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Collection: Lymphatic Support Products

We are in the process of adding more products to aid in lymphatic support.

Stay tuned for a one-stop shop for all products that will assist you in your journey to a new, healthier you!!!

Products Coming Soon!

Red Light Therapy

🤲How Red Light Therapy may assist the lymphatic system which relies on muscle movement and vessel contractions to move fluid:

1. Improves circulation

It may increase blood flow, which can help reduce fluid buildup and support lymph movement.

2. Reduces inflammation

Chronic inflammation can slow lymphatic drainage. Red light may calm inflammatory responses.

3. Enhances cellular energy

It may stimulate mitochondria (via a process related to Photobiomodulation), helping tissues function more efficiently—including those involved in fluid balance.

Lymphatic Massager

🤲 How a lymphatic massager helps the lymphatic system:

1. Stimulates lymph flow

Lymphatic vessels sit just under the skin. Gentle, rhythmic pressure helps “push” fluid toward lymph nodes, improving drainage.

2. Reduces swelling and fluid retention

By moving excess fluid out of tissues, massagers can:

  • -Decrease puffiness
    -Improve circulation
    -Relieve that “heavy” feeling

3. Supports detox processes

Lymph carries waste, proteins, and immune byproducts. Moving it along helps your body filter and eliminate these more efficiently.

4. Activates lymph nodes

Lymph nodes act like filters. Massage encourages fluid to pass through them, supporting immune surveillance.

5. Relaxes the nervous system

Gentle lymphatic massage activates the parasympathetic (“rest and digest”) state, which actually helps fluid movement and healing.

Lymphatic Face Countour Brushes

💧 How these brushes actually support the lymphatic system:

1. Gentle mechanical stimulation

  • These brushes apply light pressure to the skin, which can:
    -Move superficial fluid under the skin
    -Encourage lymph to flow toward lymph nodes
    -Some designs specifically aim to “grip” and move the skin slightly to influence fluid movement just beneath the surface

👉 Think of it as a very mild version of manual lymphatic drainage

2. Improves circulation (not just lymph)

Most benefits come from:

-Increased blood flow

  • -Slight tissue stimulation
    -This can reduce:
  • ---Puffiness (especially in the face)
  • ---Temporary fluid retention

3. Helps with fluid buildup in the face

This is where they work best:

  • -Jawline
    -Under eyes
    -Cheeks

4. May loosen fascia and tissue

Some brushes create light tension across the skin, which may:

-Improve tissue glide
-Reduce that “stagnant” feeling

Anti Cellulite Roller & Lymphatic Drainage Massager

💧 How these rollers aid the lymphatic system:

1. Move superficial lymph fluid

Rolling creates mechanical pressure + movement, which can:

-Push fluid just under the skin
-Encourage it toward lymph nodes

👉 This is a basic version of manual lymphatic drainage

Some tools are designed specifically to “stimulate lymph flow and reduce puffiness” through gentle rolling

2. Improve circulation (big benefit)

Most of the real effect comes from:

-Increased blood flow
-Tissue stimulation
-This helps:
---Reduce temporary swelling

---Improve that “heavy” feeling in legs

3. Temporarily reduce cellulite appearance

Cellulite is mostly:
Fat + connective tissue + fluid retention

Rolling can:
-Move excess fluid
-Smooth the surface temporarily

Massage rollers claim to improve circulation and drainage, which may make skin look smoother over time

👉 Important: this is temporary smoothing, not fat removal

4. Stimulate fascia & tissue

Some deeper rollers (wood therapy tools) can:
-Loosen tight fascia
-Improve tissue mobility

That can indirectly support fluid movement.

PhysioTherapy Sleeves

💧 How these rollers aid the lymphatic system :

1.Physiotherapy sleeves for lymphatic drainage are usually called compression sleeves (lymphedema garments). They’re a core part of treatment because they apply graduated pressure that helps move lymph fluid out of swollen areas and reduce buildup.

2.Provide graduated compression (tighter at wrist, looser up the arm)

-Help push lymph fluid upward toward lymph nodes
-Reduce swelling, heaviness, and discomfort
-Compression levels (important!)

---15–20 mmHg → mild swelling / prevention
---20–30 mmHg → most common for lymphedema
---30–40 mmHg → more severe cases (usually prescribed)