Rife, radionics, PEMF, nano, fir, EAV, physioscanning, scenars, etc...

broken.english said:
In this article we have the beautiful story of Dr. Johnson and colleagues testing a new set of frequencies, which surprisingly led to the destruction of all bacteria samples and molds in the laboratory of several rooms plus some lab glasses of a certain shape as the icing on the cake. What a smash hit! In the past 70 years or so nobody could really explain why this special machine they used, Rife Ray No.5, was so successful. A partial explanation is given in the article. It says that the machine could produce over 100 sidebands thus covering a range of around 600 hz. If correct, it would be possible to sweep through 25000 hz in just 2 hours at 3 minutes per each set. No explanation is given though on the broken glass.

Hi broken,

By reading this, I was wondering about the dangerousity of having the tool on so many frequencies at the same time. I mean, is it really safe for all human cells, for the all human body ? I just fear ... collateral damages on good cells. Can it be seen as a "brutal" method ? No drawbacks ? Who could answer with certitude ?
 
What I can say with certainty is that I survived a few hundred hours of tests without damage.

To my knowledge sidebands do in no way add any power to the system. It is rather that there is less power in the sidebands. Basically generators move the voltage up and down within certain limits. If the upper limit is 5 volt then the voltage can only vary between 0 v(signal down) and 5 v (signal up) no matter how the frequency settings are.
Sidebands are produced when two or more channels are mixed. In this case the max voltage is still 5 v. If at a certain moment the signal in one channel is off the total voltage is lower than 5v. Thus some power is lost.

Also it is not exactly the case that a generator can produce many frequencies at the same time. They can have a very high speed like 3 million cycles per second but at any given moment there is only one signal status somewhere between 0 and 5v in my example. Modulation of frequencies does not increase the power, it just varies the frequencies.

As your main worry is about possible dangers for body cells, I want to recommend the following two links where the subject is adressed. They are from rifevideos and the Char Boehm websites:

1. Chapter 4 of the rife machine report
http://rifevideos.com/chapter_4_are_dr_rifes_rf_frequencies_safe_to_use.html

2. Will the frequencies affect the DNA in my cells, the same way it affects the DNA of the pathogen?
(This is the last question of the FAQ. Please scroll down the page)
http://www.dnafrequencies.com/faq.shtml

I have been following up this Rife business for about 10 years and never found any reports of damaged body cells.

Loosely connected to the subject:

What remains as a complete mystery is the report of Dr. Johnson(in my above post) that they accidentally broke some glasses in their lab. For this one needs really loud audio sound delivered by a loud-speaker. Plasma lamps deliver light and weak EM fields, no audio. I have not heard of any plasma system that would be able to break glass. May Philip Hoyland rest in peace but I would like to ask him how his machine would have done this(given that the story is true).
 
broken.english said:
What remains as a complete mystery is the report of Dr. Johnson(in my above post) that they accidentally broke some glasses in their lab. For this one needs really loud audio sound delivered by a loud-speaker.
{Or maybe a resonant frequency that is tightly coupled and concentrated on the object of interest}
Plasma lamps deliver light and weak EM fields, no audio. I have not heard of any plasma system that would be able to break glass. May Philip Hoyland rest in peace but I would like to ask him how his machine would have done this(given that the story is true).

You can make audio/compression waves with electricity. Namely audio frequency modulated plasma. I also thinks this ties into electronics somehow but that is for another thread I guess.

pbp2ASws.jpg


_http://www.audiocircuit.com/DIY/Ionic-Speakers/Project:Plasma-loudspeaker-by-Ulrich-Haumann
It is really simple. It is a modulated RF power amp with a controlled ionic discharge. By modulating the oscillator with the audio signal the flame size changed and so the air pressure changed also . You hear the sound directly through the air without modulating a diaphragm.
{Though in this case the plasma discharge is the diaphragm.}

So there are no moving parts, no distortion and none of the problems other tweeters have. The signal is quite low in level ( I measured 82 dB with my prototypes ) but it is the cleanest sound I ever heard. I use no horns to increase the sound pressure so you dont have to sit in axis of the tweeter, the sound is everywere in the air.
{Makes me think about what would happen if they used this type of tech for infrasound :shock:}

You need a lot of RF power to get a ionic flame so I use a tube (valve). I choose a EL519 you can also use a PL519, the PL has only a different heater voltage. The RF power is easily modulatet on G2 of the valve. I use a transistor, it was the simplest method for the prototype. I will make a complete tube design in future. The loudspeaker input go´s through a passive 12 dB crossover to the first transistor. With the variable resistor (250K stereo) you can control the crossover frequency beginning at app. 3Khz.

I measure the frequency response at a distance of 1 meter with crossover of 5Khz. The ripple you see in the curve is from the room because I measure in 1m distance. There is a plot of the frequency response in the Schematics and Diagrams section

Now bringing this back to Rife, I thought about the fact there may be some sort of mechanical or percussive effect going on. The usual EM frequencies needed to resonate with the pathogens of interest would be much faster/shorter in wavelength than what was deemed effective according to his experiments. To add energy to a system to overload / break / disintegrate you would need some sort of resonance. This could happen electrically or mechanically: leaning more towards a mechanical destruction of the pathogens at this point.

Water manipulated with soundwaves
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4z4QdiqP-q8


Interesting snips from the video.

An ultrasonic field may be used to levitate a liquid drop, and by changing the field's strength the drop's shape can be influenced.

{snip}

When the drop is compressed, modulating the field's strength at a harmonic of the drop's resonance frequency can induce star shaped oscillations in the drop.

When they started modulating with the harmonics it appeared to be a stressful environment for the water droplet. Could pathogenic entities within the body hold up to something like that?

Abstract:
A `star drop' refers to the patterns created when a drop, flattened by some force, is excited into shape mode oscillations. These patterns are perhaps best understood as the two dimensional analog to the more common three dimensional shape mode oscillations. In this fluid dynamics video an ultrasonic standing wave was used to levitate a liquid drop. The drop was then flattened into a disk by increasing the field strength. This flattened drop was then excited to create star drop patterns by exciting the drop at its resonance frequency. Different oscillatory modes were induced by varying the drop radius, fluid properties, and frequency at which the field strength was modulated.

