Magnetic Therapy

By Ray Cralle, RPT
A new tool is available to patients and rehabilitation specialists in the United
States, thanks to the growing demands of alternative medicine.
Most everyone today is aware of some of the changes in medicine, especially
as it relates to finding cost-effective means of providing care and treating
ailments. Clinicians in this country found "magnetic therapy" a reimbursable
medical expense in Germany, Israel, Japan and forty-five other countries and
became intrigued with its possibilities for American health care.
Early manufacturers produced the familiar magnet with north and south
poles, but growing numbers of investigators have realized the importance of
using only one pole (usually north or negative). This allows for a much
stronger magnetic field to be placed against the area of pain, which research
seems to indicate the need for, especially in chronic pain or overuse
symptoms.
The Office of Alternative Medicine of the National Institute of Health in
Washington, D.C., has just awarded over a million dollar grant to Ann Gill
Taylor, RN, Ph.D. at the University of Virginia, to study the effects of
magnets in chronic pain. Dr. Gill Joins a list of doctors and scientists
currently interested in this European phenomenon. Prestigious centers such
as John Hopkins, Baylor College of Medicine and Massachusetts Institute of
Technology are studying magnetic therapy.
I first heard of magnets when a longtime friend and hospital director asked
me to go to Dublin, Ireland in 1993 to meet Austin Darragh. MD, a world
renowned researcher, who had been using magnets to treat pain. The joy of
finding something so simple, yet so effective in helping people relieve pain
still fascinates me.
I have practiced for over twenty-four years and have never been as
impressed by a technology so simple and effective in helping arthritis, back
pain and even fibromyalgia (chronic fatigue). Just to name a few, as safely
and cost-effectively as unipole Cradletive) magnets.
I am convinced that it will soon be commonplace to treat headaches, sports
injuries and even allergies with magnets, and that managed care will find it
on the top of its list of worthwhile expenses.
Ray Cradle, RPT is a registered physical therapist at Cralle Physical Therapy
Services.
Source: The Senior News, April, 1997

Magnets attracting health-care attention

By Emily Gest, Daily News Staff Writer
Who knows who would be sporting magnets now if Hideki Irabu had lived up
to his $12.8 million billing.
The long-sleeve shirt that the former Yankees pitcher wore concealed the
newest craze among health and body-conscious Westerners: dozens of small
magnets taped to his wrists, arms, chest and back at pressure points. And
even though they didn't seem to work for Irabu, the idea behind the
magnets is simple, if unproven: They stimulate magnetic fields in the body,
improving circulation, and promoting faster healing and general good health.
Magnets have been popular in Japan for two or three decades, said Hirofumi
Murabayashi, a spokesman for the Japanese Consulate. "They are usually
available at most ordinary drug stores without any prescription," he said.
Kota Ishijima, Irabu's translator, says the ball-player has sported magnets for
several years. "He changes [their position] every day, according to where he
feels stresses within his body," Ishijima said. "It is supposed to relieve
microscopic muscular tension and opens microscopic blood vessels for better
blood flow."
Sean P. Gallagher, a physical therapist at Performing Arts Physical Therapy in
Manhattan, said he often uses magnets in conjunction with accupressure
points on the body to relieve soreness and swelling. Few scientific studies
have been conducted to show how or whether magnets work, but two major
universities are planning them.
Dr. Steven Abramson, chairman of the department of rheumatology and
medicine at the Hospital of Joint Diseases in Manhattan, says that animal
research shows that "by altering magnetic fields, you can alter blood flow or
reduce the amount of inflammation by blocking the movement of inflamed
cells." Magnets are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
Dr.Alan Steiner of Denville, N.J., who calls himself a holistic dentist, said he
doubted the medicinal benefits of magnets when he heard about them from
a patient two years ago. Then he tried them. "I was told I had arthritis in the
neck, and I don't have it anymore," he said. Steiner now offers magnets to
patients who suffer from migraine headaches or TMJ (temporomandibullar
joint disorder), a painful jaw problem, and is a distributor for a California
magnet company. Whether magnets have physical benefits remains an open
question, but there is some evidence of how they may work.
"We need really good scientific inquiry, not just into clinical improvement, but
long term, 20 or 30 years later," said Dr. Patricia Muehsam, who studies
bioelectric magnetics at Mount Sinai Medical Center. "The body is exquisitely
sensitive, even to weak electromagnetic fields; even one weaker than a hair
dryer can affect enzymes in a test tube."

Source: NY Daily News, Aug. 3, 1997

Opposites attract Doctors who spurned magnet therapy are paying
heed

By Bob Condor
Here is a typical story about biomagnetic therapy: A local doctor, who
happens to be open-minded about certain less conventional health therapies
like acupuncture and chiropractic, has been taking his 12-year-old daughter
to see an orthopedic specialist for pain in her elbow. Turns out the daughter
has a bone-growth irregularity, and thespecialist recommends allowing the
bones in the joint to develop more fully before taking corrective action.
About the same time, the father/physician has been talking with a former
colleague about magnet therapy. He hears that magnets increase blood
circulation to an area and boost the number of red blood cells, thanks to the
interaction between an electro-magnetic field and electrolytes like sodium
and potassium in the bloodstream.
There might be a catch. The colleague's wife is involved with a Japanese
multilevel marketing firm that sells therapeutic magnet products. The
colleague provides some product samples, along with a thick stack of
translated research literature, which "has been mostly done in Russia."
The physician is skeptical but decides to try a magnet wrap on his daughter's
elbow.
"Her pain started to decrease almost immediately," he recalled. "Within a few
hours it was practically gone. At first, her elbow would start hurting again if
she stopped using the magnet. Gradually, over a few weeks, the pain would
go away and stayed away.
"Does magnet therapy work? Does it have a scientific basis? I'm not sure,
but I know it helped my daughter."
Anecdotes abound about biomagnetic therapy for pain relief. It's estimated
that about 20 golfers on the PGA Senior Tour wouldn't be able to compete
each week without magnets attached with elastic wraps, Velcro, belts or
medical tape attached to knees, backs, elbows, necks, hips and other body
areas.
Jim Colbert, one of the circuit's big winners, credits his success to wide-strip
magnets he wears on his back. He also sleeps on a magnetic mattress
product, which is typically fabric-covered foam padding with the magnets
sewn inside. He said his back pain used to sideline him for a good part of the
golf season. Now he hasn't missed a day, and keeps ringing up prize money.
FEELING GOOD
Chi Chi Rodriguez, another popular senior player, has been using a magnetic
mattress since a trip to Japan some 30 years ago. Magnets are widely used
for pain and overall well-ness in that country, as evidenced by the dozens of
tiny ones taped to the body of New York Yankees pitcher Hideki Irabo.
Pro football players are reporting quicker recovery from injury with the use of
magnets. Ronnie Loll, the former all-pro safety with the Oakland Raiders, is a
spokesman for Bioflex, one of several American magnet therapy companies
chasing the Japanese manufacturer Nikken.
"I was willing to try anything within league limits to relieve pain during my
playing days," said Loll, now a broadcaster with the Fox net-work. "But,
believe me, I would not have kept using magnets if they didn't work."
Many doctors have doubted that the experiences of such pro athletes can be
replicated in clinical trials. But one controlled, randomized study published in
the Archives of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine last November is
beginning to change some minds. In the experiment, which involved 50
people suffering from pain years after a bout with polio, researchers at the
Baylor College of Medicine in Houston found significantly reduced symptoms
among subjects using magnet devices with power slightly stronger than
refrigerator stick-ons. The results were corrected for any placebo effect.
Of course, more studies are needed to determine if greater magnetic
intensity (called gauss) might bring more results, whether the pain relief is
temporary or lasting, and whether there is any drop-off in effectiveness if
magnets are used constantly.
Even most critics admit there is no physical harm in trying magnets for most
people, though there are questions about whether a magnetic field can
disrupt pacemakers, insulin pumps, drug patches and pregnancy.
Fiscal risk is another matter. There's little investment at the lower end of
magnet products, say $20 or less. It gets more expensive if you want a
special bracelet for wrist or elbow pain ($150 range) or a magnetic pad for
your bed (about $500 and up).
"For some people with pain symptoms, magnets are not only the best
treatment but the least expensive one," said Dr. Julian Whitaker, co-author of
"The Pain Relief Breakthrough: The Power of Magnets." (Little, Brown and
company). "Most anyone with back pain should benefit from using them."
Whitaker says magnets can be equally beneficial for arthritis, menstrual
cramps. carpal tunnel syndrome and various sports injuries. His book details
the history of magnet therapy, With its roots in China (where it is still used
by some acupuncturists), India and Egypt.
He explained magnets are not respected by American doctors because there
are few U.S. studies confirming results. One obstacle is the magnetic fields
can't be patented, so any company wishing to prove that magnets work - at
considerable expense if government endorsement is the goal - only does the
heavy lifting for a host of competitors.
"I think magnets have potential to work for cancer and other diseases,
maybe autoimmune disorders," said Whitaker. "I don't know how the
mechanisms will work, but think it can be effective."

