What Is Hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome?

Hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS) is the most prevalent subtype of the Ehlers-Danlos syndromes, accounting for roughly 80-90% of cases. It is characterized by generalized joint hypermobility, chronic musculoskeletal pain, and connective-tissue fragility arising from alterations in collagen synthesis or structure.

The estimated prevalence of the hypermobility spectrum (which includes hEDS and hypermobility spectrum disorder) ranges from 1 in 500 to 1 in 5,000 people, with a marked female predominance. Most patients go through a long diagnostic journey — 10 to 12 years on average — before receiving the correct diagnosis.

The key to understanding pain in hEDS isn't the joint itself, but what happens around it: the periarticular muscles are chronically overloaded trying to compensate for the underlying ligamentous instability. This compensatory mechanism is the main generator of myofascial trigger points and diffuse pain in these patients.

80-90%
OF EDS CASES
are the hypermobile subtype — the most common and most often underdiagnosed
10-12
YEARS ON AVERAGE
until a correct hEDS diagnosis — a substantial diagnostic delay
73%
OF PATIENTS WITH HEDS
present active myofascial trigger points in at least 3 body regions
90%
FEMALE PREDOMINANCE
hEDS disproportionately affects women, likely because hormones influence collagen

Why Do Hypermobile Patients Develop Chronic Pain?

The biomechanical logic is straightforward: joints that move beyond normal physiological limits force surrounding muscles to work continuously to maintain stability. This compensatory muscular work leads to chronic muscle fatigue, adaptive shortening, and the formation of myofascial trigger points.

Beyond mechanical overload, hEDS patients show altered nociception: central and peripheral sensitization is highly prevalent, meaning the nervous system grows progressively more reactive to painful stimuli — and even to normally non-painful ones (allodynia).

Pain Cascade in Hypermobility

  1. Genetic ligamentous laxity

    Defective collagen weakens passive joint stability — ligaments and joint capsules cannot adequately restrain movement.

  2. Compensatory muscular overload

    Periarticular muscles are chronically recruited to stabilize unstable joints — work the ligaments should be doing.

  3. Muscle fatigue and trigger points

    Sustained contraction causes local ischemia, builds up metabolites, and forms myofascial trigger points in the overloaded muscles.

  4. Referred pain and sensitization

    Active trigger points refer pain in predictable patterns and feed central sensitization — amplifying the whole pain experience.

  5. Vicious cycle of pain and muscle guarding

    Pain drives more muscle guarding, which drives more trigger points, which drives more pain — a self-perpetuating cycle unless properly interrupted.

Muscle Regions Most Affected in hEDS

Trigger point distribution in hEDS follows a predictable pattern, tied directly to the most unstable joints. Knowing these regions is essential for targeting acupuncture treatment precisely.

REGIONS OF MUSCULAR OVERLOAD IN HYPERMOBILITY

UNSTABLE JOINTOVERLOADED MUSCLESCOMMON TRIGGER POINTSTYPICAL REFERRED PAIN
Shoulder (glenohumeral)Rotator cuff, deltoid, upper trapeziusSupraspinatus, infraspinatus, upper trapeziusShoulder, neck, and scapular pain
Cervical spineSternocleidomastoid, scalenes, suboccipitalsSCM, upper trapezius, splenius capitisCervicogenic headache, retro-orbital pain
Lumbar spineMultifidi, quadratus lumborum, psoasQuadratus lumborum, gluteus medius, piriformisLow back pain, radiation to gluteus and thigh
KneeQuadriceps, hamstrings, gastrocnemiusVastus medialis, biceps femorisPeriarticular knee pain, perceived instability
HipGlutei, tensor fasciae latae, piriformisGluteus minimus, TFL, piriformisTrochanteric pain, sciatic radiation
TMJ (temporomandibular)Masseter, pterygoids, temporalisMasseter, lateral pterygoidFacial pain, temporal headache, tinnitus

How Medical Acupuncture Works in hEDS

Medical acupuncture offers multiple mechanisms of action relevant to the hypermobile patient. Treatment doesn't target the hypermobile joint itself — that's a structural genetic condition — but rather the muscular and neural consequences of that instability.

01

Trigger point deactivation

Dry needling and acupuncture at myofascial trigger points elicit a local twitch response, followed by muscle relaxation and restored local blood flow. Trigger point deactivation is the most direct and relevant mechanism in this population.

02

Modulation of central sensitization

Needle stimulation of A-delta nerve fibers activates descending inhibitory pathways in the brainstem (nucleus raphe magnus, periaqueductal gray), releasing endorphins and serotonin — and quieting central nervous system hyperexcitability.

03

Reduction of excessive muscle tone

Low-frequency electroacupuncture (2-4 Hz) promotes endorphin-mediated muscle relaxation, without the added hypermobility risk that aggressive stretching brings in this population.

