Forgot your password?

Energy-Based Medical Technolgies and Therapies

rife handbook book cover

"Frequency therapies can increase cell energy, normalize membrane conductivity, lessen oxidative stress, reduce the amounts of inflammatory chemicals in the blood, improve protein synthesis, boost feel-good endorphin levels, restore depleted adrenal function, and enhance immune function. The restoration of these metabolic processes leads to the regeneration of tissue as well as resistance to disease." Nenah Sylver, PhD.

For an overview of Electromedicine and the science behind electromagnetic frequencies used for therapy and healing, see Healing with Electromedicine and Sound Therapies, Part One. For a description of specific EM therapeutic methods and tools, see Healing with Electromedicine and Sound Therapies - Part Two

For even more comprehensive information on energy-based technologies, devices, and their use for therapy, see Sylver's recently revised The Rife Handbook of Frequency Therapy and Holistic Health.

Energy-based technologies are accepted by the medical community as essential tools for diagnosis. However, energy therapies, research, and clinical applications and trials have not been as widely embraced (although this is slowly and inexorably changing -- see Western Medicine's Increasing Acceptance of Qigong and Energy Medicine).

What is Medical Imaging and Radiation Sciences?

The following is a partial list of energy-based technologies and therapies. It is further evidence of the acceptance of Energy Medicine by Western Medicine. For a comprehensive treatment of energy therapies, see The Rife Handbook of Frequency Therapy and Holistic Health. Also see Integrative Medicine and Medical Qigong Therapy.

Technology

Description/Therapy

Acupuncture

Inserting needles at particular points in the body to alleviate pain or cure illness by balancing the body's energy. Types of acupuncture include manual acupuncture, electroacupuncture (EA) and transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation (TEAS)

Bioelectrogenesis

The generation of electricity by living organisms. A nerve impluse is an example.

Bioelectrography

See Gas Discharge Visualization.

Biophotonics

The interaction between biological items and photons

Bronchoscopy

Endocbrochial ultrasound, electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopy. Summary of the British Thoracic Society Guidelines for advanced diagnostic and therapeutic flexible bronchoscopy in adults.

Colorpuncture (laser therapy). Also called Laserneedle Acupuncture and laserpuncture

Light is focused on acupuncture and other points on the skin to stimulate healing. In general the use of lasers for healing is referred to as Low-Intensity Laser Therapy (LILT) or Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT). For more information see Healing with Electromedicine and Sound Therapies - Part Two .

Computerized Axial Tomography (CAT/CT) , X-ray computed tomography (CT)

Combines multiple x-rays via computers to create 3-dimensional images of parts of the body. One specific implementation is Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT). Chinese researchers have used SPECT technology to show the beneficial effects of eletroacupunture for treating childrens autism. Although CT scans are the most accurate diagnostic technology for certain conditions, they can also expose patients to the risk of excessive or unnecessary radiation. Identification of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in lung cancer screening computed tomographic scans.

Dual Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DEXA) Most common test for measuring bone mineral density. Also see Radiographic absoptiometry.
Electrical Impedence Tomography (EIT) A non-invasive medical imaging technique. Patient examinations using electrical impedance tomography-sources of interference in the intensive care unit.
Electroacupuncture According to Vole (EAV) The use of electrodes and low-voltage currents in conjunction with acupunture points.

Electrocardiogram (EKG/ECG)

Measures the electrical current of the heart.

Electro-crystal Therapy Electro-crystal therapy uses pulsed high-frequency EM stimulation of crystals to balance the human energy field.

Electroencephalogram (EEG)

Electroencephalography measures the electrical current of the brain. Intracranial EEG (iEEG) is a particular application of this technology where the electrodes are actually inserted into the brain. It is being used, for example, with epilepsy patients. Low Resolution Brain Electromagnetic Tomography (LORETA) can be performed on the EEG recordings to compute the intracortical distribution of neuroelectrical activity.

Electrohydraulic lithotripsy (EHL)

A flexible probe breaks up small kidney stones with shock waves generated by electricity.

Electromyography (EMG)

Measures electrical activity generated by muscles.

Electron microscopy

Microscopy using an electron beam instead of light to form an image.

Electrophysiology

The study of the electrical properties of biological cells and tissues.

Electroporation The application of an electrical field to enhance transdermal delivery. EM researchers in the 20th Century were severely persecuted by the AMA and existing medical establishment. See The Supression of Energy Medicine. It is encouraging that this type of therapy is being rediscovered. Microsecond and nanosecond electric pulses in cancer treatments. Bioelectromagnetics. 2011 Aug 3.
Electroretinogram (ERG) Electroretinography measures the electrical responses of the retina. Also see the more general term Electrophysiology and VEP.
Electro-scanning Method (ESM) ESM uses sound and radio frequencies to create three-dimensional numerical information in decibel levels about a subject's energy field.

Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) or technology (ESWT)

Highly focused sound (shock) waves projected from outside the body pulverize kidney stones anywhere in the urinary system. Also see Ultrasound.

EWST has proven effective for tendon and ligament injuries, wound healing, osteoarthritis and degenerative joint disease, removal of kidney stones, treating plantar faschitis and rotator cuff injuries, and more. PulseVet has been very successful on animals, and it has been successful with humans too.

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)

Diagnostic technique for obtaining images of soft body tissue via magnetic fields and the radio waves generated by them. fcMRI carries MRI a step further by monitoring continuous treatment activity instead of brief and intermittent activity. fcMRI was used to characterize the difference in connectivity in key brain regions due to genuine vs. sham acupuncture: Imaging the functional connectivity of the Periaqueductal Gray during genuine and sham electroacupuncture treatment .

Gas Discharge Visualization (GDV)

Bioelectrography is a new and controversial field within physics whose purpose is to study the electric emissions of objects and living organisms. The method used in bioelectrography is called the Gas Discharge Visualization (GDV) technique. It is a more advanced technique than Kirlian photography and has been accepted as a medical technology by the Russian Ministry of Health. It creates a computer model inreal time of the energies measured by GDV, and is thought to be able to perceive 'imbalances' in energy fields which can then be used as a tool for medical diagnosis.

Technically, GDV is capturing the image of gas discharge during exposure to EMF. The cells exposed to the EMF produce a burst of electron-ion emission and optical radiation light quanta in the visual and ultraviolet light regions of the EM spectrum. These particles and photons initiate electron-ion avalanches, which create the gas discharge along the dielectric surface. A spatial distribution of discharge channels is registered via glass plate by an optical system with a CCD TV camera, and then it is digitized. The avalanche effect amplification of the object response can only occur in ionized gas and does not work in a vacuum.

Iontophoresis Iontophoresis is the introduction of ionizable drugs through intact skin by the administration of continuous, direct electrical current into the tissues of the body.
Laser Doppler Flowmetry Measures blood flow based on the laser Doppler principle.
Low Intensity Light Therapy (LILT) LILT has been shown to induce cellular effects such as accelerated ATP production and the mitigation of oxidative stress. Also referred to as Infrared Light Therapy.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (NMRI), or magnetic resonance tomography (MRT) is a medical imaging technique used in radiology to visualize detailed internal structures. Wikipedia

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging ( fMRIs )maps brain activity while the subject is performing a particlar task.

fcMRI carries MRI a step further by monitoring continuous treatment activity instead of brief and intermittent activity. fcMRI was used to characterize the difference in connectivity in key brain regions due to genuine vs. sham acupuncture: Imaging the functional connectivity of the Periaqueductal Gray during genuine and sham electroacupuncture treatment .

Magnetoencephalography

The measurement of magnetic fields over the head  which are generated by electrical currents in the brain

Microcurrent Electrotherapy Technology (MET) and Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation (CES) Used by professional sports teams and others to treat psychological and physical symptoms; by pain specialists to treat pain disorders; and by rheumatologists who see dramatic results with fibromyalgia patients. CES has been found as effective as prescription drugs in relieving pain, but is completely safe.
Microwave Radar Used by researchers to measure the high-frequency power spectrum of heart rate variability which indicates parasympathetic nervous system activity.
Multiphoton Laser Tomography (MLT) A tool for non-invasive diagnostics in dermatology and other medical specialties.
Near Infrared Spectrometer (NIRS) NIRS probes have been used in energy medicine research to measure psysiological changes such as muscle blood volume and muscle oxygenation resulting from acupuncture stimulation. Infrared spectroscopy is a more general term for this subset of spectroscopy.
Neurostimulator A battery powered device that delivers electrical stimulation to the brain.
Optogenetics Optogenetics is creating light-responsive mammalian tissue via insertion of a DNA encoding for a light-sensitive protein. One example is controlling circuits in the brain with pulses of visible light: Light Switches for Neurons. Another is creating heart muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) for use with light-based pacemakers: Researchers Create First Human Heart Cells Paced With Light.
Optical Coherence Tomography Optical coherence tomography is an optical analog of ultrasound – but it penetrates much less and resolves much more.
Pacemaker A device that uses electrical pulses to control abnormal heart rhythms.
Photochemical Internalization (PCI) Light directed delivery of nucleic acids to cells. Targeted delivery of therapy to specific cells or tissues. Photochemical internalization (PCI): a technology for drug delivery.
Photon Migration Spectroscopy Non-invasive technique utilizing light to create images of tissues.
Photonic Stimulation Near infrared light therapy. Electrons are excited to increase production of energy (ATP) to stimulate normal cellular physiology. For more information, see "Healing with Photons."
Photon Resonant Light Emission Technology See Rife Machine (below).
Photoplethysmograph A photoplethysmograph (PPG) is an optically obtained plethysmograph, which measures the volume of an organ or the entire body.
Phototherapy Electromagnetic waves (phototherapy) found safe and effective for treating skin conditions. Phototherapy in the age of biologics. [Semin Cutan Med Surg. 2011] - PubMed.
Poly-contrast Interference Photography (PIP)

Digital images of the human energy field. What are PIP Scans?