Source: Chicago Tribune, Thursday March 12, 1998

A Modern Definition of Qi

By Dr. Yang Jwing-Ming
It is important that you know about the progress that has been made by
modern science in the study of Qi. This will keep you from getting stuck in
the ancient concepts and level of understanding.
In ancient China, people had very little knowledge of electricity. They only
knew from acupuncture that when a needle was inserted into the
acupuncture cavities, some kind of energy other than heat was produced
which often caused a shocking or a tickling sensation. It was not until the
last few decades, when the Chinese people were more acquainted with
electromagnetic science, that they began to recognize that this energy
circulating in the body, which they called Qi, might be the same thing as
what today's science calls "bioelectricity."
We must look at what modern Western science has discovered about
bioelectromagnetic energy. Many bioelectricity-related reports have been
published, and frequently the results are closely related to what is
experienced in Chinese Qigong training and medical science. For example,
during the electrophysiological research of the 1960's, several investigators
discovered that bones are piezoelectric; that is, when they are stressed,
mechanical energy is converted to electrical energy in the form of electric
current. This might explain one of the practices of Marrow Washing Qigong
in which the stress on the bones and muscles is increased in certain ways to
increase the Qi circulation.
It is understood now that the human body is constructed of many different
electrically conductive materials, and that it forms a living electromagnetic
field and circuit. Electromagnetic energy is continuously being generated in
the human body through the biochemical reaction in food and air
assimilation, and circulated by the electromotive forces (EMF) generated
within the body.
In addition, you are constantly being affected by external electromagnetic
fields such as that of the earth, or the electrical fields generated by clouds.
When you practice Chinese medicine or Qigong, you need to be aware of
these outside factors and take them into account.
Countless experiments have been conducted in China, Japan, and other
countries to study how external magnetic or electrical fields can affect and
adjust the body's Qi field. Many acupuncturists use magnets and electricity in
their treatments. They attach a magnet to the skin over a cavity and leave it
there for a period of time. The magnetic field gradually affects the Qi
circulation in that channel. Alternatively, they insert needles into cavities and
then run an electric current through the needle to reach the Qi channels
directly. Although many researchers have claimed a degree of success in their
experiments, none has been able to publish any detailed and convincing
proof of the results, or give a good explanation of the theory behind the
experiment. As with many other attempts to explain the How and Why of
acupuncture, conclusive proof is elusive, and many unanswered questions
remain. Of course, this theory is quite new, and it will take more study and
research before it is verified and completely understood.
Much of the research on the body's electrical field relates to acupuncture. For
example, Dr. Robert O. Becker, author of The Body Electric, reports that the
conductivity of the skin is much higher at acupuncture cavities, and that it is
now possible to locate them precisely by measuring the skin's conductivity.
Many of these reports prove that the acupuncture, which has been done in
China for thousands of years is reasonable and scientific.
Although the link between the theory of The Body Electric and the Chinese
theory of Qi is becoming more accepted and better proven, there are still
many questions to be answered. For example, how can the mind lead Qi
(electricity)? How, actually, does the mind generate an EMF (electromotive
force) to circulate the electricity in the body? How is the human
electromagnetic field affected by the multitude of other electric fields that
surround us, such as radio wiring or electrical appliances? How can we
readjust our electromagnetic fields and survive in outer space or on other
planets where the magnetic field is completely different from the earth's?
You can see that the future of Qigong and bioelectric science is a challenging
and exciting one. It is about time that we started to use modern technology
to understand the inner energy world which has been for the most part
ignored by Western society.
Dr. Yang has been involved in Chinese Gongfu since 1961 and has more
than thirty years of instructional experience. Dr. Yang has published
twenty-four books and twenty-eight videotapes on the martial arts and
Qigong.
Doctors, Psychiatrists Turning to Magnets
Dr. Jane Murray isn't ready to prescribe magnet therapy for any of her
patients just yet. But that day could be coming.
"I hear testimonials from people right and left," said Murray, a family
physician who employs both traditional and complementary therapies at the
Sastun Center, a clinic in Mission, Kan. "I don't disbelieve them at all. But I
don't know yet how to prescribe magnet therapy."
Magnets have a long history as medical devices. Cleopatra is reported to
have worn a magnetic lodestone on her forehead in an attempt to forestall
the aging process. For decades, magnets have occupied a place among
alternative treatments, alongside herbs and acupuncture. Along the way, they
also have become big business. Billions of dollars worth of medical magnets
are sold each year, over the Web and in Tupperware-style home parties.
Yet as they've gained adherents, medical magnets also have fallen into
disrepute among many medical professionals.
"A lot of fly-by-nighters started promoting magnetics for all sorts of
ailments," said Abraham Blechman, an associate professor in orthodontics at
Columbia University's School of Dental and Oral Surgery. He has
experimented with magnets and uses them regularly in his New York practice.
A couple of years ago, the Federal Trade Commission disciplined some
companies for making unsubstantiated claims on Web sites about magnets'
power to cure AIDS, cancer, liver disease and other conditions. "Magnetics in
general got a bad reputation," Blechman said. "There are many medical
people who don't believe any of the claims being made." However, he noted,
that is slowly changing. "There are more and more uses of it being promoted
with good scientific background," he said. "It's gradually being accepted."
Several controlled clinical studies conducted in the past few years suggest
that magnets may effectively treat some disorders. And a few health-care
providers are routinely using magnets for a host of conditions.
Blechman, for example, has used magnets for years with orthodontic patients
to move teeth and to accelerate new bone growth. Some of his faculty
colleagues at Columbia's medical school are using magnets experimentally to
reduce pain among people who've had coronary artery bypass procedures, he
said. A small number of studies have found magnets, either "permanent"
magnets or electromagnets, to be effective in relieving certain kinds of pain
and hastening wound-healing. Perhaps most significantly, electromagnets are
being used experimentally at several university medical schools to treat
depression. The procedure is known as transcranial magnetic stimulation.
"That's extremely exciting," Murray said. "I think there is clearly something
powerful about the human energy field and its interaction with the energy in
the world -- electromagnetic, biochemical, and the energy we get from other
people and plants and animals."
In transcranial magnetic stimulation, a coil is held next to the patient's
forehead and a pulsating electrical current passes through the coil,
generating a magnetic field. That, in turn, creates a small electrical current in
the region of the brain called the left prefrontal cortex. That is the area of
brain thought to be underactive in depressed people.
Three studies have compared transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), a procedure in which electricity is applied
directly to the entire brain. ECT is effective against depression, although it
often causes short-term memory loss and other temporary cognitive
problems. It gained notoriety after it was featured in the film based on Ken
Kesey's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest."
In the three studies comparing the two procedures, TMS has been as
effective as ECT in treating severe depression among people who are not
troubled by hallucinations or delusions, according to David Avery, a professor
of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington Medical
School in Seattle. And ECT, he said, is more effective than anti-depressant
drugs. The studies so far have involved only a couple of dozen subjects.
Avery soon will begin a study with about 85 subjects.
Researchers theorize that the magnetic therapy may work by activating
sluggish nerve cells in the left prefrontal cortex. Four years ago, researchers
at Baylor University in Houston used magnets to treat muscular or
arthritic-type pain in post-polio patients. They laid magnets on the painful
areas for 45 minutes. Seventy-six percent of people treated with real
magnets reported feeling significantly better. Nineteen percent of those given
sham magnets reported significant pain relief.
A  team at the University of Virginia gave magnetic sleeping pads a couple of
years ago to a group of people with fibromyalgia, a baffling complaint
characterized by chronic and pervasive muscle pain. Compared to a control
group that slept on nonmagnetized pads, those with the magnetic pads
reported significantly reduced pain after sleeping on the pads for six months.
Other outcomes did not differ significantly between the groups.
In another study, a large group of people with intense nerve pain in their
feet -- a condition known as peripheral neuropathy and common among
diabetics -- were given magnetic insoles to wear. A substantial number
reported less tingling and burning and numbness in their feet.
Michael Weintraub, the neurologist who orchestrated the controlled study
that was conducted at 48 sites last year, said it "clearly shows that magnets
work. It's a real response." He expects the study to be published in a major
medical journal, and he hopes to pursue further research.
Blechman stressed that the magnets that are sold widely for medical
purposes not only vary in strength and design, but may not deliver as
promised. He tested some and found that they were not as powerful as
advertised.
Nancy Russell, a Kansas City area internist, has used magnets on occasion
for years, mostly to control pain.
"If somebody has an injury, like to a joint, (there are) wraps. I've used those
myself, like with tendonitis, and it seems that it shortens recovery time."

