Your Renal Lymphatic System.
It’s not your nephrons?
It’s not your GFR?
I spent 15 years trying to manage renal decline. Adjusting medication, monitoring creatinine, and preparing patients for dialysis.
And it wasn’t the filters themselves, but the drainage system surrounding them?
At midnight, I pulled up the research.
The renal lymphatic system—the network of vessels that surrounds renal tissue—is responsible for removing inflammatory waste, toxins, and debris from the interstitial space surrounding the nephrons.
When those vessels become clogged, toxins aren’t removed. Uric acid and creatinine build up in the tissue surrounding the filters. Inflammation occurs. And the nephrons—the millions of tiny filters in your kidneys—begin to fail, not because they are damaged, but because they are saturated with their own waste.
This is what the research revealed:
Restoring lymphatic drainage around renal tissue allows filtration function to recover.
Foaming disappears. Back pain diminishes. Labs improve.
Your kidney can finally breathe.