Traditional jade and horn gua sha at our Lane Cove clinic — clearing sha, releasing fascia and supporting recovery from Long COVID, frozen shoulder and chronic tension on Sydney's North Shore.
Book a Session Explore AcupunctureGua sha (pronounced gwah-shah, literally "scraping sand") is a Traditional Chinese Medicine technique in which a smooth-edged tool — traditionally made from jade, water buffalo horn, bian stone or ceramic — is pressed firmly against oiled skin and stroked in one direction along the meridian channels or across areas of tissue tension. The controlled pressure and friction raise a characteristic skin discolouration known as sha (petechiae) — red, purple or dark marks on the surface of the skin that represent the extravasation of stagnant blood from the superficial capillaries.
At Lane Cove Acupuncture, gua sha is used both as a powerful musculoskeletal treatment and as a diagnostic tool. The colour, density and location of the sha that emerges tells an experienced TCM practitioner a great deal about the nature and depth of the underlying stagnation. Darker, more widespread sha indicates more significant Blood stagnation; pale, diffuse sha may suggest Qi deficiency with mild stagnation.
Patients from Lane Cove, St Leonards, Crows Nest and Neutral Bay regularly find that gua sha provides relief from chronic tension that has not responded to conventional massage or physiotherapy — not because those modalities are ineffective, but because the mechanism of gua sha reaches a different level of tissue and energetic dysfunction.
The sha is not bruising. Conventional bruising results from blunt trauma causing haemorrhage into tissue. Sha is the controlled release of stagnant blood from microvasculature into the superficial tissue, producing anti-inflammatory and immune-modulating effects rather than injury responses. It typically fades in two to four days and is rarely tender to the touch.
Gua sha has attracted increasing scientific interest since Dr Arya Nielsen's landmark research demonstrated that it significantly upregulates Haem Oxygenase-1 (HO-1) in the treated tissue. HO-1 is a cytoprotective enzyme with powerful anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant and immune-modulating properties. Elevated HO-1 activity suppresses pro-inflammatory cytokines, supports mitochondrial function and protects cells under oxidative stress.
This finding helps explain several of gua sha's clinical applications that extend well beyond simple local tissue treatment:
Additional research has demonstrated that gua sha increases surface microcirculation four-fold, persisting for up to 25 minutes post-treatment — far beyond the duration of any other known manual therapy technique. This exceptional circulatory response is responsible for the rapid tissue warming and the sustained loosening of myofascial adhesions that patients experience.
The HO-1 upregulation and systemic anti-inflammatory effects of gua sha make it a compelling component of Long COVID recovery protocols. Patients experiencing brain fog, fatigue, muscle aches and immune dysregulation following viral illness have reported significant improvement with regular gua sha combined with acupuncture and herbal medicine. We treat this in the context of our broader post-viral recovery programme — see our chronic fatigue page for more detail.
Adhesive capsulitis (frozen shoulder) involves significant fibrotic changes in the shoulder joint capsule, often accompanied by substantial myofascial tension and Blood stagnation in the surrounding meridians. Gua sha along the Large Intestine, Small Intestine and Triple Burner meridians of the shoulder and arm, combined with acupuncture, consistently produces meaningful improvement in range of movement and pain reduction — often in situations where other treatments have plateaued.
Applied to the upper back, gua sha stimulates the Lung and Bladder meridians and disperses Phlegm accumulation. It is a valuable adjunct treatment for bronchitis, persistent coughs following respiratory infections, and the early-stage treatment of colds and flu when there is significant upper back stiffness and heat.
A gentler form of gua sha performed on the face using smooth jade or rose quartz tools has become widely popular for cosmetic and skin health applications. At Lane Cove Acupuncture, facial gua sha is offered as part of our broader facial acupuncture programme rather than as a standalone cosmetic treatment — because we view it in the context of the whole-body TCM pattern rather than as purely topical care.
The light stroking motions of facial gua sha along the cheekbones, jaw, forehead and neck stimulate lymphatic drainage, reduce facial puffiness, improve local circulation and — over a course of treatments — support tissue tone and a healthy complexion. In TCM terms, the face reflects the state of the internal organs, and facial gua sha is most effective when combined with internal treatment that addresses the underlying pattern (Spleen Qi deficiency, Blood deficiency, Liver Qi Stagnation) contributing to skin dullness, puffiness or fine lines.
Pricing: Gua sha is included within TCM consultation fees. Initial consultation 90 min — $150. Follow-up 60 min — $110. HICAPS private health rebates available (Medibank, BUPA, HCF, NIB, HBF, AHM).
The sensation of gua sha is strong — a firm pressure and friction that can feel intense, particularly over areas of significant stagnation. However, most patients find it deeply satisfying rather than painful, similar to a deep-pressure massage. The practitioner adjusts the pressure to your tolerance and the nature of the condition being treated. Extremely tight or inflamed areas are approached more gently.
Sha marks typically fade within two to four days. The darker and denser the marks, the more significant the stagnation present. With repeated treatments, marks generally become lighter and fade more quickly as circulation and tissue health improve.
Patients taking anticoagulant medications (such as warfarin, aspirin or novel anticoagulants) should inform their practitioner before gua sha. The therapy may still be possible at reduced pressure, but this requires careful assessment. Always disclose all medications at the time of booking.
Facial gua sha uses gentler pressure, smaller tools and strokes directed along lymphatic drainage pathways rather than along body meridians. It is a cosmetic and circulatory treatment rather than a therapeutic intervention for tissue pathology. However, the underlying principles — moving Qi and Blood, clearing stagnation — are the same.
For acute musculoskeletal conditions, two to four sessions often produce significant and lasting improvement. Chronic conditions such as frozen shoulder or Long COVID-related fatigue typically require a course of six to twelve sessions over two to three months, integrated with acupuncture and herbal medicine. Your practitioner will assess and plan your treatment at the initial consultation.