Not only is the formula for oxidative phosphoylation
the basis of chemical energy production but it is a primary
source of lymph fluid production as well. Therefore, Qigong
and Yoga practices can increase the amount of lymph which
serves as the fluid carrier for endogenous waste products as
well as exogenous pathogenic factors. In this context the
metabolizing cells are continually contributing pure H2O
into the interstitial spaces.
This water, then, is the vehicle of transport for
metabolic by-products into the lymph vessels. From the
tissue spaces it is propelled, as lymph, to the immunopotent
nodal treatment sites and finally to the elimination organs
via the blood. Increasing body movement and activating the
breath potentially accelerate O2 absorption which generates
more H2O and increases the volume of lymph fluid which
enhances the removal of the by products of metabolism and
pathogenic factors.
2. Lymph
Propulsion
The blood circulatory system has the powerful heart muscle
to propel it's fluid. The lymph, however, under the same
14.7 pounds per square inch of gravitational pressure, has
no distinct heart in humans. The quest for a "lymph heart"
added little to the traditional ideas of propulsion until
the mid 1900's when studies of birds and reptiles revealed
specific lymph hearts.(43). In humans, however, the
propulsion of lymph was found to be carried out by an
assembly of several mechanisms. The movement of lymph
against gravity is accomplished with the help of a system of
vessels that are liberally equipped with one way valves. It
was known that the lymph was somehow pumped forward and
upward enabling the valves to prevent it from flowing back
with gravity.
Even as late as 1941 several important aspects of the
lymph heart concept in humans remained obscure.(44) By 1949
spontaneous intrinsic pulsatory contraction of the
peripheral lymphatic vessels was demonstrated in humans with
a rythem unassociated with either the heart or the
breath.(45,46) This intrinsic contractility mechanism of the
peripheral lymphatics was seen by many as the long sought
after lymph heart.(40)
The subject of the lymph is complex and very much
unsettled. The current literature is crowded with a wide
range of questions raised by research. What factors might
stimulate the intrinsic contractile mechanism, what
regulates lymph protein concentration, what effect does
passage through the lymph nodes have on the proliferation of
immune cells from within the nodes(47) and what is the
nutrative role of the lymph(41) are several such
questions.
Due to the excitement over the intrinsic pumping
mechanism, the effect on the lymph of one of the classic
propulsion mechanisms, the activity of the respiratory
apparatus, was eclipsed. The breath, through two mechanisms,
has a significant effect on the propulsion of the lymph: 1).
aerobic production of water and 2). mechanical pumping of
the breath apparatus. These will likely gain recognition as
primary components of the multiple features of the lymph
heart. A number of additional propulsive mechanisms are
initiated by body movement and body posture.