Hello, I'm Dr. Shin Jungwon from Tong-in Korean Medicine Clinic.
Today's topic is something many women know all too well — menstrual pain, the monthly ordeal that keeps coming back.
For a lot of us, over-the-counter painkillers simply aren't enough. What makes it even more frustrating? Going to the gynecologist, running all the tests — and being told there's nothing structurally wrong. Just "normal period pain."
If everything looks normal on paper, why does your body feel like a battlefield every month? Is it really okay to keep taking more and more painkillers?
Today, we're going beyond painkillers — exploring the functional imbalances behind menstrual pain, and what Korean medicine can do to address them.
"My Tests Are Normal — So Why Does It Hurt So Much?"

When severe menstrual pain occurs in the absence of structural conditions like uterine fibroids or adenomyosis, it is classified as primary dysmenorrhea. The mechanism works like this:
- During menstruation, the uterine lining releases a substance called prostaglandin
- This causes excessive uterine contractions, reduces uterine blood flow, and increases peripheral nerve sensitivity
Korean medicine addresses this through three core lenses:
1. Pelvic Imbalance — A Tilted Container
Think of the uterus as something held within the "container" of the pelvis. When the pelvis becomes misaligned — due to poor posture or other causes — the muscles and ligaments surrounding the uterus lose their balance. This increases tension in the body and restricts blood flow, much like a kinked hose that can't let water through properly.
In Korean medicine, acupuncture and chuna (Korean manual therapy) are used to correct pelvic misalignment and restore healthy circulation.
2. Lower Abdominal Cold & Blood Stagnation — A Frozen River
A cold lower abdomen can significantly worsen menstrual pain. When the abdominal area stays cold, blood vessels constrict chronically — leading to what Korean medicine calls "eohyeol" (blood stagnation), where blood becomes sluggish and thick rather than flowing freely.
Do you often feel coldness in your lower abdomen? Is your menstrual blood dark or clotty? Does applying a warm heat pack ease your pain? If so, this may be your pattern.
In Korean medicine, moxibustion is used to warm the abdomen deeply, while herbal medicine helps improve circulation and restore warmth to the body.
3. Autonomic Nervous System Imbalance — An Oversensitive Control Center
Chronic stress activates the sympathetic nervous system, which in turn causes stronger uterine muscle contractions — producing that intense, cramping, wringing pain many women describe.
Do you experience abdominal pain or irritable bowel symptoms when you're stressed? Does pressing under your rib cage cause significant discomfort or pressure? Has your period pain gotten worse during particularly stressful periods of your life? If so, you may fit what Korean medicine calls the "gan-ul-gi-che" pattern — a state of stagnation caused by prolonged stress and emotional suppression.
Treatment includes herbal prescriptions to rebalance the autonomic nervous system, alongside acupuncture and moxibustion.
Korean Medicine vs. Painkillers — What's the Difference?

Common over-the-counter options like acetaminophen and ibuprofen work like circuit breakers — they block pain signals quickly and provide temporary relief. But they don't address the underlying causes.
Korean medicine, by contrast, works to improve the conditions in which pain arises — targeting the root, not just the symptom. If you've been thinking "I want to stop relying on painkillers," here's what Korean medicine offers:
- Acupuncture: Relaxes tense muscles around the uterus, corrects pelvic imbalance, and is thought to stimulate endorphin release — acting as a natural analgesic
- Moxibustion: Delivers deep warmth into the abdominal cavity, dilating blood vessels and improving circulation
- Chuna Therapy: Corrects pelvic misalignment and loosens stiff tissue to restore blood flow
- Herbal Medicine: Tailored to your individual constitution — improving circulation, warming the body, or calming nerve hypersensitivity, depending on your pattern
A Practical Guide to Managing Period Pain at Home
Can't make it to a clinic right away? Here are some things you can try at home.
1. Warm the Abdomen, Free the Blood Flow
- ✅ Ginger tea & cinnamon tea: Ginger is a warming herb with properties that may reduce uterine contractions and inflammation. Cinnamon helps relax muscle tension and supports circulation.
- ⛔ Avoid: Cold beverages, caffeine, and sugar-heavy foods
Cold drinks and caffeine constrict blood vessels and stimulate the sympathetic nervous system, increasing uterine tension and amplifying pain sensitivity. Sugar promotes inflammatory responses that can worsen cramping.
Instead of reaching for something sweet, try nuts — they satisfy the urge to chew without the inflammatory sugar load.
2. Gentle Stretching to Release the Pelvis

- Butterfly Pose: Sit on the floor, press the soles of your feet together, and gently press your knees downward. This releases pelvic muscle tension, improves blood flow, and helps realign a tilted pelvis.
- Cat-Cow Pose: Aligns the spine and pelvis to reduce nerve compression affecting the uterus, and relaxes the lumbar and sacral regions to ease nerve pressure.
3. Lifestyle Adjustments
- Half-body or foot baths: Warming the feet promotes circulation to the head and abdomen. Done consistently from one week before your period, the effects can be significant.
- Organic cotton menstrual pads: Xenoestrogens (environmental hormones) disrupt the body's estrogen balance and can worsen period pain. During menstruation especially, consider switching to organic cotton or cloth pads. Many women report reduced pain simply from limiting contact with synthetic absorbent materials.
- Reduce plastic use: Switch to glass or stainless steel containers where possible to minimize endocrine disruption.
- Sleep position: The fetal position — lying on your side with knees drawn toward your chest — minimizes abdominal muscle tension and can ease cramping during sleep.
Menstrual pain is actually one of the most common reasons international patients visit our clinic. Some come because they're worried about how much their painkiller dosage has increased over time. Others come because the pain has become severe enough to interfere with daily life.
Because it's such a common condition, many women assume period pain is just something to push through. But rather than masking the pain with medication each month, what if you chose to actually listen to your body — and take better care of it during that time?
Begin Your Journey
For personalized consultation on Dr. Shin Jeong-won, contact The Pylon Square concierge team.
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Sia
| Editor of The Pylon Club