Source: Health World Online, February 25, 2002

Drug Addiction and the Brain

By Paul Tyler
Paul Tyler brings us up to-date on findings related to electromagnetism. He
reports that the National Institute of Mental Health studied rats addicted to
morphine and found that current stimulation to the lower part of the concha
(posterior to the external auditory meatus) precipitated signs of morphine
abstinence. Researchers (Sjolund, Clement-Jones, Salar and others) have
reported an increase in B-endorphins in cerebrospinal fluid following
electro-acupuncture and other forms of electrotherapy. Increased rat brain
levels of serotonin, tryptophan and hydroxyindole acetic acid have been
reported. Numerous studies show changes of calcium ion levels in the brain
following the use of magnetic fields.
It is believed that the body's own production of B-endorphins is turned off
by drug addiction and that electro or magnetic stimulation enhances the
natural production and release of encephalms and ££3-endorphins by the
body, preventing the onset of withdrawal symptoms. Tyler speculates that
calcium is the critical factor and not the endorphin system. He further states
that modern medicine has studied and treated the chemical side of the
equation but has almost completely ignored the electrical/magnetic side. The
body's natural chemicals are released by an electrical signal so it seems
plausible that an external signal can do the same at a specific site without
drugging the rest of the body.

Source: Scientific Digest EMR and The Brain; A Brief Literature Review, 1/99
prepared for an FDA conference

Magnetic Field Therapy: Professional and Personal Observations by
Edward Friedler, M.D.

By Dr. Edward Friedler, MD
I use magnetic products and I recommend magnetic products to my
patients. I sponsored an introductory lecture on Magnetic Field Therapy to
other family physicians. Is this professional heresy, or open mindedness with
the interest of my patients coming first.
My formal training in Family Practice required exposure to all the traditional
medical and surgical specialties. A family physician must have a wide array of
management options for his or her patients. In spite of years of training and
clinical experience, it is unfortunately not unusual for my "bay of tricks " to
be unsatisfactory or empty! Because it is anathema for me to tell patients
"There is nothing more I can do for you," I have referred some to
chiropractors and not discouraged others seeking help through other
"alternative" providers. And now, I am one too!
I use magnetic products for a variety of ailments. Because I see people in
the setting of a medical office, there is an expectation that any treatment is
recommended after a working diagnosis is made. In other words, I listen to
and examine my patients and get appropriate lab information and x-rays
first. Once the data is collected and considered and a working diagnosis
made, I then organized a discussion on treatment options. For the person
complaining of fatigue, I treat anemia with iron and vitamins, not a magnet.
For a person with achy legs and low potassium, I treat with potassium, not a
magnet. Yet there are times when iron, potassium, aspirin, or a narcotic pain
pill are not the appropriate remedies, or are not enough. In these cases, I
encourage my patients to try a magnet. Let me share some success stories.
Cancer: Dr. F was diagnosed with cancer at age 41. After three months of
chemotherapy, he decided that because the track record for chemotherapy
was poor, it would be crazy to not add other modalities to his own
treatment. Since his oncologist was concerned with chemotherapy dosing,
and didn't know about other treatments, Dr. F on his own added Magnetic
Field Therapy, via a mattress pad, chair pads in the office and home, and a
large magnet worn against the lower spine. (Dr. F added other "modalities"
over the next few months.) He experienced fewer negative side effects of
chemotherapy, to the surprise of his oncologist. He lived, and still lives to tell
about it, I am happy to say, because Dr. F is me!
Arthritis: I remember Mrs. R whose knee joint had no cartilage. No medicine
prescribed by me or other doctors had helped her. I taped a small magnet to
her knee after a physical exam, and left the room while she got dressed.
When I came back to minutes later, she was bending her knee in disbelief; it
didn't hurt. The arthritis wasn't gone, but the severe pain was.
Fractured rib: Mr. E had fallen and broken a rib; his oncologist had given him
Percocet for pain. He came in to see me, saying the rib still hurt and the drug
made him feel bad. I advised him to place a magnet where the pain was
causing him discomfort. He later told me the diminishment pain was
"instantaneous." The rib still broken, but he was able to discontinue the
Percocet. When he broke another rib two months later, he used a magnet
first.
Brown recluse spider bite: Mr. W was bitten by a brown recluse spider. He
had a one inch ulcer on his lower leg that was not healing. It hurt, too. We
taped a magnet over the ulcer. The pain was less and it began to heal up
quickly. The magnet, while he used it decreased the pain.
Swollen eye: A boy had been hit in the face by a baseball. His eyelids were
swollen. He had already used ice. I gave him a mini magnet and told him to
use it where the sting occured. The swelling was gone the next day. I was
surprised.
Shoulder pain: Dr. Q was experiencing a nagging pain in her shoulder for
more than three months. She attended the lecture on Magnetic Field
Therapy. During this event she held a magnet to her shoulder. The next
morning, her shoulder was normal and the pain was gone. My own theory is
she used the magnet on her own. (At that same meeting, another doctor
used a magnet on a painful knee, which had been through many drugs and
physical therapy. The next day, she came to my office for a second magnet,
because it was helping her so much.)
Tiredness: When all the tests are normal, doctors often diagnose depression
for tired people. Some respond to antidepressant treatment. For Ms. E,
magnetic shoe inserts worked. She even returned to her karate class.
As a physician I prefer to understand as fully as possible the workings and
applications of Magnetic Field Therapy. I study this in my own practice. I tell
my patients about magnets, and I show them the Magnetic Field Therapy
Handbook as a guide to usage. I have not had anyone say, "No thanks, I
would rather suffer." I am grateful to have Magnetic Field Therapy as a
positive intervention for helping the patients in my medical practice.

