Acupuncture for Occipital Neuralgia in Mumbai
Sharp, shooting pain at the base of your skull. Acupuncture treats the nerve and the tissue compressing it. We come to you.
The Nerve Pain at the Base of Your Skull
Occipital neuralgia produces sharp, shooting, or electric-shock pain along the back of the head, base of the skull, and sometimes behind the eyes. It is caused by irritation or compression of the greater or lesser occipital nerves — typically due to muscle tension and trigger points in the suboccipital and upper trapezius region, though direct nerve compression from cervical spine pathology is also a cause.
It is frequently misdiagnosed as tension headache or migraine and treated accordingly — with poor results, because the underlying nerve irritation is never addressed. In Mumbai's desk-worker population, occipital neuralgia is increasingly common: sustained cervical flexion and trapezius loading compress the occipital nerves at their exit points, generating the characteristic shooting pain pattern.
In TCM, occipital neuralgia maps to obstruction in the Bladder and Gallbladder meridians at the cervico-occipital junction, typically involving Cold-Damp or Blood stasis. Treatment combines local needling to release tissue compression with meridian treatment to restore Qi flow.
How Acupuncture Relieves Occipital Nerve Pain
Direct nerve decompression
Trigger point needling in the suboccipital muscles and upper trapezius releases the muscular compression on the greater and lesser occipital nerves — addressing the most common mechanical cause.
Nerve desensitisation
Acupuncture at GB-20 (Fengchi) and BL-10 directly influences the occipital nerve pathway, reducing its sensitised firing pattern.
Cervical decompression
Paraspinal needling at C1–C3 reduces muscle tone in the deep cervical extensors, decreasing the compression on occipital nerve exit points.
Anti-inflammatory effect
Local acupuncture reduces periosteal and perineural inflammation at the greater occipital nerve's exit point at the nuchal line.
What the Research Says
Clinical evidence supports acupuncture as an effective treatment for occipital neuralgia, with studies showing significant reduction in pain intensity and frequency compared to nerve blocks and analgesic medication. Acupuncture's advantage over occipital nerve blocks is its ability to address the muscular and fascial compression generating the neuralgia, rather than simply blocking pain transmission. The WHO lists neuralgias as Category 1 indications for acupuncture.
indications for acupuncture
Recommended by UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
Acupuncture shown equivalent or superior to standard care in clinical trials
Occipital Neuralgia Treatment at Balancepoint
Acute phase
6–8 sessions, twice weekly. Primary focus on suboccipital trigger point release and GB-20 / BL-10 needling.
Chronic occipital neuralgia
10–12 session course with cupping at GB-21 and upper back to release fascial tension in the trapezius and cervical chain.
Postural guidance
Ergonomic and postural correction provided throughout treatment — essential for preventing recurrence in desk-worker patients.
The pain would shoot from my neck to behind my eye. It was terrifying the first time — I thought I was having a stroke. Dr. Priya explained exactly what was happening and why. After 6 sessions the shooting pains stopped completely.
Your Questions Answered
How is occipital neuralgia different from a headache?
How quickly does acupuncture work for occipital neuralgia?
Can acupuncture prevent occipital neuralgia from returning?
Do you treat this at home?
Get Your Occipital Pain Assessed at Balancepoint
Your first consultation is free. Dr. Priya will examine your cervical spine and occipital nerves, confirm the diagnosis, and begin treatment at the same visit. We come to you — anywhere in Mumbai.