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Tissue Micro-channels Formed by Collagen Fibers and their Internal Components: Cellular Evidence of Proposed Meridian Conduits in Vertebrate Skin

Bai Xuebing, Wu Ruizhi, Zhang Yue, Liang Chunhua, Shi Yonghong, Zhang Yingxin, Ding Baitao, Imran Tarique, Yang Ping, Chen Qiusheng
Key takeaways
  1. 01Microscopy revealed a network of channels in fascia formed by collagen fibers
  2. 02These channels contain fluid, immune cells, and specialized telocytes
  3. 03This network is distinct from the lymphatic system
  4. 04Authors suggest this may be the anatomical basis for TCM meridians

Researchers identified a network of micro-channels in fascia that they propose could be the physical structure of traditional Chinese medicine's meridian lines.

Abstract

In order to clarify fine structures of the hypothetical meridian conduits of Chinese traditional medicine (CTM) in the skin, the present study used light and transmission electron microscopy to examine fasciae in different vertebrate species. Collagen fiber bundles and layers were arranged in a crisscross pattern, which developed into a special tissue micro-channel (TMC) network, in a manner that was analogs to the proposed skin meridian conduits. It was further revealed that tissue fluid in lateral TMC branches drained into wide longitudinal channels, which were distinctly different from lymphatic capillary. Mast cells, macrophages, and extracellular vesicles such as ectosomes and exosomes were distributed around telocytes (TCs) and their long processes (Telopodes, Tps) within the TMC. Cell junctions between TCs developed, which could enable the communication between contiguous but distant Tps. On the other hand, winding free Tps without cell junctions were also uncovered inside the TMC. Tissue fluid, cell junctions of TCs, mast cells, macrophages, and extracellular vesicles within the TMC corresponded to the circulating "" ("Qi-Xue", i.e., information, message, and energy) of meridian conduits at the cytological level. These results could provide morphological evidence for the hypothesis that "meridians are the conduit for Qi-Xue circulation" in CTM.

Cite this study
APA
Bai Xuebing, Wu Ruizhi, Zhang Yue, Liang Chunhua, Shi Yonghong, Zhang Yingxin, Ding Baitao, Imran Tarique, Yang Ping, & Chen Qiusheng (2020). Tissue Micro-channels Formed by Collagen Fibers and their Internal Components: Cellular Evidence of Proposed Meridian Conduits in Vertebrate Skin. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/tissue-micro-channels-formed-by-collagen-fibers-and-their-internal-components-cellular-evidence-of-proposed-meridian-conduits-in-vertebrate-skin/
MLA
Bai Xuebing, et al. "Tissue Micro-channels Formed by Collagen Fibers and their Internal Components: Cellular Evidence of Proposed Meridian Conduits in Vertebrate Skin." 2020, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/tissue-micro-channels-formed-by-collagen-fibers-and-their-internal-components-cellular-evidence-of-proposed-meridian-conduits-in-vertebrate-skin/.
Chicago
Bai Xuebing et al. 2020. "Tissue Micro-channels Formed by Collagen Fibers and their Internal Components: Cellular Evidence of Proposed Meridian Conduits in Vertebrate Skin.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/tissue-micro-channels-formed-by-collagen-fibers-and-their-internal-components-cellular-evidence-of-proposed-meridian-conduits-in-vertebrate-skin/