If mould might be part of your health picture, the most important principle is simple.
Stop the leak before you mop the floor.
That means reducing exposure first, then rebuilding your system step by step. Many people get stuck because they try to detox while they are still being exposed, or they throw too many supplements at a body that is already reactive. This guide covers the basics, what to do first, and how I approach complex chronic patterns using acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine.
Who this guide is for
This is for people whose symptoms have become complicated. Fatigue that does not lift. Brain fog. Sinus issues. Skin flare-ups. Gut problems. Poor sleep. Feeling like you react to everything.
You do not need a perfect diagnosis to start making progress. You need a plan that reduces the biggest drivers first and helps you stop wasting months on random protocols.
A quick note on safety and scope
Mould can affect people in different ways. Some reactions are well-recognised, such as allergy and asthma triggers. Other chronic symptom pictures are more complex and vary a lot between people.
This page is educational and not medical advice or a diagnosis. If you have severe breathing issues, chest pain or tightness, fainting, high fevers, or rapid worsening, please seek urgent medical care.
What is mould exposure (in plain English)?
Mould is a type of fungus that grows in damp environments, often in water-damaged buildings. It can release particles into the air. Some people notice very little. Others become symptomatic with ongoing exposure.
A useful way to think about mould is as a constant irritant. It can keep the body in defence mode. For some people, the goal is not finding one single cause. The goal is reducing total load so the body can shift out of survival mode and start recovering.
Mould vs mycotoxins: what is the difference?
People often use mould and mycotoxins as if they are the same. They are related, but not identical.
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Mould refers to the organism and the particles it releases.
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Mycotoxins are specific compounds that some moulds can produce under certain conditions.
In practice, arguing about labels rarely improves symptoms. What helps is identifying exposure where possible, reducing it, and rebuilding your body’s capacity to recover.
Why mould can become part of the bigger picture in chronic illness
When your body is already under strain, mould exposure can be the extra weight that tips the system over. The strain might be poor sleep, chronic stress, gut dysfunction, nutrient depletion, hormonal load, or a history of repeated illnesses.
Think of your bodies immune system like a hose putting out fires. Mould might be one fire in your body, and you may have other pathogens like candida, viruses, bacterias and then your immune system is struggling because there is lots of little fires. The strategy is to reduce the number of fires and rebuild your ability to put them out.
Common symptom patterns people report
There is no single symptom list that fits everyone. Common patterns include:
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Fatigue, sometimes with a wired but tired feeling
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Brain fog, poor focus, headaches
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Sinus congestion, post-nasal drip, cough, throat irritation
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Skin itching, rashes, flare-ups
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Gut issues such as bloating, reflux, diarrhoea or constipation
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Sleep disruption
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Mood changes, feeling on edge
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Increased sensitivity to smells, chemicals, or foods
A useful clue is when symptoms improve away from a particular environment and flare again on return.
Why some people become more sensitive over time (the smoke alarm idea)
Here is a metaphor that helps many people.
Your immune and nervous systems can act like a smoke alarm. When it is calibrated well, it protects you. After long-term stress or repeated triggers, the alarm can become overly sensitive. It goes off when someone makes toast.
This does not mean symptoms are in your head. It means your system may be stuck in high alert. A good plan respects sensitivity. Stabilise first, then introduce change gradually so the body can adapt without constant flare-ups.
The biggest mistake: detoxing while still exposed
This is the part many people do not want to hear, but it matters.
If you are still in a water-damaged environment, the best supplements in the world can feel like pushing a boulder uphill. Reducing exposure does not have to be dramatic, but it does need to be real. If the source is ongoing, your body may keep reacting no matter what you take.
What to do first: a simple 3-step plan
If you want a beginner-friendly approach that does not crash you, start here.
1) Reduce exposure where possible
Look at home, work, and even your car. Clues can include musty smells, leaks, condensation, humidity issues, visible growth, or symptoms that clearly worsen in one environment. If you suspect hidden issues, a professional assessment can be worthwhile.
2) Stabilise your foundations
This is not glamorous, but it is often the turning point.
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More consistent sleep timing
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Regular meals your gut tolerates
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Hydration
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Gentle movement
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Downshifting the nervous system, especially if you are wired
3) Support recovery gradually
Introduce supports one at a time. Start low. Track how you respond. For many sensitive people, slow and steady wins.
A realistic approach to detox (without extremes)
Detox is a loaded word. The useful version is not a punishing cleanse. It is improving your body’s ability to process and eliminate what it is already dealing with.
If you are reactive, the goal is tolerance and regulation, not heroics. If a protocol makes you worse every time, it is usually a sign the plan does not match your current capacity.
How Chinese medicine fits in
Chinese medicine can complement modern health thinking without needing to compete with it.
Traditional concepts like dampness can be useful metaphors for patterns like heaviness, congestion, inflammation, fluid imbalance, and sluggish recovery. In clinic, I am not treating a label. I work with your pattern, your sensitivity level, and your capacity.
That often means supporting digestion, sleep, stress signalling, and gradual rebuilding of resilience.
How acupuncture may help (and what it cannot do)
Acupuncture may help support stress regulation, sleep quality, headaches and pain patterns, and digestive function. It may also help the body shift out of stuck high alert mode.
Acupuncture cannot cancel an ongoing exposure or replace remediation. Think of it as supporting recovery and regulation while practical exposure reduction handles the ongoing trigger.
How herbal medicine may help (a careful, staged approach)
Herbs can be powerful, which is why we use them carefully, especially with sensitive people.
My general approach is simple:
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start low
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change one thing at a time
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track reactions instead of guessing
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focus on supporting function like sleep, digestion, and resilience
Beginners usually do better with a steady plan than a long list of products.
When to get extra support (and what kind)
If you are very symptomatic, reacting to many foods or chemicals, or you have been stuck for months or years, it can help to get guidance.
That may include:
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your GP or relevant specialist for medical assessment, especially respiratory symptoms
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a qualified remediation professional for the building side
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a practitioner who understands sensitivity and can pace a plan properly
How I work with mould-related chronic patterns
My role is to help you build a calm, structured plan when your body feels chaotic.
That usually includes:
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clarifying your symptom pattern and triggers
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reducing overload and stabilising foundations
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layering in support gradually so you can improve without constant flare-ups
If mould is part of your picture, we treat it as one part of the system.
Book an appointment
If you want a guided plan using acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine, you can book an appointment here.
FAQ
Can mould really cause fatigue and brain fog?
Some people report significant systemic symptoms alongside clear exposure patterns. Others may have symptoms driven by different factors. The most useful approach is focusing on what is actionable. Reduce exposure where possible, stabilise foundations, and track what changes produce steady improvement over time.
How do I know if my home has a mould problem?
Common clues include musty smells, visible growth, water leaks, condensation, humidity problems, or symptoms that improve away from home and flare on return. If you suspect hidden dampness, professional assessment can help.
Should I start binders or supplements right away?
If you are still exposed or highly reactive, strong supplements can backfire. Many beginners do best with a staged approach. Reduce exposure, stabilise sleep, digestion, and stress signalling, then add supports gradually and one at a time.
Can acupuncture help if I am chemically sensitive?
Often yes, but pacing matters. When someone is highly sensitive, treatments are kept gentle and adjusted based on response.
How long does recovery take?
It varies. The biggest predictors are the ability to reduce exposure, consistency with foundations, and how sensitised the system is. The goal is steady improvement.
