Same Technique. Better Experience. Lower Hassle.

Lymphatic Massage in North Charleston, SC

Whole-body lymphatic drainage on the BOA Max 2 — without booking a 90-minute manual session.

BOA Max 2 pneumatic compression delivers consistent, programmable lymphatic drainage in 30–45 minutes — the same therapeutic effect as Manual Lymphatic Drainage (Vodder / Földi / Casley-Smith) without the variability of a human therapist or the cost of recurring weekly massage appointments.

377 verified five-star reviews 18+ years serving Lowcountry BOA Max 2 on-site 30–45 min sessions vs 90 min manual
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How BOA Max 2 lymphatic compression actually works

Your lymphatic system has no central pump. It relies on muscle movement, breathing, and external pressure to circulate. When that flow stalls — after surgery, after intense training, with chronic illness, with sedentary days — fluid pools, immune cells stagnate, and recovery slows. The BOA Max 2 mechanically restarts that flow.

Sequential compression cycles

Programmable air chambers in the BOA Max 2 compression suit inflate and release in a precise sequenced pattern from extremities toward the chest — exactly the direction lymphatic fluid is supposed to flow.

Lymph fluid moves

The mechanical pressure pushes stagnant lymphatic fluid through one-way valves and toward the central thoracic duct, clearing accumulated waste, immune-complex byproducts and excess interstitial fluid.

Circulation & recovery improve

Venous return increases, edema reduces, immune surveillance improves, soft tissue feels lighter, and recovery time after training or post-surgery shortens dramatically.

Stack with other therapies

Lymphatic drainage is the multiplier. Pair it with PEMF, Class IV laser or EBOO and the cellular-level therapies work better because the fluid system carrying their byproducts is moving again.

The Equipment

The BOA Max 2 — clinical-grade whole-body lymphatic compression

The BOA Max 2 is a pneumatic compression suit designed specifically for lymphatic drainage and circulation work. Multiple programmable chambers wrap from the legs through the abdomen and arms, applying sequential compression at therapeutic pressure. It’s the same fundamental approach used in lymphedema clinics — delivered consistently, every session, without therapist variability.

Patient receiving BOA Max 2 lymphatic massage at Charleston Pain Relief Center in North Charleston, SC
BOA Max 2 lymphatic compression session at our North Charleston clinic — 30 to 45 minutes, fully clothed.
BOA Max 2 lymphatic compression suit at Charleston Pain Relief Center
The BOA Max 2 compression suit — multiple sequential air chambers from extremities toward the chest.

Whole-body coverage

The BOA Max 2 suit covers legs, abdomen, hips and arms in one session — versus targeted-zone compression boots which only address the lower body.

Programmable pressure & cycles

Compression intensity and cycle pattern are programmed for your specific goal — post-surgical edema, athletic recovery, lymphedema management, general wellness.

Same-visit stacking

Run BOA Max alongside PEMF on the Neo-Flux, Class IV laser, or after Hill-DT decompression. Lymphatic flow amplifies every other modality’s effect.

Conditions BOA Max 2 lymphatic massage helps

Lymphatic compression therapy works on anything where fluid clearance, circulation, or recovery is the bottleneck:

Most common

Post-surgical recovery

Reduces swelling and accelerates healing after orthopedic, cosmetic and abdominal surgery. Often used in the 2–8 weeks following a procedure.

Athletic recovery

Accelerates muscle recovery between training sessions, reduces DOMS, and supports return-to-play. Used by athletes weekly during heavy training cycles.

Lymphedema (primary & secondary)

Including post-mastectomy, post-cancer-treatment lymphedema. Combined with proper lifestyle care, BOA Max sessions help manage chronic swelling.

Chronic fatigue & brain fog

Sluggish lymphatic flow correlates with fatigue and cognitive symptoms. Restoring flow often produces noticeable improvement in energy and mental clarity.

Post-COVID lymphatic stagnation

Many post-COVID patients report swelling, sluggish circulation and inflammation that responds well to consistent compression therapy.

Edema & heavy legs

Lower extremity swelling from prolonged standing, travel, hormonal changes, or vascular insufficiency.

Restless legs & circulation issues

Improves venous return and reduces nighttime restless legs symptoms in many patients.

Detox & cleanse routines

Lymphatic flow is how the body clears metabolic waste. Pairs naturally with EBOO ozone therapy, sauna routines, and cleansing protocols.

Chronic inflammation

Stagnant immune complexes and inflammatory byproducts clear faster with regular lymphatic drainage.

Skin tone & cellulite

Improved circulation and lymphatic flow produces visible improvement in skin tone and cellulite over consistent sessions.

