The nightly burning, the pins-and-needles, the balance that keeps slipping — it isn't aging, and it isn't in your head. Watch the full presentation below to understand what's actually happening inside your nerves.
Important: Turn on your sound and watch to the end — the critical discovery is revealed in the second half of the presentation.
"The real damage isn't pain — it's the silent erosion of the myelin sheath happening every night while you sleep."
Harvard Neurology Research, cited 2024If you've been told that neuropathy is simply a side effect of aging, diabetes, or stress — and that the only answer is a higher dose of gabapentin — you're not getting the full picture.
Researchers at Harvard and the National Institute on Aging have now identified MMP-13, a specific enzyme that attacks the protective myelin sheath wrapping your nerves. When that sheath degrades, your nerve signals misfire — producing the burning, the numbness, the sudden loss of balance, and the night-time flares that pull you out of sleep.
The medications most commonly prescribed today are designed to quiet the symptom — the pain signal. They do nothing to stop the enzyme from continuing to break down the sheath. Which is why the fire keeps coming back, often worse than before.
The video above walks through the peer-reviewed research behind MMP-13, explains exactly how the myelin damage progresses, and reveals what a team of researchers discovered about interrupting the process at its source — without relying on medications that leave you in a mental fog.
Watch it in full. The mechanism they found is simple to understand, and the implications for anyone dealing with neuropathy symptoms are significant.