04

Favorable analgesic profile

Medical acupuncture provides analgesia with a generally mild adverse-event profile — the most common events are bruising, local pain, and, more rarely, syncope or bleeding. It does not carry the renal and gastric risks of chronic NSAIDs or the dependence risk of opioids — a relevant consideration for chronic pain patients who need prolonged treatment.

What the Scientific Evidence Tells Us

Transparency matters here: to date, no specific randomized clinical trials on acupuncture in hEDS have been published. The current evidence is indirect, based on studies published in Clinical Rehabilitation on acupuncture for conditions that are direct consequences of hypermobility — myofascial pain, central sensitization, cervicogenic headache, and generalized chronic pain.

This gap in direct evidence doesn't mean a lack of scientific basis. The clinical reasoning rests on solid evidence for each component of the problem: acupuncture has level 1A evidence for trigger point deactivation (Cochrane review), level 1A for chronic pain (Vickers et al. 2018 meta-analysis, with more than 20,000 patients), and well-documented mechanisms for modulating central sensitization.

Special Considerations for Acupuncture in Hypermobile Patients

Treating hEDS patients requires specific technical adaptations. Connective tissue fragility affects not only joints but also skin and blood vessels — which demands differentiated care from the medical acupuncturist.

Typical Treatment Protocol

Treating myofascial pain in hypermobile patients follows a phased logic: deactivate the most active trigger points and modulate central sensitization first, before advancing to muscle strengthening.

Treatment phases in hEDS

Phase 1
4-6 weeks (2x/week)
Acute trigger point deactivation

Focus on the most active and painful myofascial trigger points. Dry needling with local twitch response. Low-frequency electroacupuncture (2 Hz) to release endorphins. Goal: break the pain-spasm-pain cycle.

Phase 2
4-8 weeks (1-2x/week)
Modulation of central sensitization

Acupuncture at distal and segmental points to modulate descending inhibitory pathways. Electroacupuncture with alternating frequencies (2/100 Hz). Integrated with starting motor control and joint stabilization exercises.

Phase 3
Biweekly to monthly sessions
Maintenance and prevention

Maintenance sessions to prevent trigger point reactivation as strengthening progresses. Focus on regions that reactivate as functional demand grows. Adjust individually to patient response.

Myths and Facts about Acupuncture in Hypermobility

Myth vs. Fact

MYTH

Acupuncture is dangerous in patients with Ehlers-Danlos

FACT

With the right technical adaptations (finer needles, superficial insertion, fewer points), acupuncture can be applied cautiously in hypermobile EDS patients, with an acceptable adverse-event profile (bruising, local hematoma, rarely bleeding). The vascular subtype (type IV) requires specific evaluation but represents less than 5% of cases.

MYTH

Hypermobility pain is articular and won't benefit from acupuncture

FACT

Most chronic pain in hEDS is myofascial — overloaded muscles and trigger points — not purely articular. Acupuncture acts directly on this muscular component, which conventional treatment often neglects.

MYTH

Hypermobile patients are "too sensitive" for needles

FACT

Even though central sensitization heightens sensitivity, acupuncture can start with minimal stimulation and be titrated gradually. Many patients report that acupuncture is one of the few interventions that gives them meaningful relief.

Multimodal Approach: Acupuncture as Part of Treatment

Medical acupuncture doesn't replace the other essential interventions for hEDS patients — it complements them. The ideal treatment is multimodal, coordinated by the physician, and includes:

  • Medical acupuncture to deactivate trigger points and modulate pain
  • Motor control and joint stabilization exercises (prescribed by the physician, who may refer to physical therapy as part of treatment)
  • Pain neuroscience education — understanding central sensitization reduces catastrophizing
  • Pharmacological treatment when needed (duloxetine, pregabalin for the neuropathic component)
  • Complementary therapies: high-energy laser for periarticular inflammation, when indicated
  • Psychological follow-up to manage chronic pain and its impact on quality of life

Frequently Asked Questions

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS · 05

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Acupuncture acts on muscle and the nervous system, not on joints or ligaments. In fact, by deactivating trigger points and easing muscle spasm, it lets muscles function better as dynamic stabilizers of hypermobile joints.

Most hEDS patients notice significant improvement in myofascial pain between the third and sixth session. But because the underlying condition (hypermobility) is permanent, treatment tends to last longer than in non-hypermobile patients, with long-term maintenance sessions.

The vascular subtype requires careful evaluation by the physician, since bleeding risk and vascular fragility are higher. In many cases, non-invasive techniques (laser acupuncture, TENS) may be preferred. The medical acupuncturist must individualize the decision after a complete evaluation.

No. Acupuncture complements therapeutic exercise — it prepares the muscles by deactivating trigger points, making strengthening more effective and less painful. The two treatments are synergistic, not substitutes.

Insurance coverage for medical acupuncture varies by country and plan. Ask your physician for the request with the appropriate ICD code (M35.7 for hEDS or M79.1 for myalgia/myofascial pain) and a clinical report justifying the indication.