An insight into acupoints and meridians in human body based on interstitial fluid circulation
Li Hongyi, Yin Yajun, Hu Jun, Li Hua, Wang Fang, Ji Fusui, Ma Chao

TL;DR
This study investigates the anatomical basis of acupoints and meridians by mapping interstitial fluid pathways, revealing complex networks that connect acupoints to visceral organs, potentially advancing traditional Chinese medicine understanding.
Contribution
The paper provides experimental evidence of interstitial fluid pathways associated with acupoints, proposing a new anatomical framework that links acupoints to internal organs.
Findings
Most extremity acupoints connect to ISF flow pathways.
ISF pathways include cutaneous, perivenous, periarterial, and neural routes.
The acupoint-ISF network links to visceral organs like the heart.
Abstract
The atlas of human acupoints and meridians has been utilized in clinical practice for almost a millennium although the anatomical structures and functions remain to be clarified. It has recently been reported that a long-distance interstitial fluid (ISF) circulatory pathway may originate from the acupoints in the extremities. As observed in living human subjects, cadavers and animals using magnetic resonance imaging and fluorescent tracers, the ISF flow pathways include at least 4 types of anatomical structures: the cutaneous-, perivenous-, periarterial-, and neural-pathways. Unlike the blood or lymphatic vessels, these ISF flow pathways are composed of highly ordered and topologically connected interstitial fibrous connective tissues that may work as guiderails for the ISF to flow actively over long distance under certain driving forces. Our experimental results demonstrated that most…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAcupuncture Treatment Research Studies · Myofascial pain diagnosis and treatment · History of Medicine Studies
