AHPRA-registered Chinese Medicine Doctor & Acupuncturist · Belmont · Geraldton WA
Belmont: Mon–Sat 9:00–17:00 · Geraldton: Mon–Fri 9:00–17:00 · Appointment Required

Addison’s Disease — Classical Chinese Medicine Support Alongside Steroid Replacement

Addison’s Disease — Classical Chinese Medicine Support Alongside Steroid Replacement

Addison’s disease — primary adrenal insufficiency — is a serious endocrine condition requiring lifelong hydrocortisone and often fludrocortisone replacement. It is not a condition that any complementary approach treats primarily, and patients should never reduce or adjust their steroid replacement without endocrinology guidance. At Nature’s Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture Clinic in Belmont Perth, Dr. Yang works alongside endocrinology teams to provide supportive treatment addressing quality-of-life issues and constitutional factors that often persist even with adequate steroid replacement.

27 yrs
AHPRA-registered practice since 1999
2 clinics
Belmont Perth + Geraldton WA
HICAPS
On-the-spot health-fund rebates

Common Symptom Pattern

  • ✓ I have documented Addison’s on stable replacement but persistent fatigue (Pattern 1 signals)
  • ✓ My exercise tolerance is substantially reduced despite adequate replacement
  • ✓ I have cold sensitivity and reduced stress resilience
  • ✓ I recover slowly from minor illness
  • ✓ I have autoimmune conditions alongside Addison’s (Pattern 2 signals)
  • ✓ My cumulative disease burden affects quality of life beyond Addison’s alone
  • ✓ I have had a recent adrenal crisis and am in extended recovery (Pattern 3 signals)
  • ✓ I have post-hospitalisation deconditioning or anxiety about recurrence
  • ✓ I want supportive care addressing the constitutional component of my condition
  • ✓ Persistent constitutional pattern requiring assessment

Four Patterns We Recognize

Pattern 1 — Residual Fatigue and Constitutional Depletion Despite Adequate Replacement (Replacement Gap Pattern)
In this pattern, the patient is on documented adequate hydrocortisone and fludrocortisone replacement, electrolytes and blood pressure are stable, but substantial symptoms persist: fatigue out of proportion to what replacement alone should produce, reduced exercise tolerance, sleep disturbance, cold sensitivity, reduced stress resilience, and slow recovery from minor illness.
Pattern 2 — Autoimmune-Associated Conditions and Broader Immune Dysregulation (Autoimmune Overlap Pattern)
In this pattern, autoimmune Addison’s is accompanied by other autoimmune conditions — Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (most common), vitiligo, type 1 diabetes, pernicious anaemia, autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome — producing cumulative disease burden and treatment complexity.
Pattern 3 — Recovery Support after Acute Adrenal Crisis (Post-Crisis Recovery Pattern)
In this pattern, the patient has had an acute adrenal crisis requiring emergency treatment and hospitalisation, has recovered to stable replacement, but is in extended constitutional recovery from the crisis event. Post-crisis depletion, post-hospitalisation deconditioning, and emotional sequelae (often substantial) all contribute.
Pattern 4 — Maintenance & Long-term Support
For stable patients: maintenance support to preserve gains, reduce flare burden, and sustain quality of life across years of management.
Addison’s disease carries life-threatening crisis risk; urgent medical attention is needed for: – Severe fatigue with hypotension, vomiting, confusion, or inability to keep down oral medication — may indicate crisis; requires emergency treatment – Any acute illness, injury, surgery, or significant stress — requires implementation of sick-day rules and often medical review – New symptoms suggesting additional autoimmune disease — require endocrinology or relevant specialist assessment

Three-Phase Treatment Timeline

Phase 1 — Stabilize (Weeks 1–6)
Sleep quality, autonomic regulation, initial symptom reduction. Continue all prescribed medications and specialist follow-up.
Phase 2 — Rebuild (Months 2–4)
Constitutional rebuild, pattern-specific treatment, integration with conventional medical management.
Phase 3 — Maintain (Month 4+)
Spaced maintenance treatments, lifestyle anchoring, ongoing specialist monitoring continues unchanged.

AHPRA-Registered, HICAPS-Ready

Nature’s Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture Clinic operates from Belmont (Perth) and Geraldton (Mid West WA). Dr. Yang is AHPRA-registered (CMR0001813274) with HICAPS on-the-spot health-fund rebates. We work alongside your GP and specialists — never as a replacement for medical care.

Supporting Research

Acupuncture for Chronic Symptom Burden
Clinical reviews support acupuncture for symptom modulation and quality-of-life improvement in chronic conditions when delivered by registered practitioners.
TGA-Compliant Herbal Formulas
Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration-listed herbal formulas provide a regulated framework for supportive treatment alongside conventional medical care.
Integrative Care Principles
Combining specialist medical management with adjunctive complementary care addresses both the disease process and quality-of-life burden.
Pattern-Based Treatment
Pattern recognition allows the constitutional treatment plan to match the individual presentation, rather than condition name alone.

Helpful Habits

  • ✓ Maintain consistent sleep and wake times
  • ✓ Eat warm cooked meals — avoid cold raw foods
  • ✓ Stay hydrated with warm or room-temperature water
  • ✓ Gentle daily movement appropriate to capacity
  • ✓ Stress regulation — breathwork, light walking
  • ✓ Continue all prescribed medications and specialist follow-up

Best Avoided

  • ✗ Iced drinks and frozen foods
  • ✗ Late-night eating disrupting sleep
  • ✗ Over-exercising during flare phases
  • ✗ Self-medication with unverified herbal products
  • ✗ Skipping specialist follow-up appointments
  • ✗ Untested supplement combinations

Frequently Asked Questions

Can classical treatment reduce or replace my hormone medication?

Absolutely not. Addison’s disease is life-threatening without adequate hormone replacement. Hydrocortisone and fludrocortisone (when prescribed) must continue at doses set by your endocrinologist. Any adjustment requires endocrinology supervision. Classical work is supportive only — addressing residual symptoms, not replacing essential medication.

How long until I see improvement in fatigue?

Constitutional support work typically produces noticeable improvement over 4–6 months of sustained treatment. Realistic expectations include improved energy baseline, better stress resilience, reduced minor-illness duration, and better sleep quality. This is slow foundational work, not a quick intervention.

Is acupuncture safe in Addison’s disease?

Yes — acupuncture is generally safe for patients with Addison’s on stable replacement. Patients should maintain their sick-day rules and emergency planning. Significant illness or unexpected stressors (including, rarely, strong treatment reactions) may require hydrocortisone dose adjustment; the endocrinology team’s guidance always applies.

What about managing sick days or stress?

Sick day rules — doubling hydrocortisone dose during illness, parenteral replacement if unable to take oral medication — are essential Addison’s management and must be followed as your endocrinologist has instructed. Classical treatment provides background constitutional support but does not replace sick-day protocols. Medical alert identification should always be worn. —

Are your clinics covered by health funds?

Yes — HICAPS-equipped at both Belmont (Perth) and Geraldton (Mid West WA) clinics for on-the-spot rebates with most major Australian health funds.

Are your clinics covered by health funds?

Yes — HICAPS-equipped at both Belmont (Perth) and Geraldton (Mid West WA) clinics for on-the-spot rebates with most major Australian health funds.

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