So a few things to think about. One can induce a percussive action with electricity, the example above illustrates one way to do it using plasma. Rife did use a plasma arc in some of his instruments but how does this account for Rife machines that used metal contacts instead? To recreate the percussive or acoustic properties you need something to act as a diaphragm if plasma is not being used. Enter water and watch below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Uqf71muwWc

In this video he briefly describes how water, being the polar liquid that it is, will resonate with EM Frequency. In effect, causing an EM entrainment effect. However, water literally will continuously move in order to stay in alignment with the EM wave amplitude as it passes. Consequently, the water is amplifying the EM signal while emitting its own EM signal that coincides with the original frequency of his key fob.

But there is a little bit more to this (osit). The water is amplifying the signal electrically at this point but in order to do this it has to physically move (mechanical action) because of its polar structure. The EM wave is being transduced into physical movement by way of the water molecules. Now if we modulated this EM wave with audio frequencies or higher then theoretically the water should act similar to the diaphragm of a speaker.

So what IF the carrier frequency of somewhere around 3.3 MHz causes electrical as well as mechanical/physical resonance with the water inside one's body. Then modulating that carrier frequency with the audio frequencies (or others) from the lists provided are what are used to do 'WORK' on the targeted pathogens. Work being either acoustic resonance with said pathogen and/or acoustic harmonics altering the shapes of the pathogens (within this artificial sound environment) to the point where they are no longer viable.

You would still have the methodology of targeting one condition without affecting other areas of the body. Because mechanical resonance, as well as other types are very specific (think of a tuning fork's ability to resonate with others of the same pitch across a cluttered room with many different objects cluttered around), a surgical knife of sorts. Would this also explain the issues of some reported herxheimer reactions. I.e. Rife would suggest taking it easy after having a treatment so that your body could pass the dead pathogens out of the body. Could this also explain why you couldn't simply use audio frequencies in their lonesome without the carrier. Especially if the carrier frequency uses the water within your body in a similar way to plasma ( being the speaker diaphragm) in the above mentioned plasma speakers.

What do you guys think?
 
I found this interesting research about the effects of Ravne tunnels in Bosnia on pathogens:

ENGINEER GORAN SAMOUKOVIĆ: RESULTS OF MEASUREMENTS ON BOSNIAN PYRAMIDS

Serbian Electrical Engineer Goran Samouković has performed measuring of electromagnetic phenomena in the Bosnian Valley of Pyramids in the last few years. The results of his research is a comprehensive report which is attached below.

Special attention was paid to ultra-low electromagnetism that is responsible for environmental and pathogenic processes.

_http://piramidasunca.ba/eng/latest-news/item/10164-engineer-goran-samoukovi%C4%87-results-of-measurements-on-bosnian-pyramids.html

Also in Serbian: _http://piramidasunca.ba/bs/offline-page/aktuelnosti/item/10161-in%C5%BEinjer-goran-samoukovi%C4%87-rezultati-mjerenja-bosanskih-piramida.html
 
This was a pretty interesting presentation!

Published on 22 Dec 2013
Anthony Holland: Associate Professor, Director of Music Technology, Skidmore College. DMA, MM, MM, BM; President: Novobiotronics Inc. [a nonprofit 501(c)(3) charitable and educational company]. Discovered the ability of Oscillating Pulsed Electric Fields (OPEF) to destroy cancer cells and MRSA in laboratory experiments. Expert in custom digital electronic signal design, synthesis and analysis for biological effects. Member: Bioelectromagnetics Society (BEMS), European Bioelectromagnetics Association (EBEA). Postdoctoral work: Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) Stanford University. Advanced Digital Synthesis and Analysis studies with: Max Mathews (the ' Father of Computer Music'), John Chowning (founding Director of CCRMA, Electronic Composer and Inventor (famed FM Synthesis Patent); Jean-Claude Risset (Electronic Composer and founding Director of the Digital Synthesis Division of the internationally renowned IRCAM center, Paris, France); John Pierce: former Director of Sound Division: Bell Laboratories.


https://youtu.be/1w0_kazbb_U

The book that he mentions during his talk is this:

The Rainbow and the Worm: The Physics of Organisms 3rd Edition
by Mae Wan Ho

Link (Paperback): http://amzn.com/9812832602
Link (Kindle): http://amzn.com/B004QZBC2U

Description:

This highly unusual book began as a serious inquiry into Schrödinger's question, “What is life?”, and as a celebration of life itself. It takes the reader on a voyage of discovery through many areas of contemporary physics, from non-equilibrium thermodynamics and quantum optics to liquid crystals and fractals, all necessary for illuminating the problem of life. In the process, the reader is treated to a rare and exquisite view of the organism, gaining novel insights not only into the physics, but also into “the poetry and meaning of being alive.”

This much-enlarged third edition includes new findings on the central role of biological water in organizing living processes; it also completes the author's novel theory of the organism and its applications in ecology, physiology and brain science.

Contents:
What Is It to Be Alive?
Do Organisms Contravene the Second Law?
Can the Second Law Cope with Organized Complexity?
Energy Flow and Living Cycles
How to Catch a Falling Electron
Towards a Thermodynamics of Organised Complexity
Sustainable Systems as Organisms
The Seventy-Three Octaves of Nature's Music
Coherent Excitations of the Body Electric
The Solid-State Cell
'Life is a Little Electric Current'
How Coherent Is the Organism? The Heartbeat of Health
How Coherent Is the Organism? Sensitivity to Weak Electromagnetic Fields
Life is All the Colors of the Rainbow in a Worm
The Liquid Crystalline Organism
Crystal Consciousness
Liquid Crystalline Water
Quantum Entanglement and Coherence
Ignorance of the External Observer
Time and Freewill

That book could be interesting, too.
 
I just wanted to share my experiences using a SCENAR (Self-Controlled Energo-Neuro Adaptive Regulation) device which I purchased shortly before registering on this forum. Despite the cost (currently £459 in the UK) and my lack of knowledge in the technology and health matters generally, I still felt it was a worthy investment in a pain relief device for a potential future when conventional pain relief medicines and treatments may be prohibitively expensive or circumstances may make them unavailable. Also, just needing a supply of batteries, and being small and very easy to use (simply direct the electronic signals to affected area), meant it could be shared readily with others too.