Frontier Science (holistic medicine

Interview With Beverly Rubik Ph.D.
Interviewed By Daniel Redwood D.C.
Beverly Rubik is a leading spokesperson for research in consciousness
studies, subtle energies, and alternative and complementary medicine,
frontier areas that challenge the dominant biomedical paradigm.
Trained as a biophysicist at the University of California at Berkeley (Ph.D.,
1979), she conducted postdoctoral research and supervised graduate student
research at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory while also serving as a faculty
member at San Francisco State University from 1979 to 1988. In l988 Dr.
Rubik relocated to Philadelphia to become founding director of the Center for
Frontier Sciences at Temple University. The Center facilitated global
information exchange, networking, and education on frontier issues of
science and medicine. Two important foci of the Center were
alternative/complementary medicine and the matter-mind-spirit
interrelationship. The Center was the first of its kind in the world linked to a
major university and spawned sister centers at the University of Guadalajara,
Mexico and the University of Milano, Italy. A journal, Frontier Perspectives,
was founded in 1990 by Rubik and was published and distributed
semi-annually to over 3,500 affiliates of the Center in 58 countries.
From 1992 to 1994, Dr. Rubik served as a member of the Advisory Panel to
the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Alternative Medicine and was
Panel Chair on Bioelectromagnetics. She presently serves on the editorial
board of several journals, including the Alternative Health Practitioner;
Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine; and the Journal of
Complementary Therapies in Medicine (UK). She is a member of the advisory
board of the Journal of Subtle Energies and the European Journal of Classical
Homeopathy. She also serves as an advisory board member to the John
Templeton Foundation and the Society for Scientific Exploration, and has
served the MacArthur Foundation as a nominator of fellows.
In late 1995 Dr. Rubik left Temple University to continue her work as an
independent scholar and consultant and founded the Institute for Frontier
Science, a nonprofit corporation. She is presently writing a book on the
frontiers of science and medicine. An anthology of her writings, Life at the
Edge of Science, was published in 1996. Rubik is also an advisor for
HealthWorld Online, a consultant for corporations involved in the nutrition
and bioelectromagnetic industries, lectures widely at universities and
conferences in the United States and abroad, and has a new appointment as
Visiting Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Arizona at
Tucson, in the integrative medicine program under Dr. Andrew Weil, and is
an adjunct faculty member at Union Institute, California Institute for Human
Science, and the University of Creation Spirituality.
In this interview with Dr. Daniel Redwood, Dr. Rubik discusses the limitations
of the mechanistic worldview underlying conventional medicine and the
emerging research that may constitute the basis of a more inclusive
paradigm. In particular, she feels it essential that health researchers and
practitioners consider the role of energy flows in living systems rather than
limiting their purview to molecular biochemistry. Moreover, she believes the
new paradigm must take into account recent research on the role of the
mind in healing (including healing at a distance).
DANIEL REDWOOD: You are trained as a biophysicist, but are best known as
a proponent of "frontier science." What is frontier science, and what led you
in this direction?
BEVERLY RUBIK: It's a term used to differentiate it from mainstream science,
which is most academic science, and also to differentiate it from fringe
science, which is very unconventional stuff. Frontier science is science that is
outside of the mainstream but has a significant number of scholars asking
questions within its domain. Topics such as consciousness studies and the
science underlying alternative medicine are examples of what I call frontier
science.
REDWOOD: What do you see as the primary features of the dominant
scientific paradigm, and how does frontier science challenge it?
RUBIK: The dominant biomedical or biological paradigm is where life is
viewed mainly as a bag of biomolecules, and a human being is a collection of
organs, tissues, and other things that it can be reduced to. In that paradigm,
the whole is considered the sum of its parts. It's also a mechanistic or
materialistic worldview. For example, in the dominant paradigm
consciousness is nothing but brain processes or the results of brain
processes. Some of its chief features are materialism, reductionism, and
fragmentation.
REDWOOD: What are the problems with that paradigm?
RUBIK: I don't think that a molecular view of life is sufficient for
understanding holistic medicine or the whole human being.
REDWOOD: What other factors need to be included to create a larger or
more applicable paradigm?
RUBIK: We need to consider energy flows in biology, the subtle energies that
can't really be reduced to molecules. A good example is acupuncture. I'm
aware that some features of acupuncture have been reduced to molecules,
such as the analgesic effects that have purportedly been explained in terms
of endorphin release. But the non-locality of acupuncture, and why
stimulating at the crown of the head might cure hemorrhoids, is beyond
anybody's comprehension from a molecular view. The specificity of that point
for hemorrhoids and other points on the body for other internal organs
certainly challenge it.
REDWOOD: Why do you think conventional medicine became so focused on
the biochemical, molecular level as opposed to the other possibilities?
RUBIK: I think it's pretty obvious. We have a pharmaceutical industry that
has grown up in the last 50 years that has been highly profitable and
somewhat successful in dealing with acute diseases. So the approach has
been to look for magic bullets in medicine. That approach works well with
acute diseases, but it does not work for chronic degenerative disease. So we
see the failure of that approach. Also, conventional medicine has failed to
treat the whole person. It tends to reduce the person to their diagnosis, to
the disease. In hospitals, people are even referred to as their disease [i.e. the
pancreatic cancer in room 205]. Increasingly, people are upset at this.
Patients want to be treated as whole persons, whose minds and spirits have
something to do with their healing.
There's a body of evidence from frontier science that leads us to believe that
mind is more than brain function, because conscious intention and prayer
operating over even long distances can have beneficial effects on people.
There have been experiments on distant healing and prayer, showing that
people can have effects on other people as well as on microorganisms. I
myself have conducted some of these experiments.
REDWOOD: Is the electromagnetic field of the body involved in human
health? Can there be external influences that impact upon it negatively and
thereby cause disease?
RUBIK: I think that both are true. We have some epidemiological evidence
that humans, especially children, placed in schools or homes around power
lines, have higher incidences of leukemia, lymphoma, and brain tumors.
There were also reports about ten years ago that pregnant women sleeping
under electric blankets (at least the older ones) had higher rates of
miscarriages and birth defects in their offspring. It's not so clear for adults,
however. The electro-pollution from our environment poses yet another
stressor on our lives. The way stressors act upon us is that one plus one plus
one may equal nine, and then you snap and get sick.
So it's very hard to point the finger to say bioelectromagnetics directly
causes a particular tumor. It's not so simple, unfortunately. Our bodily
systems don't work linearly; they're more like chaotic systems. They can
absorb stress, they're somewhat resilient, but they get to the point where
there's only so much stress they can take, and then they break. So the
causal relationship is not clear. It's not like classical mechanics and physics,
because once again, I'm considering these things from a new paradigm
perspective, not from naive, simple causality. Everybody would like simple
causal relations in medicine, but unfortunately, it's not so clear-cut. For
chronic degeneration, it's impossible to point to a single cause. This is also
true of electromagnetic influences "causing" disease.
I'm certain, however, that the evidence for the other side of the coin --
electromagnetic medicine -- is clearer. There are many devices on the
market, some of them FDA approved and most of them not, that can
enhance or accelerate healing, lift mood, and can help broken bones heal
faster.
REDWOOD: Why do you think they are not more widely used?
RUBIK: That's a puzzling question, especially when they're FDA approved.
For example, the bone healing device has been on the market for about 20
years is FDA approved and is used in only about 20 percent of the cases for
which its use is indicated. It's probably because doctors don't learn about the
possibilities of using them. They're focusing mainly on chemistry,
biochemistry, and drugs, and very little on physics, electro-magnetics, and
other ways of healing. So it's simply not within the scope of the dominant
biomedical paradigm. And I don't think doctors have teams of salesmen
pushing electromagnetic medical devices like they have drug salesmen
knocking on their doors.
REDWOOD: Do you have an opinion on the therapeutic use of magnets?
RUBIK: I do. I've seen some studies and I'm impressed that the anecdotal
reports I've heard all over the place are bearing true in clinical trials in terms
of pain relief and reduction of inflammation. I once sprained an ankle and
used some magnets obtained from an Oriental health shop in San Francisco.
I had some amazing results with the swelling going down quickly and the
pain disappearing. It's hard to say how the magnets work on the body. From
physics, there's the Hall Effect, whereby if you have charged particles in a
stream moving near a magnet, they will be altered in their flow because of
the magnetic field. This might explain changes in the flow of blood and
lymph, which contain a lot of charged proteins, ions, etc., and that may
explain why swelling, pain, and inflammation are reduced.
REDWOOD: What questions is complementary and alternative medicine
(CAM) posing that conventional medicine may have the most difficulty
answering?
RUBIK: Most people are using multiple modalities of CAM for a chronic
condition. That is, they may be taking dietary supplements, doing
biofeedback, going for acupuncture treatments, and practicing relaxation
techniques. These may be acting synergistically, and they may also be
tailored for the individuality of the patient. Conventional medicine uses more
standardized procedures, largely ignoring patient individuality. So, here we
see one major clash between conventional medicine and CAM: standardized
scientific approach vs. individualized treatment.
Secondly, in CAM, optimization of self-healing is the goal; whereas
conventional medicine throws out any self-healing response and maintains
that the cure is something contributed by the drug or other medical
intervention. What this means is that the gold-standard of conventional
medicine, the controlled clinical trial, is much less meaningful as a test for
CAM, since it does not address individuality of patients, nor does it respect
self-healing.
Daniel Redwood is a chiropractor, writer and musician who lives in Virginia
Beach, Virginia. He is the author of A Time to Heal: How to Reap the
Benefits of Holistic Health (A.R.E. Press), and is a member of the editorial
board of the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine.

