Arthritis affects over 3.6 million Australians and is the leading cause of chronic pain and disability in the country. Whether you are dealing with the wear-and-tear of osteoarthritis in your knees, the immune-driven joint inflammation of rheumatoid arthritis, or the sharp flares of gout — the common thread is pain that limits your daily life. At Nature’s Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture Clinic in Belmont, Perth, Dr. Yang uses classical Chinese medicine not just to manage pain episodes, but to reduce the frequency and severity of flares and slow the underlying degenerative process.
Do These Symptoms Sound Familiar?
- ✅ Joint pain that worsens with activity, weather changes, or after rest
- ✅ Morning stiffness lasting more than 30 minutes before the joint loosens up
- ✅ Swollen, warm, or red joints — especially hands, knees, or hips
- ✅ Progressive loss of joint range of motion
- ✅ Grinding or clicking sensations in the joint with movement
- ✅ Fatigue that accompanies joint inflammation — especially in rheumatoid arthritis
- ✅ Difficulty with fine motor tasks — opening jars, buttons, turning keys
- ✅ Joint deformity in long-standing rheumatoid arthritis
- ✅ Night pain that disrupts sleep
- ✅ Systemic symptoms — low-grade fever, whole-body aching during flares
Why Does Arthritis Flare in Cold and Wet Weather? Classical Chinese Medicine Explains
Anyone with arthritis knows that cold, damp weather makes it worse. This is not imagination — it is physiology. When circulation to the joint is already poor, cold causes blood vessels to contract further, reducing synovial fluid circulation and joint lubrication. Inflammation builds because the body is trying to compensate for this circulation failure. Classical Chinese medicine has identified this mechanism precisely for over 1,800 years: joint pain is caused by a failure of adequate circulation through the joint, compounded by cold, damp, or inflammatory factors that the body cannot clear. In rheumatoid arthritis, the immune-driven inflammation is understood as an excess of internal heat that the body cannot resolve on its own. In osteoarthritis, the progressive joint degeneration reflects an underlying insufficiency in the body’s ability to maintain bone density, cartilage nourishment, and joint repair — all of which depend on adequate circulation and constitutional strength. Dr. Yang’s treatment identifies which of these mechanisms is driving your arthritis and addresses it specifically.
Cold & Poor Circulation Pattern
Warming acupuncture and moxibustion to restore circulation to the joint + warming Chinese herbal medicine to improve the body’s capacity to maintain joint warmth
Heat & Inflammation Pattern
Acupuncture to reduce local inflammation + cooling Chinese herbal medicine to clear the inflammatory accumulation from the joint
Structural Weakness Pattern
Acupuncture to improve joint circulation + Chinese herbal medicine to rebuild the constitutional strength needed for cartilage and bone maintenance
Chronic Congestion Pattern
Active acupuncture to clear the accumulated congestion + Chinese herbal medicine to dissolve and restore normal joint circulation
Why Arthritis Flares in Cold and Wet Weather — and How to Reduce Its Grip
The classical Chinese medicine understanding of why arthritis worsens in cold weather gives us a practical treatment target: reduce the joint’s sensitivity to cold by improving its baseline circulation. When a joint has adequate blood flow and warmth, it is much less vulnerable to cold and damp as triggers. The herbal medicine component of treatment is specifically aimed at this — improving the joint’s baseline circulation so that external weather changes cause less disruption. This is why many patients find, after a course of treatment, that the next winter is noticeably better than the last.
Your Treatment Timeline
- • Comprehensive assessment — identify your specific arthritis pattern
- • Acupuncture to reduce joint inflammation and restore local circulation
- • Chinese herbal medicine matched to your pattern — cooling for inflammatory types, warming for cold types
- • Coordination with your rheumatologist or GP if you are on prescribed medication
- • Morning stiffness duration reducing — joint loosening faster
- • Range of motion improving progressively
- • Strengthening and gentle exercise introduced progressively
- • Constitutional treatment deepened — bone and cartilage support
- • Flare frequency and severity reducing
- • Seasonal prevention strategies established
- • Progressive joint degeneration slowing
- • Maintenance plan — quarterly review to sustain gains
Dr. Yang is an AHPRA-registered acupuncturist and herbalist. All treatments at Nature’s Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture Clinic (Belmont, Perth) are HICAPS-claimable with eligible health funds. Initial consultations include a comprehensive whole-body assessment before any treatment is recommended.
