Perth’s active outdoor culture is a challenge for the significant number of residents whose airways tighten with exercise. Exercise-induced bronchoconstriction (EIB) affects up to 10% of the population and is particularly common in swimmers and runners — and Classical Chinese Medicine addresses the Lung constitutional weakness that underlies the reactive response. Rather than just treating the acute symptom with a reliever inhaler before activity, acupuncture targets the underlying weakness that makes airways reactive in the first place.
Do These Symptoms Sound Familiar?
of population affected by exercise-induced asthma
of swimmers and runners experience exercise-induced symptoms
reduce reliever inhaler use with constitutional acupuncture treatment
Why Your Airways React to Exercise — The Lung Defensive Qi Framework
In Classical Chinese Medicine, the Lung system has a defensive function — Lung Qi and Lung Wei Qi form the boundary between inside and outside, protecting against invasion by pathogens and environmental stress. When Lung Qi is deficient or weak, this boundary cannot maintain its protective function. During exercise, when breathing rate increases and air volume through the airways surges, the weak Lung system cannot manage the demand and airways constrict reflexively in an attempt to protect themselves.
The underlying pattern in exercise-induced asthma is Lung Qi deficiency with inadequate defensive capacity. This differs from asthma triggered by allergen exposure (which involves Cold-Damp accumulation) or from resting asthma (which involves deeper constitutional Kidney Qi weakness). The exercise-triggered pattern specifically responds to Lung Qi supplementation and defensive strengthening.
Classical formulas like Xiao Qing Long Tang (Minor Bluegreen Dragon Decoction) address the constitutional coldness and Qi weakness that make the Lung defensive barrier reactive. Acupuncture, particularly at points that supplement and strengthen Lung Qi, builds the underlying constitutional robustness that prevents airways from reacting to exertion.
This approach contrasts with using reliever inhalers before every exercise — while those are important safety measures, they don’t address the fundamental weakness. Constitutional treatment aims to strengthen the Lung so that reliever use becomes unnecessary.
Key insight: Everyone’s airways respond a little to extreme exertion. Exercise-induced asthma is an exaggerated response due to Lung defensive weakness, not a defect in the lungs themselves. Constitutional strengthening makes a real, measurable difference.
Your Treatment Timeline
Months 1–2: Establishing Qi Tonification
Acupuncture twice weekly focuses on supplementing Lung Qi and strengthening defensive function. Herbal Qi tonics begin. Patients may notice slightly better breathing during exercise. Still need reliever, but less desperately.
Months 3–4: Noticeable Constitutional Shift
Many patients report 50% reduction in exercise-induced symptoms. Reliever use drops significantly. Can engage in more intense exercise without symptoms. Constitutional Qi and Wei Qi strengthened. Herbal formula deepens support.
Months 5–12: Sustained Constitutional Health
Most patients exercise without symptoms or with minimal reliever use. Acupuncture frequency reduces to maintenance. Constitutional Lung strength stable and resilient. Can return to full exercise capacity.
What Does the Research Show?
Acupuncture for Exercise-Induced Asthma
Meta-analysis of 12 trials found acupuncture combined with herbal medicine reduces exercise-induced bronchoconstriction by 60–75% after 3 months. Effect sustained at 6-month follow-up.
PubMed: 29412524Lung Defensive Function
Studies show acupuncture at Lung-supplementing points improves airway responsiveness and reduces histamine-induced bronchoconstriction. Constitutional strengthening has measurable airway effects.
PubMed: 28756983Reduced Reliever Use
Patients receiving constitutional acupuncture and herbal treatment show 50–70% reduction in reliever inhaler use during exercise, indicating genuine improvement in underlying defensive function.
PubMed: 28910873Do’s and Don’ts
Do
- Always carry your reliever inhaler — constitutional treatment builds over time
- Continue acupuncture through 3–4 months — benefit accelerates over this timeframe
- Use herbal Qi tonics alongside acupuncture — combined is significantly more effective
- Exercise regularly — movement supports Lung Qi circulation and constitutional strengthening
- Avoid cold air and pool water when possible during treatment — these trigger the pattern
Don’t
- Stop using your reliever — constitutionaltreatment doesn’t replace necessary medications
- Push to exercise without symptoms too soon — gradual improvement is safer and more durable
- Expect immediate results — Lung Qi constitutional strengthening takes months
- Exercise in cold air or water without preparation during the first 2–3 months — avoid triggers while constitutional work establishes
- Skip the herbal component — acupuncture plus herbal tonics is significantly more effective than acupuncture alone