Alternative Treatments for Chronic Pain

According to biomagnetic researcher William H. Philpott, M.D., of Choctaw,
Oklahoma, magnetic field therapy has many applications for the relief of
pain. "The negative magnetic field (traditional south seeking pole) provided
by magnetic therapy is ideal for relieving pain symptoms due to its ability to
quickly normalize the metabolic functions that create the conditions in the
first place," Dr. Philpott says. He points out that the negative magnetic field
does not act as a painkiller, or analgesic. Instead, it is a "normalizer of
disordered metabolic functions."
One of Dr. Philpott's patients was a woman in her seventies who came to
him suffering from a fibrous clot in her left groin that made climbing stairs
painful due to the way it impinged on the blood flow of her left leg. Dr.
Philpott had her sleep on a negative field magnetic pad with magnets also
placed at the crown of her head. After one year of treatment, the woman
was climbing stairs freely without pain and it was discovered upon further
examination that the clot, which had been present for over thirty years, was
healed despite the fact that it had never been treated directly.
Dean Bonlie, D.D.S., of Calgary, Alberta, Canada, a colleague of Dr. Philpott,
also employs magnetic field therapy to treat a variety of chronic pain
conditions. One of his patients was a retired member of the Canadian Armed
Forces who had been released from service on medical grounds for being 48
percent disabled due to three injuries to his lower back. His condition was so
severe that he had been operated on and received a spinal fusion. He had
also tried medication, heat treatments, chiropractic and physiotherapy, all
without long-term results.
Dr. Bonlie applied a four by six inch negative North Pole magnet directly on
the injured section of the man's back for twenty-five minutes and the man
experienced substantial pain reduction. Moreover, upon standing up, for the
first time in years, he did not experience the flash of burning pain down his
upper right leg that had previously been one of his symptoms. Dr. Bonlie
suggested he begin sleeping on a magnetic sleep pad and the man soon
confirmed that, after twenty-five years, he was finally free of his pain.
Source: Alternativemedicine.com

