Chinese medicine for the North Shore's high-pressure lives. Heart-Shen disturbance, Liver Qi stagnation, herbal medicine, and integrated care for anxiety and mood disorders.
Book Your Appointment Call (02) 9427 5696The North Shore of Sydney — Lane Cove, Chatswood, Willoughby, North Sydney, Neutral Bay, Cremorne — is an area of significant professional achievement and also significant pressure. High mortgage costs, demanding careers, competitive parenting culture, and the relentless pace of modern life create fertile ground for anxiety, chronic stress, and low mood.
At Lane Cove Acupuncture, we see this reality every week. People who are functioning well by most external measures but feel anxious, depleted, sad, or disconnected from themselves. Chinese medicine has a sophisticated and compassionate framework for understanding these experiences — and effective treatment pathways that work alongside, rather than in place of, conventional care.
We always recommend that patients with significant depression or anxiety maintain contact with their GP or mental health team. We are not a replacement for psychological care — we are a valuable complement to it.
Chinese medicine understands emotional disturbance through the lens of organ systems and the flow of Qi and Blood. There is no Western concept that maps exactly onto TCM patterns, but the correspondence is deep and clinically useful. The most common patterns our North Shore patients present with include:
In TCM, the Heart houses the Shen — a concept closest to consciousness or psyche. When the Heart is disturbed by heat, deficiency, or Blood insufficiency, the Shen becomes unsettled. The result is anxiety, restlessness, difficulty concentrating, and disrupted sleep. Treatment calms the Heart, nourishes Heart Blood, and anchors the Shen.
The Liver in TCM governs the smooth flow of Qi throughout the body. Prolonged stress, unresolved anger, or emotional suppression causes Liver Qi to stagnate — the energetic equivalent of a traffic jam. The result is emotional tension, irritability, chest tightness, and depression that varies with circumstances. This is the most common pattern in high-achieving professionals from Chatswood and North Sydney.
The Kidney in TCM is associated with the emotion of fear and is the root of constitutional vitality. Prolonged anxiety depletes Kidney energy, and conversely Kidney deficiency can generate a pervasive underlying fearfulness. This pattern is common in people who have lived with anxiety for many years, particularly when accompanied by fatigue and lower back or knee weakness.
Overthinking and worry weaken Spleen function in TCM, impairing the Spleen's role in transforming and transporting nutrients. This generates Damp and Phlegm, which can cloud mental clarity. The result is brain fog, excessive rumination, low motivation, and a depressive flatness that feels heavy rather than agitated.
Beyond the TCM framework, acupuncture's effects on anxiety and depression are increasingly well-understood from a neuroscience perspective. Acupuncture:
Multiple randomised controlled trials and systematic reviews support acupuncture as an effective adjunct treatment for both generalised anxiety disorder and major depressive disorder. We are happy to discuss the evidence at your consultation.
Herbal medicine is a powerful complement to acupuncture for emotional health, particularly for sustaining treatment effects between sessions. Our practitioners prescribe classical formulas adapted to your specific TCM pattern:
Chai Hu Shu Gan San — Bupleurum and Cyperus Powder: the classical formula for Liver Qi stagnation. Moves Qi, resolves depression, harmonises the Liver and Spleen. Suitable for stress-related irritability, emotional tension, and the early stages of depression.
Suan Zao Ren Tang — Sour Jujube Decoction: nourishes Heart Blood and calms the Shen. Primarily used for anxiety with insomnia, restlessness, and palpitations. One of the most frequently prescribed formulas in Chinese psychiatric practice.
Gui Pi Tang — Restore the Spleen Decoction: tonifies Heart and Spleen Qi and Blood. For depression with fatigue, poor memory, disturbed sleep, and digestive weakness — the classic pattern of overthinking and overwork.
Tian Wang Bu Xin Dan — Heavenly Emperor's Nourishing the Heart Pill: nourishes Heart Yin and Blood, clears deficiency heat. For anxiety with heat signs: night sweats, hot sensations, mouth ulcers, intense dreams.
All herbal formulas are prescribed individually and may be modified from session to session as your pattern changes and improves.
We actively support integration with psychological and psychiatric care. Many of our anxiety and depression patients are also seeing a psychologist, counsellor, or psychiatrist — and our treatment works synergistically with these approaches.
Acupuncture can reduce the physiological "noise" of anxiety (the physical symptoms — tight chest, racing heart, muscle tension) enough that psychological work becomes more accessible and effective. Herbal medicine can support the period of transition when starting or adjusting antidepressant medications. We communicate with your treating team when appropriate and welcome referral letters.
We do not advise patients to stop psychiatric medications. Any changes to prescribed medication should be discussed with your prescribing doctor. Our role is to support your overall wellbeing through a complementary lens, not to replace evidence-based psychiatric or psychological care.
Holistic Psychotherapy Insomnia & Sleep All ServicesHICAPS private health rebates processed on the day. Open Monday–Sunday, 9am–9pm. Serving Lane Cove, Chatswood, Willoughby, North Sydney, and all North Shore suburbs.
If anxiety or low mood is affecting your daily life, we can help. Book your first appointment at Lane Cove Acupuncture — a confidential, compassionate, and evidence-informed environment.
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