TCM Basics

TCM Acupoint Categories: Understanding the Special Point Systems

Learn the major acupoint classification systems in TCM — Five Shu Points, Back-Shu Points, Front-Mu Points, Eight Influential Points, and more — and why each category has unique clinical significance.

More Than 361 Points: The Logic Behind Acupoint Selection

The body has 361 standard acupoints distributed across the 14 meridians, plus numerous extraordinary points. Memorizing them individually would be overwhelming. TCM solves this by grouping acupoints into special categories (特定穴) — each category shares a common function, location pattern, or clinical application.

Understanding these categories is like learning the grammar of acupuncture — suddenly the individual words (points) make sense within a larger system.

1. Five Shu Points (五输穴) — The River Metaphor

The Five Shu Points are the most important category in clinical acupuncture. Located on the twelve regular meridians (below the elbows and knees), they represent the flow of Qi through a meridian as water flowing from a spring to the sea:

| Point Type | Chinese | Metaphor | Location | Clinical Use | |-----------|---------|----------|----------|-------------| | Well | 井 | Spring bubbling up | Fingertips/toes | Acute conditions, mental shock, resuscitation | | Brook | 荥 | Stream flowing | Near joints | Heat patterns, inflammation | | Stream | 输 | River deepening | Wrist/ankle area | Heavy sensations, joint pain, organ disorders | | River | 经 | River flowing freely | Forearm/lower leg | Cough, asthma, throat conditions | | Sea | 合 | River joining the sea | Near elbow/knee | Organ disorders, gastrointestinal conditions |

Each of the five point types also corresponds to one of the Five Elements, creating a system where points can be selected based on element relationships (generating and controlling cycles).

Why it matters: When a patient presents with acute anxiety, a practitioner may choose the Well point of the relevant meridian. For chronic stomach problems, the Sea point (He-Sea) of the Stomach meridian — Zusanli (ST36) — is the primary choice.

2. Yuan-Source Points (原穴) — The Energy Reservoirs

Each of the twelve regular meridians has one Yuan-Source Point where the meridian’s Original Qi (元气) pools and is most accessible. These points are located near the wrist or ankle.

| Meridian | Yuan Point | Location | |----------|-----------|----------| | Lung | Taiyuan (LU9) | Wrist crease, radial side | | Large Intestine | Hegu (LI4) | Between thumb and index finger | | Stomach | Chongyang (ST42) | Top of foot | | Spleen | Taibai (SP3) | Inner foot, behind big toe | | Heart | Shenmen (HT7) | Wrist crease, ulnar side | | Small Intestine | Wangu (SI4) | Hand, ulnar side | | Bladder | Jinggu (BL64) | Outer foot | | Kidney | Taixi (KI3) | Inner ankle | | Pericardium | Daling (PC7) | Wrist crease, center | | Triple Burner | Yangchi (TE4) | Wrist, dorsal side | | Gallbladder | Qiuxu (GB40) | Outer ankle | | Liver | Taichong (LR3) | Top of foot, between 1st-2nd toes |

Why it matters: Yuan-Source Points are used to tonify deficiency in their respective organs. When Spleen Qi is deficient, the practitioner needles Taibai (SP3). When Liver Qi is stagnant, Taichong (LR3) both moves and regulates.

3. Luo-Connecting Points (络穴) — The Bridge Points

Each of the twelve regular meridians plus the Ren and Du vessels has a Luo-Connecting Point where the meridian sends a branch to connect with its paired organ’s meridian. These points treat disorders of both organs in a pair simultaneously.

Notable Luo points:

| Point | Meridian | Connects To | Clinical Use | |-------|----------|-------------|-------------| | Pianli (LI6) | Large Intestine | Lung | Respiratory + bowel conditions | | Fenglong (ST40) | Stomach | Spleen | Phlegm conditions (the #1 phlegm point) | | Zhimin (BL54) | Bladder | Kidney | Lower back + urinary issues | | Neiguan (PC6) | Pericardium | Triple Burner | Chest pain, nausea, anxiety | | Guangming (GB37) | Gallbladder | Liver | Eye disorders | | Ligou (LR5) | Liver | Gallbladder | Groin pain, genital disorders |

Why it matters: Neiguan (PC6) — one of the most used points in all of acupuncture — is a Luo-Connecting Point. Its ability to treat nausea, chest discomfort, and anxiety comes from its bridge between the Pericardium and Triple Burner.

4. Back-Shu Points (背俞穴) — The Organ Access Points on the Back

Each Zang-Fu organ has a Back-Shu Point located on the Bladder Meridian, running parallel to the spine on the back. These points provide direct access to their corresponding organ’s Qi.

| Organ | Back-Shu Point | Location (vertebral level) | |-------|---------------|---------------------------| | Lung | Feishu (BL13) | T3 | | Pericardium | Jueyinshu (BL14) | T4 | | Heart | Xinshu (BL15) | T5 | | Liver | Ganshu (BL18) | T9 | | Gallbladder | Danshu (BL19) | T10 | | Spleen | Pishu (BL20) | T11 | | Stomach | Weishu (BL21) | T12 | | Kidney | Shenshu (BL23) | L2 | | Large Intestine | Dachangshu (BL25) | L4 | | Small Intestine | Xiaochangshu (BL27) | S1 | | Bladder | Pangguangshu (BL28) | S2 |

Why it matters: Back-Shu Points are the primary points for treating chronic organ deficiency. Tender points along this line reveal which organs are struggling. Moxibustion at Shenshu (BL23) for Kidney weakness, or cupping at Weishu (BL21) for stomach pain, are among the most common clinical applications.