Magnet Therapy Reduces Pain in Post-polio Patients
A small magnet strapped to post-polio patients' most sensitive sore spots
reduced pain acutely in a study of 50 people at Baylor College of Medicine
and The Institute for Rehabilitation and Research (TIRR) in Houston. Results
of the double-blind study were published in the November issue of the
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
"The majority of patients in the study who received treatment with a magnet
reported a significant decrease in pain, and most of the patients who were
given a placebo, or inactive magnet, reported very little or no improvement,"
said principle investigator Dr. Carlos Vallbona. He is a professor of family and
community medicine and physical medicine and rehabilitation at Baylor and
director of the Post-Polio Clinic at TIRR.
Vallbona evaluated the magnet therapy in adults diagnosed with post-polio
syndrome who were experiencing arthritic pain in the joints or had
identifiable points of pain in their muscles. Thirty-nine women and 11 men
participated in the study. Most were in their 50's and had developed
post-polio syndrome during their 40s. All patients were asked to press on the
"trigger point" where they felt the severest pain and rank that pain on a scale
of one to 10, with 10 being the worst. The patients were then randomly
given and active or inactive magnet to strap against their trigger point for 45
minutes. After the magnets were removed, patients rated the intensity of
their pain again. Twenty-nine participants received an active magnet. Their
average score of pain was 9.6 before the treatment, and 4.4 after wearing
the magnet. The placebo group had an average pain score of 9.5 before
treatment, and 8.4 afterward.
The low-intensity magnets, less than a half-inch thick and slightly stronger
than refrigerator magnets, were available in four formats to accommodate
different areas of the body: a credit-card-size rectangle, a six-inch strip
almost two inches wide, a disc the size of a silver dollar and a disc the size of
a CD.
Seventy-six percent of the patients who had the active magnet reported a
decrease inpain, but only 19 percent of the patients treated with a placebo
felt an improvement," Vallbona said. None of the patients reported any side
effects from the treatment. "We do not have a clear explanation for the
significant and quick pain relief observed by the patients in our study,"
Vallbona said. "It's possible that the magnetic energy affects the pain
receptors in the joints or muscles or lowers the sensation of pain in the
brain."
The Baylor-TIRR study consisted of one treatment per patient and did not
evaluate how long the reported pain relief lasted. Vallbona said more
research is needed to determine whether magnet therapy should be
recommended as an alternative to the standard treatments for pain in
post-polio patients, such as physical therapy, support braces, muscle
relaxants, anti-inflammatory drugs and other medication.
Vallbona's co-principal investigator for the study was Dr. Carlton F.
Hazlewood, Baylor professor of molecular physiology and biophysics.
Source: Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030
Magnet Therapy for Fibromyalgia
Over the past decade, chronic pain sufferers have become avid consumers of
magnet therapy. Unfortunately, doctors and consumers alike know very little
about the clinical effects of these products.
In a new study published in the Journal of Alternative and Complementary
Medicine , researchers from the University of Virginia describe the largest and
most rigorous clinical trial to date of a magnet therapy used to treat patients
with chronic pain. Results were obtained from 94 patients with fibromyalgia,
a syndrome affecting 2 percent of the general population and responsible for
widespread pain, fatigue, fitful sleep and anxiety in sufferers.
Researchers randomly separated participants into five treatment groups to
test the effects of magnetic sleep pads on several measures of participants'
pain. Ratings of subjects' pain were measured over six months using the
Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire, pain intensity ratings, tender point
counts, and tender point pain intensity.
One group slept on pads that administered whole body therapy with a low
magnetic field. A second group received magnet therapy that varied in
intensity. A third group slept on the pads but received no magnetic therapy
while a fourth group were instructed to stick to their normal pain treatment
regimens with no magnetic therapy.
Ann Gill Taylor, R.N., from the University of Virginia, says, "We did find a
statistically significant difference in pain intensity reduction for one of the
active magnet pad groups. The two groups that slept on pads with active
magnets generally showed the greatest improvements in outcome scores of
pain intensity level, number of tender points on the body and functional
status after six months."
Alan P. Alfano, M.D., from the University of Virginia, says, "The results tell us
maybe this therapy works, and that maybe more research is justified."
However, he cautions, "You can't draw final conclusions from only one study."
Source: Ivanhoe Newswire, Feb. 27, 2001

