Bioresonance Medicine
History of Bioresonance
Looking back in history, Egyptian priests were already familiar with radiesthetic measures to establish an energetic situation with the fork rod, as can be seen on artwork found in the tombs of the Pharaohs in the Valley of the Kings (3000 to 332 BC). The divining rod also played a special role in the 15th century, as stressed in the writings of Paracelsus. Then, in 1925, Georges Lakhovsky, a Russian engineer, published a book called The Secret of Life in which he identified that every living entity emits radiation (or electro-magnetic signals), and that a cell nucleus acts as an electrical oscillation circuit, similar to a radio transmitter and receiver. In 1945, Professor Burr from the Medical department of Yale University, conducted an extensive 7 years search and confirmed that all living organisms possess complex electromagnetic fields. He showed that these 'Life fields' could be used to predict illness by noting variations in them.
In the 1950s and 1960s, Dr Reinhold Voll, a German physician, pioneered modern electro-acupuncture on the basis of scientific evidence that the electric resistance of the Chinese acupuncture points along meridians varies depending on our state of health. The principle is that hyperfunction (activation, stimulation of an organ or system, inflammatory conditions) reduces the electric resistance (mW) of a related meridian, and is associated with increased conductivity (mV). Similarly, hypofunction (functional slow-down and degeneration) increases the electric resistance (mW) of a related meridian, and is associated with decreased conductivity (mV). He also discovered that effective homeopathic remedies, as well as some herbal and biochemical therapeutic agents, held next to the skin normalised these abnormal resistances. The same principle was found to apply if the remedies and therapeutic agents were placed in an electronic circuit made between the patient and the tester. So, if poorly tolerated/allergenic substances were placed in the circuit, they caused increases in skin resistance at the affected acupuncture points. The clinical application of these discoveries became known as Electro-Acupuncture according to Voll (EAV) and it remains the basis of many types of electronic bio-resonance testing that have been developed since. The term electro-dermal screening (EDS) is a more modern name for the method of testing on the basis of such electrical readings from the skin surface.
Over 30 years starting in the 1960s, Dr Robert Becker extensively investigated the link between human physiology and electricity, or electro-medicine. He proved that electrical stimulation with direct current can promote healing in bone and other tissue, and even regeneration. His book 'The Body Electric' tells the fascinating story of our bio-electric nature.In the 1970s, Dr Morell in Germany used the energies from the patients own oscillations in order to carry out an individual and effective therapy that triggered a new era of medicine, Bio-resonance Therapy. In Germany, Dr Schimmel simplified the EAV multi-acupoints approach. He found that he could successfully test any single acupuncture point by inserting selected special diagnostic homeopathic test ampoules into the electronic circuit that included both the patient and the tester, naming it the 'Vega test' and the ampoules the 'filters'.Professor Popp also discovered that DNA is the source of 'biophotons' which are responsible for triggering biochemical reactions in living cells. Finally, Paul Schmidt devised an antenae system which is in tune with fine Schumann electromagnetic oscillations, enhancing them electronically and by computerised systems search for bioresonance tissue responses.
Indeed, the body bio-energy systems can be accessed by pendulum dowsing, kinesiology (muscle-mind testing), electro-acupuncture according to Voll (EAV), and Vegatesting. Since the 1980s, various bio-energetic or bio-resonance devices have been developed for diagnostic and treatment applications, filtering and removing or cancelling unhealthy resonance patterns and feeding healthy patterns back into the biological system. Modern electro-dermal testing devices and electromagnetic bioresonance devises are now fully computerised and usually incorporate a range of pre-programmed diagnostic and therapeutic resonances.