Sjögren’s Syndrome — A Classical Reading of Dryness and Immune Dysregulation
Sjögren’s syndrome attacks the exocrine glands — primarily lacrimal and salivary — producing characteristic dry eyes and dry mouth, with systemic involvement in many patients. Specialist rheumatology management is the primary approach. At Nature’s Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture Clinic in Belmont Perth, Dr. Yang works alongside rheumatology teams to provide supportive treatment for the dryness, fatigue, and constitutional depletion that affect daily life even with good specialist care.
Common Symptom Pattern
- ✓ Persistent gritty, sandy, burning eye dryness
- ✓ Difficulty swallowing dry foods
- ✓ Constitutional thirst not satisfied by drinking
- ✓ Increased dental caries, fungal infections
- ✓ Vaginal, nose, throat, skin dryness
- ✓ Inflammatory joint pain
- ✓ Disproportionate fatigue
- ✓ Raynaud’s phenomenon — fingers/toes
- ✓ Positive ANA, anti-Ro/SSA, anti-La/SSB
- ✓ Sleep disturbance from night dryness
Four Patterns We Recognize
Three-Phase Treatment Timeline
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
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 my need for artificial tears and saliva substitutes?
For some patients yes — improvement in baseline dryness reduces dependence on symptomatic products. For others, products continue but baseline comfort improves. Significant damage to glandular architecture is not fully reversible.
Should I stop hydroxychloroquine?
No. Hydroxychloroquine is effective for joint and constitutional features and continues as prescribed by your rheumatologist. Classical work is adjunctive only.
How long until I see improvement?
Joint pain, fatigue, and sleep often improve within 2–3 months. Dryness improvement is slower — typically 3–4 months for meaningful change in mouth moisture and tissue hydration.
Is acupuncture safe in Sjögren’s?
Yes — acupuncture is generally safe in Sjögren’s. Patients on immunosuppressive therapy or with neutropenia should mention this so single-use sterile needles and standard infection-control practice are emphasised.
Will treatment change my lymphoma surveillance?
No. Lymphoma surveillance is conducted by your rheumatologist and continues unchanged. Any new lymph-node, fever, weight-loss, or salivary-gland change is escalated immediately to your rheumatology team.
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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