Magnetic Healing Does it work?
by Tom Edward
The idea of magnetic energy or magnetic therapy is centuries old. Legend
has it that Cleopatra wore magnetic bracelets and necklaces for healing.
Though actively employed by medical doctors in America in the 1800's and
early 1900's, magnetic therapy eventually fell out of favor. But in the past
decade, magnetic therapy has become a 100 million dollar a year industry in
this country (magnetic therapy has long been used as an effective healing
tool in China, France, India and Japan, especially in repairing soft-tissue
injuries).
Studies on magnetic therapies in the Journal of Electro-and Magnetobiology
led some pioneering doctors in this country to experiment with magnets in
their practice. Their activities helped to standardize the use of some magnets,
the magnet size and strength-in treating various conditions. The length of
exposure to a magnet for healing certain ailments was also determined.
Because of their work we know which magnets work most efficiently-for
example, a magnet placed in one specific area of the body may not activate
the entire body's healing power, whereas sleeping on a magnetic bed pad
radiates a magnetic field that can penetrate evenly into every part of the
body and boost the entire immune system.
Through the growth of the magnetic therapy industry, different magnetic
products have been designed which can be useful in treating many
conditions. Some of the most commonly used magnetic products include the
previously mentioned magnetic mattress which can alleviate insomnia, joint
pain, muscle spasm and fibromyalgia. Magnetic inner soles for shoes are
often helpful in relieving painful inflammation resulting from bone spurs, and
for gout and to improve circulation. Magnetic pads and wraps which can be
secured to the lower back, knees and elbows are recommended for arthritic
joints, inflamed tendons and carpal tunnel syndrome.
WHAT IS A MAGNET?
In any material that is capable of being magnetized, there are groups of
atoms with their own magnetic orientation arranged haphazardly in the
material. When that material comes into contact with a strong magnetic field,
it rearranges the groups of atoms so that they are in alignment. As the
groups of atoms become aligned, they project a magnetic field.
Magnetic energy has different names. Some people call it energy or life force;
the Chinese call it Chi, the Indians know it as Prana. Whatever you choose to
call it, magnetic energy is a basic force of life-it pulses throughout the
galaxies and is found everywhere in nature.
HOW DO MAGNETS HEAL THE BODY?
Some researchers and doctors say that magnets don't actually heal the body.
Science knows that the human body is composed of numerous cells that
combine to form blood, tissues, bones and organs. These cells are in the
constant state of renewing themselves. Dr. Robert Becker, one of the leading
medical doctors who advocates the use of magnets in healing, believes that
the force which stimulates ,cellular growth and division is electromagnetic
energy.
He and other scientists contend that the charge on the cells of the body gets
depleted as cells perform their normal daily functions and that the body tries
to "recharge" the worn down cells by sending pulses of electromagnetic
energy from the brain through the nervous system.
James Souder, President of Norso Biomagnetics in Raleigh, North Carolina,
claims that studies performed on animals, and microscopic examination of
blood vessels, indicate that capillary blood flow is stimulated by the
movement of magnetic fields through tissue and is the dominant factor in
magnetic field therapy
.
IS ALL MAGNETIC ENERGY HEALING?
No.
As previously stated, magnetic energy is a basic force of nature and
necessary to all biological systems. Magnetic energy pulses from far-off
galaxies; the sun showers us with magnetic fields. Our earth, itself a huge
electromagnet with north and south poles, protects us from harmful cosmic
radiation. Cosmic radiation is so potent that it is capable of penetrating a 12
foot thick block of lead. But it cannot penetrate the earth's protective
magnetic shield.
There is increasing evidence that there are harmful effects from high
pulsating magnetic energy emitted from power transmission lines, TVs,
radios, computers, microwaves and myriad electric appliances. The ordinary
60 cycle alternating electromagnetic fields created by technology seem to
exert stress on the body's cellular level. It is reported that they can cause
memory loss, headaches, changes in heartbeat and blood chemistry.
Melatonin production can be reduced, and the brain's electromagnetic signals
to the cells can be blocked, diluting the body's disease-fighting ability.
Studies of exposure to alternating electromagnetic fields have shown
mutagenic effects, cancer cell promotion and a lowering of the body's pH to
a more acidic level.
In addition, energy deprivation caused by living in concrete buildings also
appears to have negative effects on the body. Dr. Kyochi Nakagawa, Director
of Isuzu Hospital in Tokyo says that "Magnetic Field Deficiency
Syndrome,"produces symptoms such as headaches, back and neck pains,
insomnia, heaviness of head and general lassitude.
USING MAGNETIC ENERGY BENEFICIALLY
While there are many applications claimed for magnetics from the reduction
of scar tissue to the treatment of internal organs, the predominant use of
magnetic devices is the treatment of musculoskeletal pain and myofacial
pain. While, as previously stated, the mechanism by which this pain relief
occurs is subject to much conjecture, there is a consensus that heightened
blood flow to the area under the footprint of the magnet is one of the
primary results of magnetic treatment. The results have been demonstrated
by both thermographic and nuclear medicine studies. There have also been
evidence of pain blocking phenomena in certain nerve fibers related to the
application of magnetic fields. And researchers have been able to
demonstrate changes in the electrical potential of nerve cells which raise the
threshold for transmitting pain impulses as a result of magnetic fields.
Some scientists subscribe to the "Hall Effect," which promotes the idea that
ions in the blood are manipulated by magnetic fields thus producing a
heating effect in the magnetized area and increasing blood circulation. James
Souder disagrees, and insists that "from a biological perspective, magnets
activate or turn on capillaries creating extra blood supply at the cellular level
as opposed to the older notion that magnets produce a local heating effect
to stimulate blood supply which is essentially what the Hall effect is about."
Dr. Dean Bonlie, Chairman of the Scientific Committee of the North American
Academy of Magnetic Therapy, explains that when the body is fatigued, a
"loss of static charge" on the body's cells causes a "clumping of red blood
cells." Through magnetic field supplementation, he says, chemical reactions
are enhanced, building up the charge on cell walls which cause the cells to
repel each other, reducing the clumping. With more surface area available, he
says, the oxygen-carrying capacity of the cells is increased which in turn
reinvigorates the body.
Another source of disagreement among magnetic therapy advocates is the
healing quality of negative and positive poles. Such prominent voices in the
magnetic therapy movement as Dr. Philpott say that "there are distinct and
opposite effects of the two separate magnetic poles on metabolic
function...in terms of biological response, the separate negative and positive
polarities are as distinctly opposite as day and night, hot and cold, and acid
and alkali." Dr. Philpott claims that his clinical observations show that
negative magnetic field energy should be used to fight infection, normalize
acid base balance, increase cellular oxygen and reduce fluid retention. He
claims that using positive magnetic field energy can actually decrease cellular
oxygen, accelerate microorganism growth and result in acidic metabolic
response. James Joseph, an independent research consultant for Optimal
Living Associates, agrees with Dr. Philpott.
Dr. Philpott concluded that positive magnetic field energy creates an acidic
condition in the tissue and negative magnetic field energy creates alkalinity
after performing before and after saliva tests on patients being treated with a
whole-body negative magnetic field. Dr. Bonlie, in a similar test, found that
patients who had tested over-alkaline in pre-testing became more acidic,
indicating that whole body treatment with a negative magnetic field brings
normalcy from either end of the spectrum. Dr. Bonlie claimed that this
happened because of "simple rules of physics." "When an atom is placed in
an increased magnetic field," says Dr. Bonlie, "the charge is increased on the
atom for a fraction of a second. This increase in energy is expressed by an
increase in the velocity of some of the orbiting electrons and protons. In the
case of paired electrons, one is sped up and the other slowed down. This
imbalance causes a phenomenon known in physics as precession (wobble).
This is much like increased molecular action which takes place from heating a
solution to make a chemical reaction take place. Precession causes electron
transfer which is the basis of all chemical reactions in the body. In summary,
when the magnetic field is increased in which the atoms of the body exist,
body chemistry is enhanced, assisting it in normalcy which improves body
performance and healing."
While the physics of magnetic energy is debated, its benefits are being
experienced by people around the country. Dr. Ronald Lawrence of Agoura
Hills, California asserts that magnets have been extremely effective in the
control of arthritic pain in many of his patients. Dee Massengale, an exercise
physiologist in Atlanta, Georgia suffering with fibromyaglia since 1982, says
that of all the therapies she's tried magnetic devices have been one of the
most valuable tools for pain management.
In one of our own experiments, Anne Ziselman of Hollywood, Florida slept
with magnet wraps strapped above her kneecap. She reported a reduction of
arthritic swelling and a softening of the inflammation after four nights of use.
"Sometimes the swelling goes away by itself, but the only times my knee has
softened was when I had a cortisone shot," said Mrs. Ziselman.

GETTING STARTED WITH MAGNETIC THERAPY
First some caveats. Magnets are not meant to be used with pacemakers or
automatic internal defibrillators. Nor in cases of pregnancy.
There are some other basics to know about magnets. To begin with the
power of a magnet. The strength of a magnet is measured by a gauss meter
in gauss units power by the iron weight it can lift (the term gauss denotes
the electromagnetic unit of magnetic flux density equal to one maxwell per
square centimeter). For example, a magnet that can lift two pounds of iron
weight has 530-600 gauss power; five pounds of iron weight has 900-1250
power; 25 pounds has 2500 gauss power. The magnet's strength is
determined by its size, weight and the type of materiaI it is made of.
Magnetic therapists have general guidelines for magnetic use. Magnets with
1000 to 3000 gauss power are recommended for chronic diseases like
rheumatism, paralysis, backache and injury to large muscles. More delicate
parts of the body such as eyes or ears require less gauss power of around
500. 500 gauss should also be employed when treating children.
The depth of penetration of a magnetic field into the body is another
important factor in magnetic healing and is in direct relationship to the size
of the magnet as well as its gauss power. A magnet can have a strength of
over 10,000 gauss but if it is small it might only penetrate an inch or two
into the body. But a magnet of 4x6 and 1000 gauss can penetrate the body
completely (magnetic energy has not been fully standardized in terms of
application for all diseases, but a rule of thumb for use established by the
Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare is a minimum of 500 gauss for any
significant illness).
Drinking magnetically treated water is another way to reap the benefits of
magnetic energy. Magnetically treated water is relaxing to the body. Put an
8-ounce glass of water on the negative pole of a magnet for five minutes or
longer and drink twice a day as a general preventative.
Lastly, scientists have been recording the strength of the earth's magnetic
field over the past 158 years and they claim that its magnetic field, and
subsequently the intake of magnetic energy into our bodies, has been
reduced by more than 8% in that time (this rate of decline has been verified
by measurement of the decrease of north-south orientation of magnetite
crystals in deposits in volcanic flows and sediments that date hack as far as
4,000 years). As the human body is electromagnetic by design composed of
charged particles such as atoms and ions-advocates of magnetic therapy say
that chemical and electrical actions of the body can be strengthened by
exposure to the right kind of magnetic fields.
The range of healing using magnetic energy has been found effective in
treating complaints from acne to asthma, but knowing the proper gauss
strength, how and where to place a magnet on the body and the duration of
exposure to magnetic energy are variables that a trained practitioner would
know best. Keep an open mind as you explore this alternative therapy, but
be practical and find a therapist who can help you to maximize its benefits
rapidly and safely.
Source: Newlife, July 1996