After conducting my own layman's research and being quite confident it was safe to use, I purchased my device and a weekend training course. I have used it on myself and occasionally on my daughters (if they had joint pain, sprains or strains etc from dancing) with quite favorable results. In recent years I haven't needed to use it very often at all, but a few days ago I hurt my lower back lifting heavy pallets for a building project. It was painful enough that I couldn't stand completely upright. So I experimented, initially taking ibuprofen for one day which just masked the pain until it returned later that night. Yesterday I applied my scenar device a couple of times and this morning I only have a slight twinge in my back and my condition has improved significantly.

I haven't found any articles on SOTT relating to SCENAR and only this thread which mentions the technology. I apologize for not contributing about this earlier, particularly when Laura had her painful knee last year, in case there is something beneficial about this form of electronic 'energy medicine'. It does sound very 'Star Trek' and I have considered that I may have fallen for some 21st Century quackery with any perceived healing coming from the placebo effect. Alternatively, this technology (which originated in Russia) may actually work! :)

The company I used has a lot of information on their website: http://www.paingenie.com/

This article (August 2016) by Cate Montana is from the 'What doctors don't tell you' website https://www.wddty.com/magazine/2016/august/space-age-healing-in-your-pocket.html

Space age healing in your pocket


Eight years ago, John Hayward, 61, of East Sussex in the UK, suffered pain and weakness in his right arm and shoulder. There was a loss of nerve control in his right hand, which meant he struggled to write his name and even to straighten his fingers; it also seriously reduced his ability to work on his landscape-gardening business.

After five years of neurological investigations on the NHS (National Health Service), numerous trips to King’s College London and three magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, the conclusive diagnosis was vertebral growth impinging on a nerve, following trauma from a broken neck during a motocross fall when he was younger.

The proposed treatment? An operation involving the insertion of metal spacers between the fourth to sixth vertebrae through the front of his neck, with possible damage to his vocal cords.

Instead, three SCENAR treatments reduced his pain, so he continued for a total of 10 treatments over the course of three months. By the end, the pain had “virtually reduced to zero” and he had regained full mobility of his fingers.

“Today I am fully active in my business, which sometimes requires lifting and carrying mini-digger buckets weighing approximately 50–60 kg.

“I am also playing football every week against youngsters 40 years younger. And my signature is normal, ” says John.

SCENAR, which stands for ‘Self-Controlled Energo-Neuro Adaptive Regulation’, is a handheld device the size of a television remote control that was invented in the 1970s by Dr Alexander Karasev, currently the head of LET Medical Research Laboratory in Taganrog, Russia. His ideas for a device designed to powerfully stimulate the body’s own healing capacity were swiftly adopted by the Russian space programme because they offered an answer to the issue of how to provide medical treatment to cosmonauts on long space flights.

So, for years, Karasev was part of the medical team at the Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City near Moscow that was developing the technology. During the patenting process, several other scientists were brought on board, including Professor Alexander Revenko a specialist in neurology and psychotherapy. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the technology—commonly referred to as ‘energy medicine’—was rapidly commercialized and made its way to Europe and, from there, to the rest of the world.

TENS machines work by stimulating A and B nerves to produce amines (chemical neuromediators in the nervous system) like acetylcholine and noradrenaline (norepinephrine), and amino acids like alanine, cysteine and glutamic acid—all of which have short-term physiological effects.With SCENAR, however, the devices also stimulate the production of neuropeptides, including enkephalin, neurotensin and bradykinin, and endogenous opioid neuropeptides—also known as endorphins, dopamine and serotonin, the brain’s natural antidepressants—as well as other agents that affect cognitive ability.

The body produces around 2,000 neuropeptides in all. They are believed to regulate the body’s self-healing mechanisms, prompting the body to heal itself.

Lowe himself began using SCENAR after successfully treating a frozen shoulder. More recently, while pruning a tree this past October, he fell off a step ladder onto his left sacroiliac joint—“the kind of thing most people go into A & E for.

“But my son knows how to treat me, and with his help in treating myself every two hours for 24 hours with SCENAR and PEMFs, within 48 hours I was able to go for a long walk and do some gardening.”

The difference between SCENAR and other PEMF devices is that it claims to be able to mimic the body’s own EM emissions, uncover errant frequencies and automatically change its output to correct the abnormalities.

With SCENAR, the pain relief is often just as immediate and powerful as with TENS, but the effects are long-lasting. “I remember one guy,” says Lowe. “He fractured his ribs and was diagnosed as such by his doctor. He was in a lot of pain, especially at night. After one SCENAR treatment, most the pain had gone and he could sleep normally. I think I only gave him two treatments and he was done.

“He went back to his doctor, who couldn’t believe what he was seeing. And that was just in the space of a few days.”

Although licensed in most countries, including the UK—but only for treatment of acute pain conditions and general ‘dysfunction’—over the past few decades, SCENAR has also proven highly effective for the treatment of systemic and chronic disorders and pathologies.

For example, SCENAR has been clinically proven to nearly halve (by 46 per cent) the number of angina attacks in patients compared with 39 per cent reduced attacks in those taking nitroglycerine pills.3 And it’s been found to be significantly more effective than “conventional drug rehabilitation”in patients recovering from strokes.4

When the approximately 3,000 SCENAR practitioners in Russia were asked to complete a survey a few years into the millennium, the collated results showed, on average, a 79 per cent improvement in all musculoskeletal conditions, including muscle injuries, arthritis, sciatica and osteoporosis. In addition, there was also 82 per cent success in treating circulatory disorders like heart failure and stroke, an 84 per cent success rate with respiratory conditions of every variety and a 93 per cent success rate with disorders involving the eyes or digestive tract.

A 2006 study looking into the efficacy of SCENAR therapy for myofascial pain syndrome at Pochon CHA University in Seongnam, South Korea,revealed that patients experienced “significant improvement”, with 87 percent reporting “effective pain relief” that lasted at least a month after the treatment.5

And in a 2011 study, the effectiveness of SCENAR therapy for digestive disorders such as GORD (gastroesophageal reflux disease), peptic ulcers and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was undertaken at Rostov State Medical University in Rostov-on-Don, Russia.