"PIP shows pulsating bands of color and changing variations in light quality emanating from living organisms.... In humans, these imaes tend to correspond to energy meridian pathways, defined by traditional Chinese medicine, and chakras, defined by Ayurvedic medicine.... PIP technology is able to pinpoint disturbed energy states before they become evident by standard diagnosis." Townsend Letter, 2009 Jan; (306): 37.

Positron Emission Tomography (PET)

A computerized imaging technique that utilizes a radioactive dye. This type of imaging may reveal tissue problems that are not visible on CT or MRI scans.

Proteomics (the study of proteins)

This technology is based upon mass spectrometry coupled with hyphenated separation techniques such as two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE) and micro- or nano-scale multidimensional liquid chromatography. The technique of proteomics is one of the fastest developments with the farthest-reaching consequences in the high and new biotechnology in the world of today. It can be used to screen the target molecules of the action of traditional Chinese medicines, to identify the new effective components from traditional Chinese medicines, and to explore the mechanisms of the effects of traditional Chinese medicines.

Pulse light irradiation For chloasma, the effect of treatment with acupuncture plus intensive pulse light irradiation is superior to that with simple acupuncture

Pulsed EM fields (PEMF)

Effective for treating slow-healing fractures.

Radiation Therapy/Radio Therapy

 

High-definition Multileaf Collimator Radiosurgery System: In January 2008, the Palo Alto Medical Foundation in Palo Alto, CA became the first health care organization in the world with a new high-definition multileaf collimator (HD 120 MLC), an ultra-fine device for radiosurgery that shapes each treatment beam to match the exact contour of a tumor or other target. This technology allows doctors to treat brain tumors and cancer in all parts of the body with unsurpassed accuracy – all with fewer side effects, greater patient comfort and improved outcomes.

Radiosurgery is a non-invasive medical procedure in which high-energy X-rays are delivered to a target area within the body from a machine outside the body. With the HD120 MLC, which is part of PAMF’s Novalis Tx® radiosurgery system from Varian Medical Systems and BrainLab, patients receive an ultra-precise dose of high-intensity radiation – accurate within fractions of a centimeter – while avoiding the pain and complications associated with conventional “open” surgery. Palo Alto Medical Foundation March 2008 e-HealthNews Volume 5 Issue 3. Also read Radiosurgery , Cancers Treated with Radiosurgery, and Benefits and Side Effects of Radiation Therapy.

A more general term for radiosurgery is Radio Frequency Ablation (RFA). Results show it to be extremely effective and can be used with advanced lung cancer where conventional surgery is not possible. Radio frequency ablation is a medical procedure where part of the electrical conduction system of the heart, tumor or other dysfunctional tissue is ablated using the heat generated from the high frequency alternating current. It essentially heats tumors and kills them. ( Radiofrequency ablation). (Radiofrequency ablation for treatment of symptomatic uterine fibroids.) (Radiofrequency ablation for treatment of renal tumors: technological principles and outcomes.)

Another example of radiation therapy is the use of External Beam Radiation and Brachytherapy for Mesothelioma. Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) also uses brachytherapy: Beating breast cancer - Targeted radiation shortens treatment, reduces side effects.

Radio telemetry enables monitoring of cardiovascular functions such as systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and heart rate. A more general term for this is biotelemetry.

A Radioelectric Asymmetric Conveyer REAC-CRM device applies radiofrequency fields to body parts: Radioelectric asymmetric stimulation of tissues as treatment for post-traumatic injury symptoms.

Rife Machine EM healing device utilizing radio transmission. Also see Healing with Electromedicine and Sound Therapies - Part 1. Royal Rife was persecuted by the existing medical establishment and his work was distroyed (see Suppression of Energy Medicine). His cure for cancer was discovered in the 1930's. It is only now starting to show up in treatments. For more complete information see: The Cancer Cure That Worked: 50 Years of Suppression
SCIO Frequency Healing Technology The SCIO measures and balances the body's electro-physiological activity.
Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) An medical imaging technique using gamma rays.
Sonogram See ultrasonography.