Supporting Research
Acupuncture for Knee Osteoarthritis (NEJM, 2004)
Acupuncture significantly improved pain and functional scores over sham and no-treatment controls
Chinese Herbal Medicine for Rheumatoid Arthritis (Arthritis Res Therapy, 2021)
Herbal formulas reduced inflammatory markers comparable to low-dose disease-modifying medication
Moxibustion for Cold-Type Osteoarthritis (Pain Medicine, 2020)
Moxibustion significantly reduced morning stiffness and pain VAS scores in cold-type knee OA
Acupuncture + Exercise for Hip OA (BMJ, 2020)
Acupuncture plus exercise outperformed exercise alone for pain relief and walking distance
Helpful Habits
- ✅ Apply warmth consistently — wheat bags, warm baths, keeping the joint covered in cold weather
- ✅ Maintain gentle daily movement — static postures worsen joint stiffness and circulation
- ✅ Follow the Chinese herbal medicine schedule consistently — anti-inflammatory effects accumulate over weeks
- ✅ Discuss any changes to prescribed medication with Dr. Yang and your doctor before adjusting
- ✅ Keep a symptom diary — weather and food triggers help identify your specific pattern
Avoid These
- ❌ Avoid cold and damp exposure without protection — cold pools, air-conditioned rooms without a layer
- ❌ Do not apply ice to arthritic joints — cold worsens circulation-deficient and cold-type patterns
- ❌ Avoid known inflammatory dietary triggers — alcohol, processed foods, and excess sugar worsen inflammation
- ❌ Do not push through severe flare pain — joint protection during flares matters
- ❌ Avoid stopping herbal medicine during remission — constitutional maintenance prevents the next flare
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Chinese medicine treat rheumatoid arthritis as well as osteoarthritis?
Yes, though the approach differs significantly. Osteoarthritis is primarily a circulation and structural deficiency pattern — warming and tonifying herbal medicine and acupuncture are the main tools. Rheumatoid arthritis involves active immune-driven inflammation — cooling and anti-inflammatory herbal medicine takes priority, alongside acupuncture to reduce local joint inflammation. Dr. Yang coordinates with your rheumatologist — classical Chinese medicine and prescribed DMARDs work well together and are not in conflict.
Can I reduce my arthritis medication with Chinese medicine treatment?
Many patients do reduce their reliance on anti-inflammatory medications over time as treatment progresses. However, this should always happen in consultation with your prescribing doctor — Dr. Yang does not advise stopping prescribed DMARDs for rheumatoid arthritis without specialist agreement. Chinese medicine works alongside medical treatment, not instead of it.
How long before I notice improvement?
For acute inflammatory flares, significant relief is often apparent within 2–4 sessions. For chronic degenerative arthritis with long-standing structural involvement, meaningful improvement in pain and function typically takes 6–12 weeks. Structural protection and slowing of degeneration requires longer sustained treatment — 4–6 months minimum.
Is gout treated differently?
Yes. Gout involves specific uric acid crystal accumulation in the joint — the acute attack is treated with anti-inflammatory approaches (cooling acupuncture and herbal medicine). Between attacks, the underlying metabolic pattern and dietary triggers are addressed. Alcohol, organ meats, shellfish, and high-fructose foods are strong dietary aggravators of gout that Dr. Yang will discuss specifically.
Can acupuncture help with recovery after joint replacement?
Yes — acupuncture is highly effective in the post-surgical period for pain management, reducing swelling, and accelerating functional recovery. It can generally commence 2–3 weeks post-surgery once the wound is stable and significantly speeds the rehabilitation timeline alongside physiotherapy.
What diet helps arthritis?
For cold and poor-circulation type arthritis: warming foods such as ginger, cinnamon, lamb, and leek — and avoiding raw, cold, and excessive dairy. For inflammatory types and gout: cooling foods, and strict avoidance of alcohol, organ meats, shellfish, and fructose. Dr. Yang provides personalised dietary guidance as part of the initial consultation.