Patients treated with SCENAR for peptic ulcers improved in 92 per cent of cases, while those treated with basic therapy plus SCENAR for ulcerative colitis reported positive effectsin 82 percent of patients compared with 63 percent receiving basic therapy alone.6

How does it work?

SCENAR devices—and there are lots of them on the market nowadays—send electrical impulses in milliamperes (mA), the standard international unit for measuring electrical currents, into the body via electrodes attached to the skin. The maximum level of the current varies from device to device, but is usually no more than 70 to 85 mA. The electrical impulses are very brief in duration, lasting around five seconds, and have a frequency greater than 15 Hz, so they’re usually audible.

The signals sent to the body are designed to mimic natural nerve impulses, so both the brain and the rest of the body easily accepts the impulses being delivered.

Where SCENAR technology claims to take a quantum leap forward is in its biofeedback function. Devices like the RITMSCENARPro (one of the most popularly used models) not only send out electrical signals accepted by the nervous system and readily interpreted by the brain, but they can also read the body’s responses, second by second, and adjust the output signal according to the body’s needs.

Indeed, it’s an interactive interface—which is why SCENAR is apparently so effective for chronic conditions as well as acute pain.

The body is designed to survive and consequently built to respond to any needs and crises that arise. Whether in response to a new injury, toxins or stress, the body sends a signal to the brain, which then ‘instructs’ all of the body’s adaptive systems—the endocrine system, the nervous system, the skin, all part of the healing process —to get into action. And each part of the system sends back information, creating a healing information-feedback loop.

But often, the healing is incomplete. The body is interrupted and has to respond to another crisis, and then another and another. In the process, it ‘forgets’ the older injuries and chronic pain conditions.

It gets accustomed to the previous signals of distress—chronic low back pain is a perfect example—and ignores those signals, thereby closing the door to further healing in that particular area.

“When that happens, disease develops and the energy can become stuck,” says Dr Rob Esser, a Canterbury acupuncturist and SCENAR practitioner now living in Het Gooi, The Netherlands.

“In Russian medicine, they call it an ‘energy cyst’. When that happens, the SCENAR device intervenes, acting as a part of the functional system for a few moments and starts reminding the body, basically telling it there’s something wrong. The body has to respond to the SCENAR’s message and starts paying attention to what it was not paying attention to before.”

And unlike TENS, the SCENAR signal is so variable that the brain/body doesn’t become habituated to it and tune it out. Although TENS and other modalities like LED (light-emitting diode) therapy and low-level laser therapy (LLLT) provide visible and near-infrared light that is healing, SCENAR signals are even richer in information.

Like Lowe and many other SCENAR therapists, Toni Bark, MD, founder and medical director of the Center for Disease Prevention & Reversal in Chicago, expanded her homeopathic medical practice to include the devices because of a personal experience. “I really wasn’t interested in SCENAR,” she says. “But I had an opening in my client schedule one day and agreed to meet the woman who was representing a company bringing it into the States.”

The sales rep treated Bark, who had chronic tendinitis in both knees as well as low back pain. The treatment lasted 15 minutes and she only treated one knee. “The next day, my tendinitis of nine months left both knees and I was like, ‘Wow I’m intrigued’. So I wound up getting trained and got a device.”

What can it do?

Actually, it’s easier to ask what SCENAR doesn’t do. Across the board, therapists praise the technology for pain reduction or elimination and quicker healing times, using words like “sensational” and “stupendous”, though the praise is more muted when it comes to chronic and systemic conditions; according to the Russian survey, the device is less successful for skin disorders and cancer.

But while the devices aren’t legally approved for conditions like attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, insomnia and osteoarthritis, most therapists have treated patients with chronic pain with SCENAR only to suddenly find other symptoms disappearing too.

This may have something to do with the fact that SCENAR has a major effect on neuropeptides, which influence everything from cellular respiration to DNA activity by triggering increased or decreased gene expression. Neuropeptides are also involved in regulating memory, and SCENAR signals interact deeply with the hypothalamus, which governs the metabolic processes involved in such widely diverse things as interpersonal behaviours and sleep rhythms.

Bark uses SCENAR in combination with homeopathy and dietary regulation for everything from Peyronie’s disease (a form of erectile dysfunction) and chronic fatigue to fibromyalgia, trigeminal neuralgia, curable migraine and even cancer.

“If somebody is not taking in daily toxins and they’re eating reasonably well and living a reasonable lifestyle, I’ve literally had absolute reversals of many conditions with one treatment,”
says Bark.

At the Garmonia Centrein Kiev, Ukraine, SCENAR therapy was clinically tested in 27 women with premenstrual syndrome (PMS). They were divided into two groups: one was a SCENAR-only group that received treatment starting seven days before menstruation for three menstrual cycles; the other group had the same SCENAR treatment plus a homeopathic therapy in the second phase of their cycle.

In the first group, 79 percent of the women experienced either full disappearance or a considerable decrease in their PMS symptoms whereas, in the second group, the rate was 92 per cent.7

The future is now

Although sometimes referred to as the ‘Star Trek device’in the tabloids, hundreds of clinical tests have been conducted with SCENAR technology in Russia over the past 30 years—with consistently positive results.

A summary by DrYuri Gorfinkel of published papers provided by the International Academy of SCENAR Therapy in Moscow showed that, of the more than 18,000 cases covering dozens of pathologies—from acute heart failure, endometriosis and gastritis to hepatitis and pancreatitis—89 per cent were cured and 96 percent significantly improved.8 However, the analysis was never completed due to Gorfinkel’s death in 1998.

Nevertheless, more is yet to come. According to Esser, who met and talked with Karasev, the originator of the technology, at a healing conference in Russia in 2010, Karasev now envisions three stages of development: SCENAR; Cosmodic (the second-generation SCENAR device); and an evolution of the technology currently in development.

According to Karasev’s website, SCENAR is the technology of treatment and Cosmodic is the technology of regeneration. The latter devices additionally focus on stimulating and increasing the restorative capacity of the body at the cellular level, but without amplifying any pathological signals (which is how SCENAR tells the body that something needs healing).

We can only imagine where the third stage of technology will take us within just the next decade. Now, all that’s needed is more Western research to confirm how many earthbound illnesses can be treated by what is, in many ways, one of the best things to come out of the Space Race.

