Train hard. Recover smarter. Stay in the game.

Acupuncture for Female Athletes — Performance and Recovery That Treats the Whole Athlete
You push your body because you love what it can do. Whether you’re running trails in the Bridger Mountains, skiing the backcountry around Big Sky, competing in CrossFit, or training for your next endurance event, your body is your most important tool, and when something is off, everything is off.
Acupuncture for female athletes is not about slowing down. It’s about recovering faster, staying injury-free longer, and understanding what your body is telling you before it forces you to listen. Women athletes in Bozeman and across the Gallatin Valley are increasingly turning to acupuncture not just for injury treatment, but as an integral part of their training and performance strategy.
What makes this approach different is the attention to the female body specifically — the way hormones interact with training load, recovery, and injury risk, and how those factors shift across the month, across a season, and across a career.
Built for the Female Athlete — at Every Level of the Game
Acupuncture for female athletes is the right fit if:
You’re a runner, cyclist, skier, climber, swimmer, or endurance athlete dealing with a recurring injury that won’t fully resolve.
01
You train consistently, but your recovery feels incomplete — you’re always a little sore, a little flat, never quite at 100%.
02
You’ve noticed your performance, motivation, or energy shifting with your cycle and want to understand and work with that pattern.
03
You’re returning to sport after pregnancy and want support for a body that has changed significantly.
04
You’re dealing with a specific injury, and want treatment that addresses the root, not just the site.
05
You’re an active woman whose mood, sleep, and mental sharpness are suffering alongside your physical performance — and you know they’re connected.
06
You don’t have to be a competitive athlete to be here. If you move your body and you want to keep doing it well, this is for you.
Benefits of Acupuncture for Female Athletes
Real results women athletes in Bozeman and Montana can find support in training, competition, and recovery.
Injury treatment and prevention:
- Faster healing of soft tissue injuries — tendons, ligaments, muscles.
- Reduced inflammation at injury sites.
- Relief from chronic and overuse injuries that haven’t responded to other treatments.
- Better tissue strength and joint mobility.
- Reduced risk of re-injury by addressing compensatory patterns before they become problems.
Recovery and performance:
- Faster muscular recovery between training sessions.
- Reduced delayed onset muscle soreness.
- Improved sleep quality — one of the most underrated recovery tools available.
- More consistent energy levels across training blocks.
Nervous system regulation:
- Reduced pre-competition anxiety.
- Better stress resilience during heavy training blocks.
- Faster recovery from the neurological load of high-intensity training.
- Improved focus and mental clarity.


How Acupuncture for Female Athletes Works
Accelerating tissue repair
Acupuncture increases local circulation to injured tissue, reduces inflammatory cytokines, and stimulates the body’s own healing mechanisms. This is well-supported by research and is one of the most concrete mechanisms behind acupuncture’s effectiveness for injury.
Regulating the nervous system
Hard training creates a significant neurological load. Acupuncture regulates the stress response, supports parasympathetic recovery, and improves sleep. All of these support your actual physical adaptation to training.
Supporting hormonal balance
For female athletes, hormonal health is performance health. Acupuncture addresses the HPO axis — the hormonal feedback system — supporting cycle regularity, managing the effects of training-induced hormonal suppression, and helping the body find balance between output and recovery.
Laine Gallegos, LAc, has been in practice since 2014 with in-depth training in women’s health and Chinese medicine. Her work with female athletes draws from classical Chinese medicine and current sports medicine research — with particular attention to the hormonal and physiological realities of training as a woman.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can acupuncture actually help with sports injuries?
Yes — and there’s solid research behind it. Acupuncture is effective for a wide range of musculoskeletal injuries, including tendinopathies, IT band syndrome, plantar fasciitis, hip and knee pain, and rotator cuff issues. It works by increasing circulation to the injured area, reducing inflammation, and stimulating the body’s own repair mechanisms. For chronic injuries that haven’t responded to other treatment, it’s often the missing piece.
How is acupuncture for female athletes different from general sports acupuncture?
The difference is in the attention to female physiology specifically. Training affects the hormonal system, and the hormonal system affects everything — recovery, injury risk, mood, energy, motivation. Treating a female athlete without addressing that layer means missing a significant part of the picture. This practice specifically works at that intersection.
Can acupuncture help if my period has stopped due to training?
Yes. Exercise-induced amenorrhea and hormonal suppression from high training loads are serious and often undertreated. Acupuncture can support the restoration of hormonal function alongside adjustments to training and nutrition. It’s worth noting that this condition overlaps significantly with Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S), and a comprehensive approach — including working with your medical team — is usually appropriate.
I’m a master’s athlete dealing with both training recovery and perimenopause symptoms — can acupuncture address both?
Absolutely — and this overlap is more common than most people acknowledge. The hormonal shifts of perimenopause affect recovery, performance, body composition, and motivation in real, measurable ways. Acupuncture addresses both simultaneously. Acupuncture for Menopause and Perimenopause covers that side of care in more detail.
I just had a baby and want to return to training — can acupuncture support that?
Yes. Postpartum return to sport is one of the most undertreated transitions in women’s athletics. The body has changed significantly — hormonally, structurally, neurologically — and returning to training without support increases injury risk and extends recovery time. Acupuncture supports tissue healing, hormonal rebalancing, and the physical readiness to train again. Acupuncture for Pregnancy and Postpartum speaks directly to this.
How often should I come in during a heavy training block?
It depends on your training load and what you’re working on. During a heavy block or race build, weekly or biweekly sessions tend to be most effective — supporting recovery between sessions and staying ahead of injury. During maintenance phases, once or twice a month is often enough to keep the body balanced and responsive.
Keep Doing What You Love — For as Long as You Want to Do It
The goal is never to slow you down. It’s to help you train smarter, recover fully, and stay connected to the sport and movement that matters to you — this season and the ones after it.
If fertility is also part of your picture, Acupuncture for Fertility addresses how training and reproductive health intersect. If you’re navigating the hormonal shifts of pregnancy alongside an athletic identity, Acupuncture for Pregnancy and Postpartum is the right next read.
When you’re ready, new patient information is here.
Laine Gallegos — Bozeman, MT. Serving women in Belgrade, Livingston, Manhattan, and across the Gallatin Valley.