Central Sensitization Through the ALPIMS Lens
Central sensitization occurs when the nervous system becomes more reactive and less able to filter sensory signals. Pain pathways become amplified, but the changes often affect multiple body systems at once.
This is why many people with central sensitization experience symptoms across several domains.
Within the ALPIMS framework (Anxiety, Laxity, Pain, Immune, Mood, Sensory), central sensitization can be understood as a cross-domain amplifier.
Instead of affecting only pain, it can influence how the nervous system processes signals across the whole body.
🅐 Anxiety / Autonomic
When the nervous system is sensitised, the autonomic nervous system can become more reactive.
This may contribute to:
- POTS or dysautonomia symptoms
- Heart rate fluctuations
- Adrenaline surges
- Increased startle response
- Hypervigilance to body sensations
The body becomes more likely to interpret signals as threat or overload.
🅛 Laxity
Joint hypermobility and connective tissue differences can increase sensory input to the nervous system.
This can contribute to:
- joint micro-strain
- proprioceptive instability
- increased pain signalling
In people with hypermobility, this additional input may make central sensitisation more likely to develop or persist.
🅟 Pain
This is the most recognised domain.
Central sensitization contributes to:
- fibromyalgia-type pain
- migraine threshold instability
- chronic pelvic pain
- IBS pain
- widespread musculoskeletal pain
Pain signals become louder and more persistent, even when tissue injury is minimal.
🅘 Immune
Immune signalling can also interact with nervous system sensitivity.
Examples include:
- mast cell activation
- inflammatory signalling
- post-infection sensitisation
- cytokine-driven fatigue and pain
These immune signals can prime the nervous system, making it easier for sensitisation to occur.
🅜 Mood
Mood and nervous system regulation are tightly linked.
Central sensitization can contribute to:
- emotional overwhelm
- irritability
- anxiety
- depression linked to chronic pain and fatigue
Importantly, this does not mean symptoms are psychological — it reflects shared brain regulation networks.
🅢 Sensory
This domain explains the global sensory hyperresponsiveness described in central sensitization.
People may become more sensitive to:
- light
- noise
- smell
- touch
- temperature
- medications
- food chemicals
The nervous system loses some of its ability to filter sensory input.
Why the ALPIMS Lens Helps
Looking only at pain does not fully explain central sensitization.
The ALPIMS framework shows that symptoms may arise from multiple interacting systems, including:
- nervous system regulation
- connective tissue differences
- immune activation
- sensory processing
- emotional regulation networks
Understanding this helps shift the focus from “What single disease explains this?”
to
“What systems are overloaded, and how can we stabilise them?”
A Load and Capacity Perspective
When several ALPIMS domains are under strain at once, the body’s load exceeds capacity.
This can increase:
- pain amplification
- sensory intolerance
- fatigue
- autonomic instability
- emotional overwhelm
Reducing load and rebuilding capacity can sometimes lower the sensitivity threshold, even if symptoms do not disappear completely.
The Human Side
For many people, living with central sensitization also affects family life, identity, and daily routines.
Adaptations are often necessary.
But adaptation is not failure.
It is simply a different way of navigating life while the nervous system learns to settle again.