5. Front-Mu Points (募穴) — The Organ Access Points on the Front

Each Zang-Fu organ also has a Front-Mu Point on the anterior surface of the torso. While Back-Shu Points treat deficiency, Front-Mu Points are especially effective for excess and acute organ conditions.

| Organ | Front-Mu Point | Location | |-------|---------------|----------| | Lung | Zhongfu (LU1) | Upper chest | | Heart | Juque (CV14) | Epigastrium | | Liver | Qimen (LR14) | Below rib cage, right side | | Spleen | Zhangmen (LR13) | Below rib cage, left side | | Kidney | Jingmen (GB25) | Lower back/flank | | Stomach | Zhongwan (CV12) | Midline, upper abdomen | | Bladder | Zhongji (CV3) | Lower abdomen |

Why it matters: Combining a Back-Shu point with its corresponding Front-Mu point is called the “Shu-Mu combination (俞募配穴)” — one of the most powerful treatment strategies in acupuncture. For example, pairing Feishu (BL13) on the back with Zhongfu (LU1) on the chest creates a front-back pincer effect on the Lung.

6. Eight Influential Points (八会穴) — The Meeting Points

Eight points on the body serve as gathering places for specific tissues and structures:

| Influences | Point | Location | |-----------|-------|----------| | Qi | Shanzhong (CV17) | Center of chest | | Blood | Geshu (BL17) | Back, T7 level | | Bones | Dazhu (BL11) | Back, T1 level | | Marrow | Xuanzhong (GB39) | Outer lower leg | | Sinews | Yanglingquan (GB34) | Outer knee | | Vessels | Taiyuan (LU9) | Wrist | | Zang Organs | Zhangmen (LR13) | Below ribs | | Fu Organs | Zhongwan (CV12) | Upper abdomen |

Why it matters: When treating bone disorders (osteoporosis, fractures), Dazhu (BL11) is added to the prescription. For tendon and ligament injuries, Yanglingquan (GB34) is essential. These points influence the entire body’s tissue of their type, not just the local area.

7. Xi-Cleft Points (郄穴) — The Emergency Points

Each meridian has a Xi-Cleft Point where Qi “clefts” or pools deeply. These points are used for acute conditions and pain in their meridian or organ:

  • Kongzui (LU6) — acute asthma attack
  • Wenliu (ST34) — acute stomach pain
  • Yinxi (HT6) — night sweats
  • Jimen (SP11) — acute bleeding

Why it matters: Xi-Cleft Points are the acupuncture equivalent of emergency brakes — fast-acting points for acute flare-ups of chronic conditions.

8. Lower He-Sea Points (下合穴) — The Fu Organ Points

Six points below the knee serve as gathering places for the six Fu (Yang) organs:

| Fu Organ | Lower He-Sea Point | |----------|-------------------| | Stomach | Zusanli (ST36) | | Large Intestine | Shangjuxu (ST37) | | Small Intestine | Xiajuxu (ST39) | | Gallbladder | Yanglingquan (GB34) | | Bladder | Weiyang (BL39) | | Triple Burner | Weiling (BL55) |

Why it matters: When treating Fu organ disorders (digestive complaints, gallbladder issues, urinary problems), these points are the primary targets. Zusanli (ST36) for stomach complaints is perhaps the most commonly used point in all of clinical acupuncture.

How Practitioners Use Categories in Practice

A skilled acupuncturist rarely relies on a single point. Instead, they compose a prescription using points from different categories:

Example: Chronic Spleen Qi Deficiency with Dampness

| Point | Category | Role | |-------|----------|------| | Taibai (SP3) | Yuan-Source (Spleen) | Tonify Spleen Qi directly | | Zusanli (ST36) | Lower He-Sea (Stomach) + Sea (He) | Strengthen digestion | | Pishu (BL20) | Back-Shu (Spleen) | Access Spleen from the back | | Fenglong (ST40) | Luo-Connecting (Stomach) | Transform dampness via the Spleen-Stomach pair | | Zhongwan (CV12) | Front-Mu (Stomach) + Eight Influential (Fu Organs) | Local regulation |

This prescription draws from five different acupoint categories to create a comprehensive treatment addressing the root deficiency, the dampness complication, and the organ pair relationship.

Key Takeaways

  • Acupoints are organized into categories based on shared functions, not just location
  • Five Shu Points map Qi flow like a river from spring to sea
  • Yuan-Source Points access an organ’s Original Qi for tonification
  • Luo-Connecting Points bridge paired organs for combined treatment
  • Back-Shu and Front-Mu Points provide front-and-back access to each organ
  • Eight Influential Points affect specific tissues (bones, sinews, blood, marrow) throughout the body
  • Professional prescriptions combine points from multiple categories for comprehensive treatment

FAQ

Who is this article for?

Readers who want to go beyond individual acupoints and understand the system behind them — why certain points are chosen for specific conditions and how TCM classifies its 361+ points.

Can this article replace professional medical advice?

No. This content is educational only and should not replace diagnosis or treatment from a qualified healthcare professional.

Disclaimer

This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for diagnosis and treatment.

Related Articles