Carboxytherapy in Lipedema
Clinic based treatment that aims to improve microcirculation by injecting CO2 under the skin in lipedema patients.
As you know, I’m on my own in a foreign country for two and a half weeks. I don’t have much to do besides eating well, enjoying the sunny weather, working my full time job, and diving deep into the things that genuinely engage me, like lipedema. One article leads to another, and my creativity is at its peak. That usually means a lot of new content for you to explore.
You might not be able to read everything right away, and some articles may be more relevant later in your journey, especially the deeper scientific deep dives. Some learning needs to sit in a queue and that’s true for me too. Sometimes I’m simply in a different phase, with different needs, or it’s just not the right time.
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This article might be one of those for you, because what I’m about to share is new. It was new to me until a couple of hours ago, when I came across a particular study that really caught my attention while I was working on this piece:
One of the studies made me especially curious because it included a combined treatment I had never come across before. It was called carboxytherapy, where the clinicians injected CO2 just under the skin. That was completely new to me. I had never even heard of it. So I decided to dive deeper into what it is, why it might be used, and what the research actually says. I’ll get into that later in this article.




