Skip to content

Impaired Lymphatic Drainage and Interstitial Inflammatory Stasis in Chronic Musculoskeletal and Idiopathic Pain Syndromes: Exploring a Novel Mechanism

Brian Tuckey, John Srbely, Grant Rigney, Meena Vythilingam, Jay Shah
Key takeaways
  1. 01Poor lymphatic flow can trap inflammatory substances
  2. 02This may lead to continuous activation of pain signals
  3. 03Fascia may compress pre-lymphatic pathways, worsening the problem
  4. 04The process could create a self-perpetuating chronic pain loop

Impaired lymphatic drainage may trap inflammatory substances in tissues, creating a self-perpetuating cycle that drives chronic pain.

Abstract

A normal functioning lymphatic pump mechanism and unimpaired venous drainage are required for the body to remove inflammatory mediators from the extracellular compartment. Impaired vascular perfusion and/or lymphatic drainage may result in the accumulation of inflammatory substances in the interstitium, creating continuous nociceptor activation and related pathophysiological states including central sensitization and neuroinflammation. We hypothesize that following trauma and/or immune responses, inflammatory mediators may become entrapped in the recently discovered interstitial, pre-lymphatic pathways and/or initial lymphatic vessels. The ensuing interstitial inflammatory stasis is a pathophysiological state, created by specific pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion including tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin 6, and interleukin 1b. These cytokines can disable the local lymphatic pump mechanism, impair vascular perfusion via sympathetic activation and, following transforming growth factor beta 1 expression, may lead to additional stasis through direct fascial compression of pre-lymphatic pathways. These mechanisms, when combined with other known pathophysiological processes, enable us to describe a persistent feed-forward loop capable of creating and maintaining chronic pain syndromes. The potential for concomitant visceral and/or vascular dysfunction, initiated and maintained by the same feed-forward inflammatory mechanism, is also described.

Cite this study
APA
Brian Tuckey, John Srbely, Grant Rigney, Meena Vythilingam, & Jay Shah (2021). Impaired Lymphatic Drainage and Interstitial Inflammatory Stasis in Chronic Musculoskeletal and Idiopathic Pain Syndromes: Exploring a Novel Mechanism. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/impaired-lymphatic-drainage-and-interstitial-inflammatory-stasis-in-chronic-musculoskeletal-and-idiopathic-pain-syndromes-exploring-a-novel-mechanism/
MLA
Brian Tuckey, et al. "Impaired Lymphatic Drainage and Interstitial Inflammatory Stasis in Chronic Musculoskeletal and Idiopathic Pain Syndromes: Exploring a Novel Mechanism." 2021, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/impaired-lymphatic-drainage-and-interstitial-inflammatory-stasis-in-chronic-musculoskeletal-and-idiopathic-pain-syndromes-exploring-a-novel-mechanism/.
Chicago
Brian Tuckey et al. 2021. "Impaired Lymphatic Drainage and Interstitial Inflammatory Stasis in Chronic Musculoskeletal and Idiopathic Pain Syndromes: Exploring a Novel Mechanism.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/impaired-lymphatic-drainage-and-interstitial-inflammatory-stasis-in-chronic-musculoskeletal-and-idiopathic-pain-syndromes-exploring-a-novel-mechanism/