is less prevalent (2%–4%), associated mainly with phimosis, prostatitis, or penile conditions.
Conventional Treatments
Treatment of dyspareunia is necessarily guided by etiology. Correct diagnosis (gynecologic, dermatologic, neurologic) precedes any treatment. The multimodal approach is the most effective — especially when there is a central component (sensitization, catastrophizing).
TREATMENTS BY TYPE OF DYSPAREUNIA
| TYPE | MAIN TREATMENT | ROLE OF ACUPUNCTURE |
|---|---|---|
| Postmenopausal vulvovaginal atrophy | Topical estrogen (vaginal cream or ovule); oral ospemifene | Complementary: SP-6, KI-3, CV-4 to support Yin; improvement in vaginal thermal sensation |
| Vestibulodynia / provoked vulvodynia | Topical lidocaine, topical amitriptyline, pelvic floor physiotherapy, vestibulectomy | BL-32, SP-6, LR-5 — sacral neuromodulation of the pudendal nerve; reduction of allodynia to genital probing |
| Dyspareunia from endometriosis | Hormonal or surgical treatment of endometriosis | SP-8, CV-4, LR-3 — control of pelvic central sensitization; complementary |
| Vaginismus | Progressive dilators, psychotherapy/sexology, botulinum toxin in the levator | PC-6, SP-6 — reduction of anticipatory anxiety; complement to behavioral treatment |
| Male dyspareunia | Treatment of prostatitis, phimosis, dermatoses | BL-32, CV-3, SP-6 — pelvic analgesia; support for chronic prostatitis |
| Dyspareunia with central sensitization | Amitriptyline, duloxetine, pain psychotherapy (CBT) | Acupuncture as a central modulator — reduces spinal excitability; complementary |
How Acupuncture Works in Dyspareunia
Mechanisms in Dyspareunia
Pudendal Nerve Neuromodulation (S2–S4)
BL-32 and BL-33 (sacral foramina S2–S3) directly stimulate the roots that originate the pudendal nerve — the main afferent for pain in the vulva and perineum. Electroacupuncture at this point reduces the excitability of pudendal C and Aδ fibers, decreasing vulvar allodynia.
Reduction of Levator Ani Spasm
In vaginismus and dyspareunia with reflex muscle spasm, the levator ani muscle contracts involuntarily in anticipation of pain. Points such as SP-6 and BL-36 are believed to modulate spino-bulbo-spinal reflex pathways that inhibit this muscle — with a clinical target similar (but mechanism distinct) to that of botulinum toxin.
Modulation of Central Sensitization
In chronic dyspareunia, the dorsal horn S2–S4 becomes sensitized — amplifying all stimuli from the pelvic region. Acupuncture reduces spinal c-fos and NMDA expression, gradually desensitizing the central pain system. This central component explains why acupuncture improves dyspareunia even when the local cause has already been treated.
Improvement of Vaginal Flow (Atrophy)
In postmenopausal atrophic dyspareunia, CV-4 with indirect moxibustion and KI-3 increase pelvic flow and modulate the vaginal trophic response via the parasympathetic autonomic nervous system (S2–S4 → pelvic nerve → vaginal plexus). Studies show improvement in pH and lubrication.
Scientific Evidence
Modern Approach: Integration With Multimodal Treatment
Complement to Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy
Pelvic floor physiotherapy (biofeedback, dilators, pelvic floor release) is the first-line non-pharmacologic treatment for vaginismus and muscular dyspareunia. Acupuncture reduces the central tension that hinders progress with dilators — potentiating physiotherapy results.
Postsurgical Dyspareunia
After hysterectomy, oophorectomy, endometriosis surgery, or prolapse repair, adhesions and partial denervation contribute to postsurgical dyspareunia. Acupuncture addresses residual sensitization and improves pelvic flow without additional surgical risk.
When to See a Medical Acupuncturist
Indications
Chronic dyspareunia (>3 months) with an identified cause already in treatment; central sensitization component; dyspareunia from endometriosis; postmenopausal atrophic dyspareunia as a complement to topical estrogen; postsurgical dyspareunia.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Treating without a diagnosis is not recommended. Dyspareunia may be a symptom of endometriosis, PID, tumor, or other conditions that require specific treatment. The medical acupuncturist will take a history and, if the cause is not diagnosed, will refer to the gynecologist for investigation before initiating treatment.
Needling at the S2–S3 sacral foramina is performed by a physician with experience in pelvic anatomy. The needles are 0.25–0.30 mm in diameter — they do not cause nerve injury. There may be a sensation of tingling or radiation to the perineum during electroacupuncture — this is expected and indicates good localization. The procedure is safe when performed by a trained medical acupuncturist.
Acupuncture is not performed "during" intercourse. The benefit is cumulative — 8–12 weeks of treatment produce progressive and sustained reduction of dyspareunia. It is not a local anesthetic that acts at the moment of intercourse. Some patients report that the session performed on the day of, or the day before, a planned encounter helps by reducing the state of alertness and anticipatory muscle tension.
It should not replace it. Topical estrogen (vaginal cream or ovule) acts directly on atrophy — restoring epithelium, pH, and lubrication. Acupuncture can complement, contributing to modulation of pelvic flow, residual allodynia, and the central component of pain. The combination of topical estrogen with acupuncture tends to be more effective than any approach alone in atrophic dyspareunia of greater intensity, always under the gynecologist's direction.