Published February 10, 2026 | Version v1.0
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Parasympathetic Regulation, Vagal Signaling and the Structural Origin of Chronic Pain

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Independent Researcher

Description

Chronic pain is commonly approached as a problem of tissue damage, inflammation or neural hypersensitivity. This paper advances a structural position: pain persistence is primarily a failure of autonomic containment driven by degraded parasympathetic regulation and impaired vagal afferent signaling. The nervous system does not respond to sensation alone but to interpreted internal state. When parasympathetic tone is sufficient, sensory input is contextualized and resolved. When vagal signaling is weak or distorted, the brain defaults to threat-biased processing, amplifying pain and allowing it to consolidate into a persistent state independent of ongoing injury. This framework reframes chronic pain as a regulation error rather than a stimulus problem. By examining parasympathetic dominance, sympathetic bias and vagal signal integrity, this paper explains why symptom suppression often fails and why upstream correction of regulatory state is required for durable pain resolution.

This paper is part of the Spiritual Technology research framework.

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