Designed for the body electric

The human body is, in many respects, an electrical bio-machine. Chemical elements in the body have electrical charges, like the cells in the sinoatrial node of the heart, which contain the electrolytes calcium, magnesium and sodium. When these electrolytes pass through cellular membranes, they discharge electricity.1

Electrical signals are how the human brain and nervous system communicate in the body’s ongoing efforts to maintain homoeostasis—keeping a healthy balance (within normal ranges) within the body’s system of a wide variety of factors like pH, blood pressure, temperature and glucose levels. ECG (electrocardiography) measures electrical activity in heart muscle, while EEG (electroencephalography) measures electrical activity in the brain.

Throughout the last century, there has been tremendous scientific interest in developing electrical signal-producing devices for health and healing based on pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMFs; see pages 56 and 63).

TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation) devices, which stimulate the largest nerves in the body (the A and B nerves), arrived on the market in the late 1970s. Since then, numerous clinical studies have proven the effectiveness of TENS therapy for mitigating acute pain conditions.2

But it wasn’t until the development of SCENAR that the ultrafine, body-wide network of unmyelinated, slow-conduction C fibres in the central and peripheral nervous systems, constituting around 85 percent of all nerves in the body, could be communicated with via electrical signals to induce pain relief and healing.

“One of the unique aspects of SCENAR is it easily makes contact with the C fibre in the central nervous system,” says Brighton physical therapist Paul Lowe, MA, MBCMA, one of the UK’s 1,000 SCENAR practitioners. “And the advantage of being able to really make contact with the C fibres is that: (1) they’re everywhere; and (2) they have a far greater potential than A and B fibres to release neuropeptides [protein-like chemical messengers in the brain] that are our main healing vehicles.”

SCENAR and depression

Although he’s now a trained acupuncturist, Dr Rob Esser’s first love was clinical psychology, for which he received his doctorate from the University of Amsterdam. After expanding his Coventry practice to include SCENAR, he was delighted to discover that the technology—in particular, Karasev’s more advanced COSMODIC device—works exceedingly well for depression as well as other mental disorders.

His first depressive patient was a middle-aged man who was put on SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) antidepressants after his divorce. “Basically he found his wife with someone else, and that was such a shock to him that the doctor prescribed antidepressants,” says Esser. “After 12 years on medication, he felt like he was living in a prison. He was emotionally stable within a certain limited area of familiar circumstances. But the moment anything happened that put him outside of his comfort zone—and it didn’t take much—he didn’t know what to do. He might’ve killed somebody. He might’ve jumped out of a window. He was in a poor state and started drinking.”

Esser, who is currently reestablishing his practice in The Netherlands, says this patient’s treatment was a remarkable experience in that, after every session,the patient would just stand outside and look at the world in amazement, watching people rushing by, all of them too busy with seemingly inconsequential things to pay attention to life going on around them.

“He suddenly had—I don’t know what you would call it—semi-enlightened moments.”

After a couple of treatments, the patient was able to slowly come off the SSRIs—missing one day a week at first and then increasing the length of time without medication. “In the end, he was completely free of it and has since rebuilt his life, remarried and had a child. He is now a totally different person.”

Another patient was depressed immediately after childbirth to the point of feeling suicidal. Her doctor wanted to put her on antidepressants, but she wasn’t convinced it was a good idea. “She had one session and she completely changed,” says Esser. “I gave her two or three more sessions, but she was basically lifted out of it in one session.”

Who’s who in energy medicine

The catchphrase ‘energy medicine’ includes several devices in addition to SCENAR, such as pulsed electromagnetic frequency (PEMF), low-level laser therapy (LLT) and light-emitting diodes (LED).

PEMF devices deliver a wide range of EM energy in rapidly pulsating bursts to cells, thereby stimulating cell energy, cellular electrical activity and chemical processes in the tissues of the body.

Bioresonance machines analyze aberrant waveform patterns from the body, then generate an equal but opposite waveform. The idea is to create an interference pattern that cancels out the abnormal patterns and so cures the problem.

LLLT uses laser light with power outputs of 1–1,000mW(milliwatts) to stimulate a photochemical response in the body’s cells that is healing.

LEDs don’t have the same concentrated focus of LLLTs, but they do produce light within the same general range of wavelengths (around 632–1,064 nm),for the same purpose of stimulating a healing photochemical response.1

SCENAR doesn’t deliver much energy to the body; it uses a very weak electrical current. Instead, the device works with the feedback information it receives from the patient ‘s skin, using it to adapt its own electrical output, and by interacting with the body, constantly changing frequencies to ‘coach’ the body towards optimal neuropeptide production and the use of its own resources in an intense and highly focused way.


References

1 http://themedicinejournal.com/articles/how-human-bodies-create-electricity/

2 CurrRheumatol Rep, 2008; 10: 492–9

3 Reflexotherapy, 2003; 4: 41–5

4 www.scenartherapist.co.uk/CLINICAL-STUDIES/Stroke-Rehabilitation-Study.html

5 www.scenar.com.au/docsys/download.php?&docid=79

6 www.scenar.com.au/docsys/download.php?&docid=91

7 http://scenartherapist.co.uk/CONDITIONS-+-CASES/CLINICAL-STUDIES/PMS-Scenar-for-Premenstrual-Syndrome,-PMT.html

8 http://scenar.biz/scenar-resources/scenar-articles/scenar-articles-scenar-therapy/individual-results.html

Online resources:

Alexander Karasev: www.scenar.ru

Alexander Ravenko: www.scenar-revenko.ru/en/

Dr Toni Bark: www.disease-reversal.com

Paul Lowe: www.scenartherapist.co.uk

Dr Rob Esser: www.eenvoudiggezond.nl
 
I found this article from 2015 that suggests this SCENAR device is just a new-agey scam. But then the author also states that acupuncture, reflexology etc is "abject nonsense".

SCENAR: Another dose of uncritical hype
WDDTY first pimped SCENAR in October 2008, in an article titled “Changing the body’s frequency” (by how much? From what, to what, in Hz, and to what demonstrable effect?). This issue also included credulous coverage of the Rife machine and other fraudulent devices.