General wellness & longevity

Many patients use BOA Max 2 weekly for maintenance — supporting immune function, recovery and cellular waste clearance long-term.

Pre-event preparation

Athletes and active patients use BOA Max in the week before competition, hard training blocks, or long travel to prime the lymphatic system.

Brand Comparison — Devices

Top compression therapy brands compared — and where BOA Max 2 fits

If you’ve researched compression therapy or lymphatic drainage, you’ve seen the major device brands: NormaTec / Hyperice, Therabody JetBoots, Air Relax, Rapid Reboot, and Recovery Pump. Most are designed for athletic recovery in the lower body. BOA Max 2 plays in a different lane — full-body lymphatic-grade compression. Honest landscape:

What we use

BOA Max 2 (full-body)

Whole-body compression suit covering legs, abdomen, hips and arms — designed specifically for clinical lymphatic drainage protocols, not just lower-body athletic recovery. On-site at our North Charleston clinic, integrated with our PEMF, laser, decompression and SoftWave stack.

NormaTec / Hyperice

The most-recognized compression boots brand. Premium consumer pricing, popular with athletes. Lower-body only — boots and hip attachments. Athletic recovery focused, not lymphatic-clinical.

Therabody JetBoots

Therabody’s compression line. Wireless boots, premium consumer market. Solid for athletic recovery; not designed for full-body lymphatic work.

Air Relax

Mid-tier consumer compression boots. Decent value; same lower-body limitation as NormaTec. Not designed for clinical lymphatic protocols.

Rapid Reboot

Athletic recovery boot brand at a slightly lower price tier than NormaTec. Used in some training facilities. Lower-body only.

Recovery Pump

Lower-cost compression option marketed direct-to-consumer. Reduced pressure range and fewer chambers than premium brands. Adequate for general use.

The lane distinction: NormaTec, Hyperice, Therabody, Air Relax, Rapid Reboot and Recovery Pump are all athletic recovery compression boots — great for tired legs after a workout. BOA Max 2 is whole-body lymphatic drainage — designed for the clinical work of moving stagnant lymph through the entire body. Different goals, different equipment.

Comparison — Devices vs Therapists

BOA Max 2 vs Manual Lymphatic Drainage (human therapists)

Lymphatic massage isn’t just about machines. The other side of the market is Manual Lymphatic Drainage (MLD) performed by certified massage therapists trained in the Vodder, Földi, or Casley-Smith methods — and lymphedema-certified therapists (CLT-LANA, MLD-C). Both approaches do the same fundamental work: move lymphatic fluid. Here’s the honest side-by-side so you can pick what fits:

BOA Max 2 (compression device)

  • 30–45 minute session
  • Consistent pressure & sequence every session
  • No therapist scheduling required — book any open slot
  • Fully clothed, no oils, no draping, no shower needed
  • Programmable to your specific protocol
  • Stack same-visit with PEMF, laser, decompression
  • Lower per-session cost than skilled MLD
  • Predictable — same therapeutic dose every time

Manual Lymphatic Drainage by certified therapist

  • 60–90 minute session typical
  • Hands-on by Vodder / Földi / Casley-Smith certified therapist
  • Requires booking a specific therapist’s available time
  • Disrobing, oils, draping, shower often required
  • Personalized pressure judgement based on therapist’s reading of tissue
  • Standalone session — not stacked with other modalities
  • Higher per-session cost (often $90–$180+ depending on certification)
  • Excellent for very specialized lymphedema cases requiring nuanced manual technique

Same technique. Better experience. Lower hassle. For most patients — athletic recovery, post-surgical edema, general wellness, lymphatic maintenance — the BOA Max 2 delivers equivalent therapeutic effect with significantly less time, cost and scheduling friction. For complex lymphedema cases that require the hands-on judgement of a certified MLD therapist, we’ll refer you to a CLT-LANA or MLD-C specialist directly. We tell you straight which fits your situation during the initial evaluation.

What to expect during a BOA Max 2 session

30–45 minutes

You stay fully clothed in comfortable workout-style attire. The BOA Max 2 suit is fitted, the compression cycle starts, and most patients describe the experience as deeply relaxing.

Once or twice per week typical

Most goals respond well to weekly sessions over 4–8 weeks. Athletic recovery patients often go 1–2× per week long-term. Acute post-surgical recovery may require 2–3× weekly for the first 2–3 weeks.

No drugs, no downtime

Walk in, walk out. No anesthesia, no recovery time. No shower, no oils, no disrobing. Athletes can train the same day.

