jump-starting healing
in a serious clinical condition known as delayed union of fracture (improper
healing within 6 months) or fracture nonunion (failure of union after 6
months). One of the underlying causes of delayed union or fracture nonunion is
chronic inflammation. One successful method is called pulsed electromagnetic
field (PEMF) therapy. Magnetic pulses induce current flow through the bone,
delivering electrons to the site of inflammation where they can neutralize free
radicals. A second method involves implanting an electrical stimulator near the
fracture site. Both of these methods deliver electrons that can neutralize
lingering free radicals, allowing the healing process to proceed.
PEMF and electrical
stimulation have been very successful and have been used in tens of thousands
of cases. Further research has revealed that injuries to other tissues, such as
ligaments, nerves, capillaries, and skin also respond to minute electrical
currents, with each tissue having a different optimal stimulation frequency.
There are several
obvious ways of keeping our immune systems tuned up and ready to respond to
injury or disease. The key is to maintain the quality of our tissues so
they can conduct energy and information and allow for the migration of cells. A
number of medical devices are able to locate and repair sites of silent
inflammation. ONDAMED is such a device. It uses a sophisticated frequency
technology that scans the entire body, locating and correcting communication
pathways that are not functioning properly.
We have reached a
point in healthcare where there are many options available to patients
interested in restoring and maintaining their health. In my opinion, the
patient of the future will define the medicine of the future by the choices
they make. And the patient of the future and the medicine of the future will
take advantage of sophisticated medical devices such as ONDAMED that can
monitor the state of one's physiology and correct imbalances if they arise.
Seeing the emergence of these technologies gives me great optimism for the
future of medicine in general and of anti-aging medicine in particular.
For more
read at http://www.ondamed.net
.