The article below is the second and most recent substantial coverage of SCENAR. The first was by Lynne McTaggart, this one by Bryan Hubbard. Hubbard’s article is, if anything, even more breathlessly credulous. It obviously had the desired effect: there are 15 adverts for SCENAR in various issues of WDDTY after this article was published.

At the time of the first article there were four articles in MedLine covering SCENAR, which had risen to five by the time of the second article. None was in a mainstream journal with respectable impact, none support the extravagant claims of proponents, not one was sufficiently large to form any compelling evidence. There are by now another two, again, neither particularly compelling (Medline search).

SCENAR is sold as a TENS device, which it essentially is. Probably. As Professor David Colquhoun notes, the descriptions are basically word salad.

The evidence for TENS is rather weak, but it is widely used.

The ‘Russian problem’ used to mean the spread of Communism to the West. Today, the term could just as easily be applied to a new healing modality, developed behind the Iron Curtain during the Cold War and which, its advocates claim, will revolutionize Western medicine.
Oh no, not another one. The problem with Russia is that it’s a country in meltdown. Information coming out of Russia is very often not accurate or trustworthy.

The Scenar (Self-Controlled Energo-Neuro-Adaptive Regulation) device is the size of a TV remote, and runs on a single 9-V battery. Researchers and doctors in Russia claim that it can reverse most diseases without drugs or surgery. In the UK, it’s licensed as a pain-relief device.
That’s because the generic claim of TENS needs no specific proof, so all they have to do in order to sell the device is show that it’s a TENS machine. They can then rely on the quackosphere to build a buzz of unsupportable claims, and reap the rewards without having to actually break the law by making claims they cannot evidence.

It’s a sweet little scam and is endemic in the world of Supplements, Complementary and Alternative Medicine (SCAM).

The problem—like so much of alternative medicine that doesn’t enjoy the sizeable profits of the drugs industry—is the lack of ‘good’ scientific evidence from a double-blind placebo-controlled trial to support such ambitious claims.
Conspiracist nonsense. If this device genuinely worked as the proponents claim there would be nothing to stop companies like Johnson & Johnson, Novartis, Baxter or any one of a hundred other multi-billion-dollar drugs and medical device companies from manufacturing a competing device, or licensing SCENAR.

There are, however, thousands of case studies gathered from the 10,000 therapists and doctors in Russia who routinely use Scenar in their practices.
The plural of anecdote is anecdotes, not data.

Dr Yuri Gorfinkel, who became a Scenar therapist after working in the Chernobyl clean-up operations, has collated 18,255 case studies of Scenar treatments for almost every conceivable disease—from gastritis, haemorrhoids and impotence to bronchitis, hypertension and acute heart failure. Of these patients, there was no recurrence in 88.5 per cent of cases, while 6 per cent reported “signif-icant improvement” in symptoms, with only 3 per cent reporting little or no change for the better (SCENAR Therapy, SCENAR—Medical Assessment and Expertise, 1998; 4).
Medical Assessment and Expertise is not, as far as I can tell, a journal. In fact the only references to it in a well-known search engine are a couple of pages (including WDDTY) referencing SCENAR. It may be a translation from the Russian, but if a well-known translation engine is correct then this would be “Медицинское заключение и экспертиза” (which transliterates OK), and that scores nothing either.

Let’s just run a little thought experiment here.

A company – let’s call them PfizoBaxMerck – comes up with a new device. They don’t have any published evidence for it, and there’s no primary research showing it to be plausible, and it’s not approved for anything other than relief of self-limiting pain, but they advertise it as a cure for serious diseases, based on a bunch of case studies they and their customers compiled while using it for unapproved indications, and point people to a non-existent or at least insignificant journal for support.

How happy do you think WDDTY would be with that? Of course it’s an absurd thought experiment because these companies are all regulated, and while they may push the boundaries (a lot), they tend not to go straight in with unregulated claims. WDDTY is forever banging on abuse of the clinical trials process: why is opting out of it altogether, acceptable?

In a later report compiled by Dr Irina Kossovski, who tracked hundreds more case reports involving a similarly wide range of diseases, Russian Scenar practitioners were said to have achieved a complete recovery rate of around 66 per cent, while the remaining third of patients reported some improvement in their condition (Kossovski I. ‘An Overview of the Basic Results of a SI Medicine Treatment Complex.’ Mediscen Inc., 2001).
That is not a peer-reviewed publication. Actually, it’s just a bunch of claims on the supplier’s own website – it’s self-published, not even pay-to-play bottom feeding predatory open access. As evidence, it is utterly worthless. That is not hyperbole: it would be rejected out of hand if submitted in that form to any regulator.

The sole study published in a Western medical journal pitted Scenar against TENS (transcutaneous electric-al nerve stimulation). In this trial, 24 chronic neck-pain sufferers received six months of treatment with either Scenar or TENS, or no treatment (controls). The researchers reported that the Scenar group showed “significant reduction” of neck pain and disability compared with either the TENS or control group. They also pointed out that none of those in the Scenar group reported any adverse reactions (Chiropractic & Osteopathy, 2007; 15: 9; doi: 10.1186/1746-1340-15-9).
Chiropractic & Osteopathy (now called Chiropractic and Maual Therapies) does have the distinction of being published by the groups of chiropractors who are pro-vaccine and oppose chiropractic predation on children, excessive use of X-rays and the nonsensical “chiropractic subluxation complex”, but it is still not a PubMed indexed journal. The cited paper is not PubMed indexed, it is in PMC (the open-access adjunct to which publishers submit any open-access content).

The device has also been used by athletes to speed recovery time after injury. French football star Djibril Cisse has prepared a YouTube testimonial, claiming the Scenar helped him to recover more quickly from an ankle injury. Also, SCENAR is currently being used by the Greek professional football team Panathinaikos, based in Athens.
Oh, well, that settles it then – after all, no sports person would ever endorse a bogus device. Is there a randomised double-blinded trial comparing SCENAR with lucky underpants?

How does it work?

Scenar has been described as ‘electronic acupuncture’ and ‘space-age medicine’, the latter in reference to its use in the late 1970s as a healing aid for cosmonauts training in zero gravity.
Oh, an electronic placebo. Right. I love the idea that “space age” means the 1970s.

