Monday, November 23, 2009

Bioresonance Therapy


Bioresonance therapy has been in use for the past 70 years. A well-recognized and standard use is to enhance the healing of nonunion fractures. It also has been claimed that this therapy is effective in treating osteoarthritis, migraine headaches, multiple sclerosis, and sleep disorders. Some animal and cell culture studies have been conducted to elucidate the basic mechanism of the bioresonance therapy effect, such as cell proliferation and cell-surface binding for growth factors.  

 

Bioresonance therapy  is based on the scientific principle that metabolism within cells is influenced by one's electromagnetic field. Each cell has its own pattern of resonating frequencies necessary to maintain the vitality of the whole organism whether it is a person, plant, or animal.  

 

Everything has its own unique "signature" frequency. A toxin, for example, entering the body, has a signature frequency the body cannot resonate with, thus the toxin interferes with the body's frequency patterns, creating disharmony, which negatively affects the body's functions and homeostasis. Body cells communicate with each other via signature frequencies and a person is considered healthy as long as the communication remains unimpaired by disharmonic. Bioresonance therapy is about restoring harmonic frequencies so one can achieve the desired level of physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health and wellness. 


The effects of bioresonance therapy on humans have been researched internationally and there is no doubt today, that optimized bioresonance systems can be applied for therapeutic purposes.

Research started over 100 years ago and has intensified with space technology in the past 40 years. All scientists involved in this research confirm the following effects:
  • antiviral
  • analgesic - natural pain relief
  • antiphlogistic - reduces inflammation
  • blood vessel relaxing - helps reduce blood pressure
  • increasing p02 - increases oxygen pressure level
  • antineuralgic - reduces nerve pain
  • sedative - improves deep sleep

Energy Metabolism

Energy metabolism consists of a series of chemical reactions that break down foodstuffs and thereby produce energy. The body traps about 20 percent of the energy that is produced and releases the remaining 80 percent as heat. This is why the body heats up during exercise. 

Energy production in the human body revolves around the rebuilding of ATP molecules after they have been broken down for energy. ATP is the molecule that stores energy in a form that the body can use. This rebuilding of ATP molecules is accomplished in a number of ways, all of which correlate to the four main purposes for which energy is utilized during athletic performance - power, speed, strength, and endurance - and to the four basic types of physical activity - strength - power, sustained power, anaerobic power - endurance, and aerobic endurance.
The National Research Council of Canada states that the human body maintains a basic minimum rate of heat production at about 250 Btu/hr during sleep, the heat equivalent of about 75 watts, and about 400 Btu/hr (120 watts) when awake but sedentary. As bodily activity increases, the rate of oxidation of food, with its attendant release of energy, must increase. The level of heat production for light work will be about 650 Btu/hr (190 watts), the extreme value for heavy work, about 2400 Btu/hr (700 watts).

Friday, November 20, 2009

Attitude Towards Life

Adrenaline functions to raise blood sugar levels when the brain senses energy starvation. That energy is Biological Energy called (ATP) . It is essential in the production of the feel good neurotransmitters , just like any engine that needs energy to activate its machinery.


Biological energy is derived from the sugars we eat in food. It is converted to energy. When a person suffers from Insulin Resistance , it means that he/she is not absorbing and converting sugars into energy, despite the fact that blood sugar may be abnormally high or unstable. Insulin resistance leads either to hypoglycemia or diabetes. Therefore a person with abnormal blood sugar levels cannot have good control over his energy levels and may lose the plot, when emotionally aroused.


Treatment for hypoglycemia includes Bioresonance therapy as well as adoption of a hypoglycemic diet which aims at normalizing blood sugar levels, thereby normalizing stress hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol, that are thought to be responsible for the symptoms of mood-swings, depression, anxiety, phobias, alcoholism and drug-addiction. Such a diet needs to be adjusted to the individual need and nutritional biochemistry, and needs to take into account the influence of allergies but usually consists of: 

  • Avoidance of sugar, coffee, strong tea, nicotine if possible, refined carbohydrates 
  • High protein + complex carbohydrates snacks every three hours or sooner, to provide a slow release of glucose, and to prevent the hypoglycemic dip.  
  • Supplementation of diet with Anti-stress vitamin B-Complex tablets 
  • Other supplements that could slow down the absorption of glucose, thereby avoiding blood sugar peaks and the release of stress hormones.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Reactive Versus Preventive Care

For nearly 100 years, medicine has seen the human body as a biochemical factory, requiring only the correct input of oxygen, nutrients and water to function effectively. Based on this theory, medicine has used chemical substances (pharmaceuticals), to treat disease. It can be debated that this approach to health is superficial and reactive because it is treating symptoms rather than the cause, and addressing health issues after they have manifested themselves as disease rather than before they have reached pathological proportions.

Many certainly know that conventional medicine has difficulty in treating many chronic illnesses and allergies. Bioresonance therapy addresses the most fundamental causes of ill health which is deficiency in cellular energy.

Increasing cellular energy is known to improve cellular performance and healing by a gain in blood circulation, oxygen saturation, and metabolism. Furthermore, cellular energy is also important to assist recovery from chronic illnesses, for post operative wound care, or boosting sports performance, and for maintaining good health.

What is Energy?

Energy can be defined simply as the strength and vitality to sustain activity. Energy is an important factor in the function of our bodies. The use of energy by our body is what creates the quality we call 'life'. Forms of energy used by our bodies are: chemical energy, electrical energy and electromagnetic energy.

We all know people who are 'full or energy'. We often admire children who seem to have an abundance of energy, who never sit still and keep going until they are overcome by sleep, which in turn restores their energy. In a healthy person with abundance of this vibrant bio-energy available and living in harmony with him or herself, others and the environment, it circulates freely. Traditional Chinese Medicine defines health as a harmonic flow of bio-energy between the various organs and systems of the human body, dynamically regulating all biological functions.

Energy Deficiency - Our Modern Lifestyle Energy Robber


Factors such as pollution, toxins, poor diet and nutrition, lack of exercise, stress, dehydration, long working hours and lack of sleep have a negative impact on our energy system, draining us of energy and disrupting the body's energy distribution.

Low levels of energy and blockages in the energy circulation result in physiological dysfunction. The duration and severity of the energy imbalance determine the impact on the organs and the extent of the functional and later structural damages.

Energy deficiency is a condition commonly related to lifestyle having a major impact on our health, particularly later in life when energy levels are already naturally declining.