the only electro medical device I have known to actually work is the "Skenar" and yes it does work but then it does not cost tuppence on ebay (granted it costs that much to make them) and it does have research to back it and my own experience of it working
If you had worms, you would eventually notice them with out the cayenne pepper enema (ouch!).
Almost all the 'zapper' projects posted here, are the anti-healing kind, where the kids run around shocking people as a joke, and then get beat up. Google places ads automatically, based on what is on the screen. You are typing/reading about 'zappers', Google finds some advertisement to entice you, webmaster gets paid...
the only electro medical device I have known to actually work is the "Skenar" and yes it does work but then it does not cost tuppence on ebay (granted it costs that much to make them) and it does have research to back it and my own experience of it working
There are lots of electro-medical devices that both work & are in mainstream medical use. They use electro therapy to speed up the healing of broken bones as well as for muscle injury. My daughter uses on for knee pain after playing netball & swears by it. She often swears AT it when first applied.
Called "Omron Electrical Pulse Massager" Has adjustable frequency , intensity & pulse duration. About the size of a TV remote with two tacky pads. The missus uses it to relieve migrain as well. Looks like Frankenstein with a wire connected to each side of her head , but she swears by it. I'm beginning to think that it may even stop my beer from going flat (it seems to do everything else)
There is a "Tens" electrical thing that zaps your skin to make an underneath muscle twitch. The US government sued for fraud a Chinese guy who advertised on TV that it could heal damaged muscles (he sold millions of them) but some injured people say it helped better than nothing.
Some people make and drink collodial silver which turns their skin grey colour. Many years ago it was used as a disinfectant. Lysol (the disinfecting cleaner) is probably also drinked by those weirdos.
the only electro medical device I have known to actually work is the "Skenar" and yes it does work but then it does not cost tuppence on ebay (granted it costs that much to make them) and it does have research to back it and my own experience of it working
There is a "Tens" electrical thing that zaps your skin to make an underneath muscle twitch. The US government sued for fraud a Chinese guy who advertised on TV that it could heal damaged muscles (he sold millions of them) but some injured people say it helped better than nothing.
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TENS make your muscles contract and are a proven and very useful system for "exercising" muscles in situations where the person may have range of motion issues. They send an AC signal through the mucle and make it contract. On high settings your muscles will contract harder than your brain can contract them, and you can risk getting a torn muscle.
Like pacemakers they have their place in legitimate medical use (especially rehabilitation), I think the fraud thing was related to those hyped up ads claiming you could be a lazy american sitting on the couch watching TV with wires connected to your belly, and 2 weeks later you have a perfect "six pack" like a pro bodybuilder...