Kristen Sparrow • February 03, 2026

This arthritis study provides more evidence for acupuncture’s effect on the neuro-immune axis, central sensitization, vagal nerve activation, and microglian suppression. We’ve discussed the neuro-immune axis many times, and of course vagal nerve activation. (Both these topics were covered in my book)
Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA) causes chronic pain in children that often does not match the level of joint inflammation. This mismatch suggests that pain is driven by changes in the nervous system, known as central sensitization. In JIA, immune cells in the brain called microglia become overactive, amplifying pain through disrupted communication between the immune and nervous systems. This review explains how acupuncture may help by restoring balance in this neuro-immune axis. Evidence from animal and human studies shows acupuncture can reduce inflammation, activate the vagus nerve, calm microglial activity, and lower pain signaling, potentially reducing reliance on pain medications.
Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA) is a common chronic rheumatic disease in children, and its associated persistent pain severely impacts the quality of life of affected patients. The severity of JIA-associated pain often does not correlate with the degree of peripheral inflammation, suggesting that Central Sensitization is a key underlying mechanism specific to JIA subtypes. At the core of this process is a dysregulation of the neuro-immune axis, particularly the aberrant activation of microglia within the central nervous system. As a non-pharmacological therapy, acupuncture demonstrates significant potential for JIA pain management, supported by a series of clinical studies. This review focuses on JIA-specific neuro-immune pathophysiology of chronic pain and systematically elucidates the complete pathway from peripheral inflammation to central microglial activation and central sensitization. By integrating evidence from both preclinical and clinical JIA studies, we provide a detailed analysis of how acupuncture remodels neuro-immune balance through mechanisms spanning peripheral autonomic regulation and central glial modulation. This modulation encompasses the inhibition of upstream pro-inflammatory signaling pathways. These include peripheral anti-inflammatory effects via the vagus nerve, regulation of systemic immunity, and direct inhibition of central microglial activity toward an anti-inflammatory phenotype. This work establishes a theoretical framework, grounded in JIA-specific neuro-immune pathophysiology, for acupuncture’s application in treating JIA-associated pain, highlighting its role in reducing reliance on analgesics.
Keywords: Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA); acupuncture; central sensitization; chronic pain; microglia; mitochondria; neuro-immune axis; vagus nerve.