Stack with other modalities

BOA Max combines beautifully with PEMF (Neo-Flux), Class IV laser (Summus), Hill-DT decompression, NEO Red Light bed, and EBOO ozone therapy. Multiple modalities in one visit.

Who’s not a candidate

Lymphatic compression is one of the safest non-invasive therapies available. We won’t recommend BOA Max 2 if any of these apply:

  • Active deep vein thrombosis (DVT) or known clotting disorder
  • Active malignancy at or near treatment areas (relative — requires oncologist clearance)
  • Severe heart failure (decompensated CHF)
  • Acute infection or cellulitis in treatment areas
  • Severe peripheral artery disease
  • Pregnancy (relative — case-by-case with physician clearance)
  • Open wounds or recent skin grafts in treatment areas

What our 377+ patients are saying

BOA Max 2 lymphatic massage, answered

What does BOA Max 2 do?

BOA Max 2 is a clinical-grade pneumatic compression suit that performs lymphatic drainage. Sequential air chambers compress legs, abdomen, hips and arms in a programmed pattern that moves stagnant lymphatic fluid from the extremities toward the central thoracic duct, supporting circulation, immune function, recovery and edema reduction.

How does BOA Max 2 compare to NormaTec, Hyperice, Therabody JetBoots, Air Relax or Rapid Reboot?

NormaTec, Hyperice, Therabody JetBoots, Air Relax, Rapid Reboot and Recovery Pump are all athletic recovery compression boots — designed primarily for tired legs after a workout, lower-body only. BOA Max 2 is whole-body lymphatic compression — covering legs, abdomen, hips and arms in one suit, designed for clinical lymphatic drainage protocols, not just athletic recovery. Different lane, different equipment for different goals.

Is BOA Max 2 the same as Manual Lymphatic Drainage (MLD) by a massage therapist?

Same therapeutic effect — moving lymphatic fluid — delivered different ways. Manual Lymphatic Drainage by a Vodder, Földi or Casley-Smith certified therapist uses skilled hands-on technique over 60–90 minutes. The BOA Max 2 delivers consistent programmed compression in 30–45 minutes, fully clothed, with predictable pressure every session. For most patients (athletic recovery, post-surgical edema, general wellness, lymphatic maintenance) the BOA Max delivers equivalent results with less time and lower cost. For complex lymphedema requiring nuanced manual technique, we refer to a CLT-LANA or MLD-C certified therapist.

How long is a session?

30 to 45 minutes typically. You stay fully clothed in comfortable attire. Most patients find the experience deeply relaxing and many close their eyes during the session.

How often should I do lymphatic massage?

Most goals respond to 1 to 2 sessions per week for 4 to 8 weeks. Athletic recovery and longevity patients often continue weekly long-term. Post-surgical recovery may need 2 to 3 sessions weekly for the first 2 to 3 weeks.

What conditions does BOA Max 2 help?

Post-surgical recovery, athletic recovery, lymphedema (primary and post-cancer secondary), chronic fatigue and brain fog, post-COVID lymphatic stagnation, edema and heavy legs, restless legs, chronic inflammation, skin tone and cellulite, detox protocols, and general wellness or longevity maintenance.

Does it hurt?

No. The compression is firm but not painful. Most patients describe the experience as a gentle, rhythmic squeeze that feels deeply relaxing.

Will my insurance cover lymphatic compression?

Lymphatic compression is typically not covered by insurance and is paid out of pocket. We offer transparent package pricing, accept HSA and FSA cards, and offer payment plans. Significantly more affordable than recurring 90-minute manual MLD sessions.

Are there contraindications?

Yes. We won’t recommend BOA Max 2 for patients with active DVT or clotting disorders, severe heart failure, acute infection in treatment areas, severe peripheral artery disease, pregnancy (relative), or active malignancy without oncologist clearance. We screen during your initial consultation.

Can I combine BOA Max 2 with my other treatments?

Yes. Lymphatic compression amplifies every other modality we offer. Common combinations include BOA Max with PEMF (Neo-Flux), Class IV laser (Summus), Hill-DT decompression, NEO Red Light bed, and EBOO ozone therapy. Multiple modalities can be performed in the same visit.

Where are you located?

Charleston Pain Relief Center is at 2294 Otranto Rd, North Charleston, SC 29406, central to Charleston, Mt Pleasant, West Ashley, Summerville, Goose Creek, Hanahan and Ladson.

Same technique. Better experience. Lower hassle.

Get the lymphatic results without the 90-minute appointment. 15-minute evaluation tells you straight whether BOA Max 2 fits — or whether your case needs a CLT-LANA certified therapist instead.


