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Bioresonance : Therapy for Parasites?

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http://www.townsendletter.com/July2006/shorts0706.htm

 

 

Bioresonance

 

Therapy for Parasites

 

> Bioresonance therapy uses electromagnetic frequencies generated by

the body to detect the presence of parasites, bacteria, toxins, and

other health disruptors, and to help eliminate them. Every cell

produces tiny electromagnetic vibrations. Cells that are in good

health emit harmonious signals that freely resonate with each other.

 

Toxins or microbes

that infect a cell add their own frequencies and distort the cell's

natural signal. This investigation of electromagnetic energy produced

by living cells began with Russian engineer Georges Lakhovsky, who

published The Secret of Life in 1925. Other researchers, including

Harold Saxton Burr, Robert O. Becker, and Fritze A. Popp, have made

similar observations.

>

> Bioresonance therapy uses electrodes, which are attached to a device

such as the BICOM 2000, to pick up various electromagnetic waves from

the skin's surface. The device amplifies healthy signals and

counteracts signals from pathogens by inverting their signals. The

resulting therapeutic signal is then sent to the patient, creating an

energetic environment that discourages parasites or other health

disruptors. The therapeutic signal also seems to prod the unhealthy

signals into greater harmony with the healthy ones.

>

> In an article for Positive Health, Reinhold D. Will, a German

naturopath who specializes in BICOM resonance therapy, explains the

many ways in which parasites contribute to chronic illness. He uses an

EAV test device, included in the BICOM 2000, to identify parasites and

parasite eggs or larvae that are affecting a patient. The EAV shows an

improvement in the patient's energy reading when the correct parasite

test ampoule (containing the energy pattern of the offending parasite)

is chosen.

 

 

Bioresonance therapy is just one part of Will's seven-step treatment

plan. He also works to strengthen the immune system, balance disturbed

intestinal flora, and treat underlying causes of parasitic invasion

(e.g., heavy metal stress, pharmaceutical toxins) through diet,

supplements, herbs, and homeopathics.

>

> Like other bioresonance therapists, Will has observed that

pathogenic parasites can act as " symbiotic helpers and friends of

their host. "

Parasites scavenge heavy metals, pesticides, and other toxins

available in the host's body. They also ingest fungi and viruses.

Patients can experience severe reactions if parasites are destroyed

before the patient's system can deal with the many toxins and

pathogens released as the organisms die. The EAV with the help of

special parasite test ampoules lets the bioresonance therapist

identify and support a parasite's helper function.

 

Will says, " After being treated for a while, the parasites' are

treated as what they actually are: as pests. In the two last stages

[of his treatment plan], any toxins such as heavy metals which may be

incorporated in the parasites are also treated. "

>

> While bioresonance therapy is denigrated as quackery by some,

research trials – conducted primarily in Russia, Germany, and Eastern

Europe – indicate that electromagnetic waves do, indeed, affect

biology. A 2002 Russian study, found on PubMed.gov, measured

" activities of superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glutathione

peroxidase, and content of nonprotein thiol groups (reduced

glutathione) in blood lymphocytes from patients with rheumatoid

arthritis before and during bioresonance therapy. "

 

Standard pharmacotherapy given to these patients tends to increase the

activity of these antioxidant enzymes and to decrease thiol groups. In

this study, bioresonance therapy increased the amount of thiol groups

in blood lymphocytes and normalized superoxide dismutase and

glutathione peroxidase activity. Interestingly, bioresonance did not

normalize catalase activity; " [it] remained above the control. "

>

> A 2004 Polish study looked at the effect of bioresonance therapy

using BICOM B15 on female Buffalo rats implanted with Morris tumors.

After 14 consecutive in vivo treatments (begun the third day after

inoculation), 31 of the 45 rats (69%) in the experimental group

experienced total tumor regression. None of the controls showed tumor

regression.

 

In addition, none of the rats in the bioresonance group had lung

metastases, usually observed in those with tumors. Also, the

researchers found signs of a high, cell-mediated immune response at

the site of tumor implantation. The authors conclude, " We cannot

exclude the possibility that [low-frequency electromagnetic] signals

transmitted via [bioresonance therapy] into the tumor bearers may

stimulate two separate processes: effective immunological response

and/or tumor-cell death. "

>

> Energy Medicine Review. About bio-resonance. Available at:

www.emreview.org/uk/guide_about/about_bioreonance.htm. Accessed on

April 12,

2006.

>

> Fedorowski A, Steciwko A, Rbczynski J. Low-frequency electromagnetic

stimulation may lead to regression of Morris hepatoma in buffalo rats.

(Abstract) J Altern Complement Med. 2004 Apr;10(2):251-60. Available

at: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query. Accessed on April 13, 2006.

>

> Islamov BI, Balabanova RM, Funtikov VA, et al. Effect of bioresonance

therapy on antioxidant system in lymphocytes in patients with

rheumatoid arthritis. (Abstract) Bull Exp Biol Med. 2002

Sep;134(3):248-50.

Available at: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query. Accessed on April

13.2006.

>

> Will RD. Bioresonance therapy for parasites. Positive Health.

November 1999. Available at:

www.positivehealth.com/Permit/Articles/Nutrition/will46.htm. Accessed

on April 12, 2006.

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