Space age guys are all about SCENAR.


Space age guys are totally about SCENAR.
Although Dr Alexander Karasev invented the device in 1976, it was developed by two electronics engineers, who were awarded the Order of Lenin for their work. The technology was secret and ‘classified’ until Perestroika in the mid-1980s opened up the Soviet Union. It was then that SCENAR was made available to Russian doctors.
You may not be aware that the period from the 1960s to now, has seen a serious decline in Russian healthcare. The late Soviet era was pretty abysmal, there was a small improvement, but with the descent of the Russian Federation into kleptocracy it has descended again. In particular, there was gross abuse of the psychiatric system to pursue political ends.

It was not all gloom: Svyatoslav Fyodorov invented the radial keratotomy. And someone invented the SCENAR.

Scenar is a simple hand-held device controlled by four buttons. The practitioner brushes the device along the patient’s skin, looking for any resistance or ‘stickiness’, as Scenar therapists call it. Such ‘stickiness’ indicates disease, in-flammation or injury, while different areas of the skin correlate with different internal organs and muscle groups, similar to the acupuncture model.
Riiiight. And no doubt only the cognoscenti can feel the stickiness. Are you getting a feeling of déjà-moo? The uncanny impression that you’ve heard this bull before?

Now here’s a list of practices that rely on the idea of some part of the body mapping onto internal organs:

  • Auricular acupuncture
  • Emotional Freedom Techniques
  • Face reading
  • Iridology
  • Phrenology
  • Reflexology
Notice something? Yes, that’s right: they are all abject nonsense.

Pro tip: If you want to invent a new and sciencey-sounding treatment, it’s best not to base it on ideas that are without any foundation in empirically established fact.

Once a problem area has been detected, the practitioner changes the Scenar frequency modulation and, using biofeedback, begins a ‘dialogue’ with the patient’s central nervous system. Eventually, Scenar is said to stimulate neuropeptides in damaged cells to speed recovery by helping cells to ‘remember’ their healthy signature state. The healing process continues long after the session ends, although it may take many sessions to achieve full health, depending on how chronic the condition is.
It’s said to do that, is it? Well let me look up the evidence in support of this bold claim.

tumbleweed


It’s awfully reminiscent of a hundred other forms of quackery, of course, all of which claim (fortunately incorrectly) to manipulate the immune system.

However, if the problem is acute, such as a sports injury, Scenar practitioners say the device can heal the problem even before bruising appears.
If there’s one guaranteed way to generate glowing testimonials, it’s diagnosing and “curing” things people don’t even know they have.

SCENAR in the West

Scenar is becoming part of the accepted medical therapy in Russia, and is now being used in clinics and hospitals. It is also gaining a foothold in Germany, where there are around 3000 practitioners.
Russia is not a great advertisement for anything: the place is basically descending into feudalism, run by corrupt politicians and only marginally less corrupt oligarchs on one side and organised crime on… well, the same side, pretty often.

Obviously the appeal to popularity is not evidence, and the existence of practitioners is hardly relevant. There are a lot of homeopaths, after all.

However, inroads into the UK market have been more torturous. There have been several attempts to introduce it into Great Britain, but infighting and squabbles between various competing groups have impeded its progress. Today, the Scenar licence for the UK and Ireland is held by 21st Century Energy Medicine, and its CEO is former IT consultant Richard Cumbers. Scenar is officially distributed in the UK by its sister company Pain Genie.
PainGenie. Where have we heard that name before? Oh yes: WDDTY advertiser and ASA adjudicated misleading advertiser.

Although we understood PainGenie believed the ENAR device tested in the clinical trial examining neck pain was relevant to the claims for the advertised device, we noted evidence had not been supplied to demonstrate that the devices were sufficiently similar for the results of that trial to be extrapolated. The US trial on the scenar device was based on the self-assessment of pain relief of 14 individuals who reported various types and locations of pain. The trial included a statement that the device “stimulated the nervous system” and “is able to teach the body to heal itself” but did not include further examination of these points. The trial was not supplied in full and it was therefore not possible to establish whether it was published in a peer-reviewed journal or that it had been placebo controlled, blinded (or double blinded) or carried out in such a way that demonstrated the self-reported results were statistically significant. Evidence was also not supplied to demonstrate that the tested device was the same as the device sold by PainGenie.

We considered that the claim “the most technically advanced pain relief device in existence” would be understood by consumers to mean that the PainGenie device was more effective at treating pain than other comparative products and noted no comparative evidence was supplied.

We considered the claims “The Pain Genie is the most technically advanced pain relief device in existence and represents a breakthrough in stimulating the body’s natural self healing abilities” and “It is highly effective in all forms of pain relief” had not been substantiated and therefore concluded that the ad was misleading.


ENAR is of course another name for SCENAR.

Naturally in WDDTY‘s hierarchy of evidence an ASA adjudication against you is nearly as powerful as a prosecution for fraud. It means The Man needs you off the market.

Nevertheless, Cumbers has been forced to fight a constant battle against black-market versions of the device, which are often sold on the Internet by workers at the Russian factory—and at a far lower price. However, the black-market versions don’t come with any training or support.
At one point, Microsoft’s chief competitor in the market was counterfeit copies of its own software. That was an indication of predatory pricing and a market dominated by fear, uncertainty and doubt.

Cumbers sells the Pain Genie Home SCENAR for £469, which includes a training manual and DVD. Although some retailers believe that only properly trained practitioners should use it, Cumbers promotes its use among the public, although he emphasizes the importance of after-sales support.
Ah, right, predatory pricing, fear, uncertainty and doubt. After all, you wouldn’t want a fake fraudulent medical device would you? For comparison, you can get a TENS machine for, appropriately, a tenner. No wonder quacks are desperate to recoup their cash.

In the three years that he has held the SCENAR licence, Cumbers has trained around 1200 practitioners in the UK. His efforts have interested a few doctors in the UK, including Dr Jan Beute, from the Doncaster Royal Infirmary Accident & Emergency department. Beute, who uses his own Scenar on patients, has said: “The Pain Genie will save the NHS a tremendous amount of money because it’s so easy, cheap and effective to use.”
Hurrah! A testimonial from a former medical student! Naturally, homeopathy believers also believe that homeopath will save the NHS a fortune. That’s why the opinion of believers is not accorded much weight.