Pairs Well With

Lymphatic massage pairs perfectly with the other detox + circulation therapies. The therapies most patients combine it with at CPRC:

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Lymphatic Drainage Therapy

Lymphatic Drainage in North Charleston — Move the Sludge, Wake Up the System.

Your lymph system has no heartbeat. When it stalls, you swell, you fatigue, you hold onto inflammation. CPRC stacks medical-grade compression (BOA Max 2), hands-on drainage, vibration, and red light to get your tissue moving again — without drugs, surgery, or downtime.

The CPRC Lymphatic Toolkit

Compression

BOA Max 2 Pneumatic Suit

Medical-grade, multi-zone sequential compression — full-leg or upper-body sleeves. Most patients feel lighter inside one session.

Hands-On

Manual Lymphatic Drainage

Gentle, directional strokes to mobilize fluid through superficial pathways. Pairs powerfully with compression before or after.

Vibration

Power Plate Movement

Whole-body vibration mechanically pumps lymph without joint load — a 10-minute primer before your compression suit.

Light + Field

Red Light + PEMF Boost

Photobiomodulation and pulsed magnetic fields support cellular drainage and reduce post-session inflammation.

Home Protocol

Hydration + Castor Oil Pack

Simple between-session tools your CPRC team teaches: water with minerals, dry brushing, rebounding, castor oil packs over the abdomen.

Why CPRC for Lymphatic Work

Stack Your Lymphatic Care

Best Partner

EBOO Therapy

Compression mobilizes — EBOO flushes oxidative load out of the blood. Same-day stacking is allowed.

Learn EBOO →
Cellular Recharge

Red Light Therapy

Pre-session red light primes mitochondria for the drainage push.

Learn Red Light →
Field Therapy

PEMF Therapy

Pulsed magnetic field — circulation + recovery in 20 minutes.

Learn PEMF →
Movement Pump

Power Plate

10 minutes of whole-body vibration primes lymph flow before your suit.

Learn More →
Composition

Medical Weight Loss

Lymph patients often pair drainage with our medical weight loss program for fluid + fat reduction.

Learn Weight Loss →

Deeper Questions Real Patients Ask

Should I do lymphatic drainage before or after EBOO?

Both work. Most CPRC patients do compression or manual drainage 1–3 days before EBOO to "prime the field," then a second session 24–48 hours after EBOO to help flush what oxidative therapy mobilized. Same-day stacking is also fine — we simply space them by 60–90 minutes.

Will lymphatic drainage help after liposuction, BBL, or other plastic surgery?

Yes — post-surgical lymphatic work is one of the highest-value use cases. We work with your surgeon's post-op timeline (typically clearance at day 3–5), use lighter compression initially, and progress as swelling drops. Bring your post-op letter to your first visit.

Is lymphatic compression safe during active cancer treatment?

It depends. For lymphedema following lymph node removal (e.g., post-mastectomy), drainage is often part of a Certified Lymphedema Therapist's plan. For active malignancy without your oncologist's clearance we decline — we want your oncology team driving the plan. Bring written clearance and we'll work alongside them.

Does lymphatic drainage actually reduce cellulite?

It reduces the fluid component of the "dimpled" appearance, which is real and measurable session-to-session. It does not eliminate the underlying fascial banding that causes cellulite long-term. Stack with Power Plate, red light, and consistent hydration for the most visible change.

How long until I see or feel results?

Most patients feel lighter, less puffy, and notice clearer urine within hours of their first session. Visible measurement change (waist, thighs, ankles) typically shows around session 3–4 of a series of 6. Skin tone and energy improvements stack with red light and PEMF.

What should I do at home between sessions?

Three things: (1) drink half your body weight in ounces of water with a pinch of mineral salt; (2) dry brush from feet → heart before showering; (3) 5–10 minutes of rebounding (mini-trampoline) or walking after meals. Optional bonus: castor oil pack over the abdomen, 3 nights/week.

Can lymphatic work help with chronic Lyme, mold illness, or other detox protocols?

Yes — it's a core support tool in functional/integrative detox. Mobilizing lymph while supporting drainage pathways (liver, kidney, bowel) reduces "herx" symptoms when you start binders or antimicrobials. We coordinate with your functional medicine practitioner so the timing fits your protocol.

Is lymphatic drainage safe during pregnancy?

Manual drainage by a trained provider is generally considered safe and is often used for pregnancy-related edema. We require OB clearance for any sessions after the first trimester. We do not use mechanical compression suits during pregnancy.

Ready to feel lighter this week?

Free 15-minute consult with Kayla Blann, FNP-C. We'll map your protocol, your stack, and your honest cost up front.

Call 843-225-2550