Research.
Every peer-reviewed study on fascia in one place — graded for strength of evidence, summarised in plain language for clinicians, researchers, and curious readers.
We grade studies from A to 1A+++ using the Fascia Research Database rubric — 1A+++ is the strongest.
Researchers behind the studies- A2004
Consciousness and Quantum Information Processing: Uncovering the Foundation for a Medicine of Light
Bruce D Curtis, J J HurtakThis theoretical paper suggests a deeper connection between consciousness, light, and the body's information systems. The authors discuss how biophotons (biological light) may play a role in the body's self-organization…
biophotonsultraweak photons - A2004
Frozen Shoulder: MR Arthrographic Findings
Bernard Mengiardi, Christian W. A. Pfirrmann, Christian Gerber, Jürg Hodler, Marco ZanettiResearchers used a specific type of MRI, an MR arthrogram, to identify the characteristics of frozen shoulder. They compared images from 22 patients with the condition to 22 healthy control subjects. The study found tha…
frozen shoulderAdhesive capsulitisMR imagingArthroscopy - A2003
Mechanobiology and diseases of mechanotransduction
Donald E IngberThis 2003 article argues that medicine often overlooks the physical and mechanical aspects of disease, focusing instead on genetics. The author reviews how physical forces and the extracellular matrix are vital for norm…
extracellular matrixcytoskeletonmechanotransductionIntegrinstissue engineering - A2003
Fecal and urinary incontinence after vaginal delivery with anal sphincter disruption in an obstetrics unit in the United States
Dee E Fenner, Becky Genberg, Pavna Brahma, Lorri Marek, John O L DeLanceyThis study investigated the link between severe perineal tears during a first vaginal delivery and later incontinence issues. Researchers sent questionnaires about pelvic floor function to women six months after they ga…
urinary incontinenceanal incontinencevaginal deliveryperineal lacerations - A2003
Vibrations and their Indication in Sport-Injuries
U G Randoll, F F HennigThis paper discusses the cell-biological basis of bodily function, which is relevant for understanding sports injuries. The authors emphasize that all cells in the body are embedded in the extracellular matrix, a fluid-…
Therapy / Vibrations - A2003
Vitamin C, respiratory infections and the immune system
Harri HemiläThis 2003 publication by Harri Hemilä explores the relationship between Vitamin C, respiratory infections, and immune system function. As only the title is available, specific conclusions regarding the study's exact res…
Vitamin CAscorbic acid - A2003
Biophoton emission of human body
S Cohen, F A PoppResearchers measured the very faint light, or "biophotons," emitted by the human body using a special photon detector. They found that these emissions are not random, but seem to reflect the body's left-right symmetry a…
BiophotonBiological regulationBiological rhythmsHuman body measurmentLeft right symmetry - A2003
The myofibroblast in wound healing and fibrocontractive diseases
G GabbianiDuring wound healing, cells called fibroblasts can transform into a more specialized type called myofibroblasts. These myofibroblasts have contractile properties, much like muscle cells, which help to pull the edges of…
inflammationα-smooth muscle actinstress fibresTGF-β1 fibronectintension - A2003
Tensegrity I. Cell structure and hierarchical systems biology
Donald E IngberThis review article revisits the concept of tensegrity, a structural model for living cells first described a decade prior. The tensegrity model helps explain how cells control their shape, movement, and internal mechan…
cytoskeletonIntegrinscell mechanicsmicrotubulesMicrofilaments - A2003
Tensegrity II. How structural networks influence cellular information processing networks
Donald E IngberThis theoretical article, the second in a two-part series, explores how a cell's physical structure influences its internal signaling and behavior. It builds on the "tensegrity" model, which describes the cell's skeleto…
BioinformaticsmechanotransductionIntegrinsmechanobiologyBiocomplexity - A2003
New and active role of the interstitium in control of interstitial fluid pressure: potential therapeutic consequences
H Wiig, K Rubin, R K ReedThis review challenges the traditional view of the interstitium as merely a passive fluid reservoir. The researchers present data suggesting that connective tissue cells and the extracellular matrix actively regulate in…
inflammationextracellular matrixInterstitial fluid volumeintegrins edema - A2002
Detection of changes in cartilage water content using MRI T2-mapping in vivo
C Liess, S Lüsse, N Karger, M Heller, C-C GlüerEarly-stage osteoarthritis (OA) is characterized by an elevated water content in cartilage. This study investigated if a specific MRI technique, T2-mapping, could detect these changes in living subjects. Healthy volunte…
MRIEarly osteoarthritisWater contentT2-mapping