There are only a handful of practitioners in the US, where it has “light touch” Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval as a relaxant and “muscle re-educator”.
And once again, Bryan misses a giant, neon-lit red flag. Why would a device that purportedly cures every ailment under the sun, be licensed under an approval that does not require it to prove anything other than that it transmits a small current?

“This carpet totally flies. Here’s the certificate proving it’s a genuine Axminster”.

SCENAR and the future


In fact, there are more case studies of Scenar effectiveness than for any other ‘alternative’ device or technology. As the technology is now more than 30 years old, this is perhaps not so surprising. Nevertheless, its success rate is impressive—and far higher than that of any single drug or conventional therapy.
Let’s go back to the published, peer-reviewed evidence in reliable journals. As soon as there is some.

But such success arouses suspicion among doctors—it all seems too good to be true—especially as there have been little independent research and few clinical trials published in Western medical journals.
And if something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

For SCENAR practitioners and advocates like Cumbers, this is frustrating, as they see the technology as an inexpensive and effective alternative within the mainstream of Western medicine, especially at a time when the National Health System and its counterparts around the world are virtually bankrupt.
I’m sure they do. The route to achieving their goals is:

  1. Conduct well-designed trials and get them published in reputable journals.
  2. Include enough detail to allow independent replication of your results.
  3. Conduct a large multi-centre trial with rigorous methodology and ethical oversight.
  4. Publish full results.
  5. Retire on the immense fortune that rolls in.
You sort of wonder why the originators haven’t done this, really. Unless, of course, it doesn’t actually work, which is very likely indeed given the implausible purported mechanism.

However, the issue runs far deeper than just proving that the modality works through the ‘gold-standard’ clinical trials. Scenar attacks the very heart of medicine—its protocols and theories—which is avidly guarded directly by the pharmaceutical industry, and indirectly by medical schools and government-approved bodies, and even the mainstream media.
That is just an escape hatch argument, semantically indistinguishable from the homeopath who asserts that while positive trials are entirely valid, negative trials cannot be considered because homeopathy cannot be studied with reductionist science.

What actually happens when people turn existing medical knowledge on its head, is they win the Nobel Prize. The thing to remember here is that the scientific establishment is not like a gentleman’s club. It is anarchic, and incredibly competitive. The best way to become famous is to successfully challenge established opinion. This applies whether you’re an obscure Austrian patent clerk or a collaborator with the most evil regime in history. Science has a long history of not giving a damn about anything but truth.

Undaunted, Cumbers and others nevertheless believe that the time is now right for making a serious pitch to governments, which are looking to cut costs wherever they can, and whose allegiances may lean more towards the public purse and less towards protecting the conventional medical paradigm. They also point to the Russian health system, where there is already wide acceptance of Scenar.
Well, they might be onto something: politics has sustained pseudoscience before. However, science has a nasty habit of going on being right however passionately people believe otherwise.

For Prime Minister Cameron, President Obama and other world leaders, it could be the start of the Russian problem all over again.
Why would it be? Why would Cameron be unhappy at something that slashed NHS spending? Why would Obama be unhappy at something that pulled the rug out from under the HMOs that lobbied against Obamacare, something that would dramatically reduce the cost of healthcare for the underprivileged, an issue to which he is passionately committed? Maybe Bryan is confusing Obama with Mitt Romney? Oh, wait, no: Romney’s health policy is not much different to Obama’s.

 
I found this article from 2015 that suggests this SCENAR device is just a new-agey scam. But then the author also states that acupuncture, reflexology etc is "abject nonsense".




I am still not sure what the SCENAR can do and what not. What impressed me, however, is that it really stops at certain points when moved over the skin. It is really hard to move it beyond that point before the SCENAR has delivered its message to the body.
 
I am still not sure what the SCENAR can do and what not. What impressed me, however, is that it really stops at certain points when moved over the skin. It is really hard to move it beyond that point before the SCENAR has delivered its message to the body.

Indeed. When the device is moved in certain locations/directions there is a 'stickiness' - which seems to be the area that needs the most healing. As I understand it, due to the toxicity of the environment (body) the normal method of self-healing is corrupted; so the electrical impulses from the device send messages to the brain to say "Send forth the neuropeptides....this area needs healing!"

When I first read Laura's work on cyclical cometary bombardment, and their electrical nature, it reminded me of this type of periodic healing or 'cleansing' of our Earth. As above, so below.
 
  • Like
Reactions: SMM
Indeed. When the device is moved in certain locations/directions there is a 'stickiness' - which seems to be the area that needs the most healing. As I understand it, due to the toxicity of the environment (body) the normal method of self-healing is corrupted; so the electrical impulses from the device send messages to the brain to say "Send forth the neuropeptides....this area needs healing!"


Thank you for posting on the subject Gary.

Had heard excellent personal testimonials on the technology a couple of years ago but having been unable to find a local practitioner, the topic had slipped my mind entirely.

After an hours noodling around this time, found one just down the road 😊

Can’t wait to give it a whirl.

Much appreciated.

J
 
Thank you for posting on the subject Gary.

Had heard excellent personal testimonials on the technology a couple of years ago but having been unable to find a local practitioner, the topic had slipped my mind entirely.

After an hours noodling around this time, found one just down the road 😊

Can’t wait to give it a whirl.

Much appreciated.

J

It would be interesting to hear about your experiences J. :-)
 
This was a pretty interesting presentation!


https://youtu.be/1w0_kazbb_U

In a funny coincidence, I had been listening to Graham Hangcock's 'Fingertips of the Gods' in audiobook and thinking about the possibility of ancient civilizations having used soundwave technology for different purposes, when Youtube's suggestions led me to this video. I too thought it was very interesting. Now I don't know if this guy's machine and method work as well as described, but I don't see why the principle, if refined, shouldn't. It's worth exploring for science, I think!

Then Youtube suggested I watched the following video - it's quite interesting as well. Although it's not exactly the same principle, it also uses sound waves to destroy cancer tumors. The presentation is 2.5 years old; it would be interesting to learn how much the HistoSonics team has progressed so far:

 
Back
Top Bottom