Evidence behind this recommendation.
Selected studies from our library that inform the recommendations on this page. Evidence grade shown when available.
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...”
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...”
Chronic Male Pelvic Pain: A Spectrum of Undertreated Conditions
Chronic male pelvic pain (CMPP) is defined as persistent or recurrent pain in the pelvis, perineum, external genitalia, low back, or lower abdomen, lasting at least 3–6 months, not explained by infection or other structural pathology. It is a clinical spectrum that includes: chronic non-prostatic pelvic pain syndrome, chronic orchialgia (testicular pain), pudendal neuralgia, and male hypertonic pelvic floor syndrome. It affects 5%–12% of adult men and is frequently underdiagnosed and undertreated.
Conventional Treatments: Approach by Diagnosis
TREATMENTS BY TYPE OF CMPP
| CONDITION | CONVENTIONAL TREATMENT | ROLE OF ACUPUNCTURE |
|---|---|---|
| Chronic orchialgia from varicocele | Varicocelectomy (improvement in 60%–70%) | Postsurgical complement; postoperative residual sensitization |
| Idiopathic / post-vasectomy orchialgia | NSAIDs, amitriptyline, spermatic cord block | Complementary option to conventional treatment — LR-3+SP-6+CV-3; preliminary evidence in idiopathic orchialgia |
| Pudendal neuralgia | Pudendal nerve block, physiotherapy, gabapentin | BL-32+BL-33 — neuromodulation of S2–S3 roots; complementary to conventional treatment |
| Hypertonic pelvic floor | Male pelvic floor physiotherapy, biofeedback, muscle relaxants | SP-6+BL-36 — reflex inhibition of the levator muscle; potentiates physiotherapy |
| Congestive post-vasectomy pain | Epididymectomy, vasovasostomy, cord denervation | Complementary for residual pain; avoids additional surgery in moderate cases |
How Acupuncture Works in CMPP
Mechanisms in Chronic Male Pelvic Pain
Neuromodulation of L1–S4 Roots (Male Pelvis)
BL-23 (L2), BL-32 (S2), and BL-33 (S3) modulate the roots that innervate testicles, epididymis, prostate, and perineum. 2 Hz EA reduces ectopic afferent discharge and normalizes spinal excitability — addressing the central sensitization component that perpetuates pain even after the initial cause has been resolved.
Inhibition of the Hypertonic Pelvic Floor
SP-6 and BL-36 (ischiorectal fossa) activate the spino-bulbo-spinal inhibitory pathway of the levator ani muscle. Chronic pelvic floor spasm is identified on perineal palpation in 80% of men with CMPP — and rarely diagnosed. Acupuncture progressively relaxes this spasm.
Testicular Pain — Afferents via the Renal Plexus (T10–L1)
The testicles are innervated by the genitofemoral nerve (L1–L2) and by the renal plexus (T10–L1). For orchialgia, points such as KI-3 (saphenous, L4–S1), LR-3 (peroneal, L4–L5), and ST-29 (femoral, L2–L3) activate convergent segments that inhibit testicular nociceptive transmission in the dorsal horn.
Pudendal Neuralgia — S2–S3 Neuromodulation
BL-32+BL-33 in the sacral foramina access the S2–S3 roots that originate the pudendal nerve. Studies suggest that 2 Hz EA may contribute to the desensitization of hypersensitized C and Aδ fibers as a complementary approach to conventional management (does not replace anesthetic block when indicated).
LR3 + LR8 — Liver Meridian (External Genitalia)
In Chinese medicine, the Liver meridian runs through the male external genitalia. LR3 and LR8 are the points of choice for testicular and scrotal pain — neurobiologically, they activate the peroneal nerve that converges with genitofemoral afferents in the dorsal horn.
Scientific Evidence
Modern Approach
Pre-Surgical (Varicocelectomy, Epididymectomy)
For surgical orchialgia, acupuncture can be tried before the surgical decision — especially when the diagnosis is not definitive. Significant reduction of pain with acupuncture may modify the operative decision.
When to See a Medical Acupuncturist
Indications
CMPP with established diagnosis (urologic and/or by imaging); chronic orchialgia with normal exams or grade I varicocele without clear surgical indication; pudendal neuralgia; post-vasectomy pain; documented hypertonic pelvic floor.
When to Investigate First
Acute testicular pain: emergency (torsion?). Pain with palpable mass: oncology. Pain with new urinary symptoms: urologic evaluation. Acupuncture for CMPP is indicated after exclusion of specific treatable causes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
In varicocele with associated infertility, surgery has a clear indication and should be performed. For varicocele only symptomatic (without infertility criterion), surgery can be deferred if acupuncture adequately controls the pain. The decision is individualized with the urologist — but trying acupuncture for 8–12 weeks before deciding on surgery is a reasonable approach in selected cases.
Sacral acupuncture (BL-32+BL-33 with 2 Hz EA) acts on the same S2–S3 roots through a neuromodulation mechanism and can be considered as a complementary approach. Case series show response in some patients, but the evidence is limited. The decision among block, pharmacotherapy, and acupuncture should be individualized — in severe cases, anesthetic block or other interventions may be necessary, with acupuncture acting in maintenance protocol.
Chronic pelvic pain with normal exams is characteristic of chronic pain syndrome: the problem is in how the nervous system processes signals — not in structural injury. Acupuncture acts precisely on this mechanism: it modulates the excitability of the neural pathways that process pelvic pain, without the need for structural injury as a "target." It is a nervous-system-centered approach, not anatomy-centered.
Yes — they are generally compatible. Amitriptyline acts centrally (inhibits noradrenaline and serotonin reuptake), and acupuncture combines peripheral action (sacral and tibial neuromodulation) with central action (spinal and supraspinal modulation). The combination can potentiate symptomatic control, especially when there is a predominant central sensitization component. Coordination should be done with the attending physician.