Superconducting Quantum Interface Device (SQUID)

Diagnostic device that can detect minute magnetic fields. SQUIDS map biomagnetic fields produced by physiological processes in the body. One example is recording the magnetic field of the heart (magnetocardiography). Since thinking causes electrical signals in the brain which in turn produce magnetic fields, it's possible to detect thoughts, even at a distance, using SQUIDS

Synchrotron x-ray Fluorescence analysis (SXRF) A form of electromagnetic radiation used in physics and biomedical research.

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)

Stimulates the brain with magnetics fields

Transcranial photon migration spectroscopy Chemical absorption of laser light shone through the skull.
Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) Used for treating nerve disorders such as knee osteoarthritis and managing pain. One criticism of TENS is that its effects are often temporary. See Healing with Electromedicine and Sound Therapies - Part 2 for a more in-depth discussion. Recent research suggests that TENS over acupoints on lung function and dyspnoea in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease warrants further investigation. For more information, search the Qigong and Energy Medicine Database™.

Ultrasound

Use of sound waves for diagnosis and treatment. Ultrasonography is nearly as accurate as CT scans, but does not cause radiation damage. Ultrasonic lithotripsy is the use of high frequency sound waves delivered through an electronic probe break up kidney stones.

Low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS) has been found effective against cancer cell proliferation: Inhibition of breast cancer cell proliferation by low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS). It is also used in bone fracture healing: Low-intensity pulsed ultrasound in the treatment of nonunions. Exogen™ is an example of an FDA-approved device for this purpose.

High intensity ultrasound successfully used to seal punctured lungs. Star Trek Medical Device Uses Ultrasound To Seal Punctured Lungs. Also see ESWT - Extracorporeal Shock Wave Technology.

Ultrasound stethoscope uses Doppler effect to screen out outside noise and amplify internal body sounds: Doppler-based Stethoscope Ignores Outside Sounds

High intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) stops internal bleeding without surgery: Stopping Internal Bleeding Without Surgery

Ureteroscopy

A laser may be used to break up a kidney stone.

Vibrational spectroscopy

Using light to monitor low-level functioning of a system. Examples are Raman spectroscopy and vibrational spectroscopy: Intra-operative optical diagnostics with vibrational spectroscopy.

Vega Test

A highly effective electronic procedure to detect all allergy conditions by monitoring skin impedance at acupuncture points.

Visual Evoked Potential (VEP) An eye functionality test which monitors brain responses to visual stimulai. Also see the more general term Electrophysiology.
Voltage clamp The voltage clamp is used by electrophysiologists to measure the ion currents across the membrane of excitable cells, such as neurons, while holding the membrane voltage at a set level. Wikipedia.

Frequency Medicine

What is Frequency Medicine

The electrical currents set up by the heart, brain, muscles, the retina, and by other tissues and organs give rise to electric fields that are measurable at the surface of the body. These fields are used in medical diagnosis...Energy medicine is the diagnostic and therapeutic use of energy (heat, light, sound, gravity, pressure, vibration, electricity, magnetism, chemical energy, electromagnetism) whether produced by or detected by a medical device or by the human body. Energy medicine recognizes that the human body utilizes various forms of energy for communications involved in physiological regulations. Energy medicine involves energy of particular frequencies and intensities and wave shapes that stimulate the repair of one or more tissues. James Oshman. Theory and Practice of Energy Medicine, powerpoint presentation. 56.5MB.

Shockwave Therapy

Shockwave therapy is a relatively new treatment option in orthopedic and rehabilitation medicine. Shockwaves (high frequency sound waves) are used to treat many orthopedic conditions, including plantar fasciitis (heel spurs), patellar tendinitis (jumper’s knee), lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow), medial epicondylitis (golfer’s elbow) and shoulder tendinitis. Multiple studies have been conducted to assess the efficacy of shockwave therapy. Many have shown a positive response versus placebo treatment and others have shown no benefit over placebo. No studies have reported any significant side effects when utilized for orthopedic conditions.

Shockwave Therapy - Southern California Orthopedic Institute

Shock Wave Biology

Shock Wave Physics

Peer-Reviewed Scientific Publications On High-Energy Extracorporeal Shock Wave for Musculoskeletal Conditions

Pulsed Electromagnetic Field (PEMF) Therapy

Theory and Practice of Energy Medicine: A Powerpoint presentation by James Oshman, PhD describing Frequency Medicine, including a short history of electromagnetic research, physics and physiology of bioenergy, use of PEMF for therapy, biofeedback, and the Ondamed PEMF device and frequency therapy.

Introduction to Frequency Therapy and Devices

Watch Nenah Sylver's excerpt from Crash Course in Frequency Therapy (12:41).