Biomagnetic Therapy
By Dr. Michael Tierra L.AC., O.M.D.
Magnetic energy is a structuring force of the universe. As such, it is a
reflection of the order that causes the infinite stars and planets throughout
the galaxies to revolve and spin at incredible velocities while remaining in
their respective orbits. As one of the four fundamental forces of nature along
with gravity, nuclear energy and radioactivity, electromagnetism is equivalent
in definition to the Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) concept of 'Qi', or the
East Indian Ayurvedic definition of 'Prana'. These concepts are what many in
the West, regard as the 'life force'.
Personally, I have had long occasion to experiment and use magnets
beginning with myself and then extending to family, friends, students and
patients. Two particular occasions on myself were most convincing. Both
were soft tissue injuries, one to my elbow and the other, a ligament injury of
my knee, which I will describe further on. The elbow pain stemmed from an
unknown cause, perhaps an injury or strain. It had persisted for at least 2
weeks during that time I tried acupuncture and herbal treatments, which
offered only minor temporary relief. As is well known, soft tissue injuries can
take some time for repair. It would be most helpful, however, if during that
time, there was a simple, non-invasive method to hasten the healing and
relieve the pain.
I decided to experiment using magnets to treat the problem. While I had
previously heard of magnet therapy, basically that there was a difference
therapeutically between the magnet's North and South polarities, I had no
previous experience or further knowledge of their use. When I taped a small
1000 Gauss acuband magnet directly on the skin over the 'trigger' point or
center of the pain in my arm. I was amazed to find that the pain almost
completely disappeared within 5 minutes. I decided to experiment further,
first by removing and reapplying the magnet a few times. Each time the pain
returned when the magnet was removed and all but completely disappeared
again when reapplied. I then experimented by turning the magnet over to
change its polarity from North, which is cooling and dispersing, to South,
which is heating and building. I discovered that when the South side of the
magnet was against the skin, the pain intensified and by reversing the
magnet to North, it was alleviated.
Since that time, I have been intrigued with the therapeutic possibilities of
bio-magnetic therapy. However, I still had no idea whether the magnet
treatment to my arm was only symptomatic or could eventually promote
complete healing. Further, I found that there were discrepancies both in print
and from various distributors concerning the importance and definition of the
North and South sides of a magnet. Despite my confusion, I tentatively
began to use magnets on my patients. Because, however, I had such an
unsure grasp of any basic theoretical or practical methodology, my results
were inconclusive.
I say all this because there may be others who, like myself, felt or presently
feel unsure about the value and results of an experience of biomagnetic
therapy. Through my example they may appreciate a further corroboration
by another who has become fully convinced that biomagnetic therapy may
well be one of the safest and most powerful natural healing methods,
especially for the relief of pain ever discovered by humankind.
My interest in magnets was rekindled a few years later when I had a crippling
soft tissue injury to the medial aspect of my right knee. It was particularly
debilitating because there were few positions either standing, sitting or
reclining that could provide relief. Having nearly all but forgotten about my
previous experience with the magnets on my elbow, I began by using
acupuncture, moxabustion (heat applied to specific acupuncture points) and
herbal poultices, fomentations and liniments. Everything helped but I still
could barely walk or find a comfortable position to either sit or recline.
I certainly was not looking forward to having to stand and be present at a
forthcoming natural products trade show that included a promised diversion
to my excited young son to a nearby entertainment park. In desperation I
remembered the all-but-forgotten magnets that I stored in a cupboard near
my bed. I systematically applied the North magnets to the trigger points
located near the site of pain around my knee. Estimating what meridians
were involved, I positioned the South magnets further up the femur and hip
on the Gall Bladder and Bladder Meridians. I found, however, that it was the
local application of the North magnets around the knee that was most
effective. Within two hours after their application, the pain was 95% gone.
Again, I decided to conduct the same experiments on my knee that I had
done a few years previous on my elbow pain, by removing and reapplying
them, changing the magnets to irrelevant locations and reversing their
polarity. My previous findings were absolutely corroborated. I eventually
discovered that I needed to wear the magnets on the trigger points around
my knee nearly continuously for about two months before the problem
became sufficiently stabilized and resolved.
Again, I decided to conduct the same experiments on my knee that I had
done a few years previous on my elbow pain, by removing and reapplying
them, changing the magnets to irrelevant locations and reversing their
polarity. My previous findings were absolutely corroborated. I eventually
discovered that I needed to wear the magnets on the trigger points around
my knee nearly continuously for about two months before the problem
became sufficiently stabilized and resolved.
After this second powerful experience with bio-magnetic therapy, I decided
to apply magnets on all my patients along with the acupuncture, dietary and
herbal therapy that was part of my normal practice. I wanted to discover for
myself the range of their effectiveness for a wide variety of complaints. Since
that time, I have found biomagnetic therapy to be around 90% effective for
the relief of pains and conditions caused by inflammation. For examples, a
woman with diagnosed symptoms of colitis, had tried many forms of
conventional and non-conventional treatment over the year previous but was
relieved with the application of magnets to her lower abdomen within a
week. Another man with arthritis in his hands and fingers with only minimal
response from acupuncture and herbal therapy used magnetic balls to relieve
and eventually remedy his condition completely. Similarly, another man had
encroaching stiffness in his fingers that was threatening to impair his main
love, playing the guitar. He also found the results he was seeking with the
use of magnetic balls. As a pianist, I can only imagine the benefit these
simply magnetic balls could be to the many who have suffered injury from
repetitive use or wrong playing.
Everyone, who had acute or chronic lower back, elbow or knee problems
found relief and in many cases, complete recovery from the local application
of magnets. Patients with asthma, found that the application of magnets to
their upper back or chest would provide them the relief they desperately
needed without any further external medication. The list goes on to include
patients with upper respiratory allergies, gastro-intestinal and digestive
complaints, migraine headaches -- all were relieved with the use of magnets
-- and the list of conditions continues to expand. Now with the expanded
methods of application using magnetized water, magnetized oils, magnetic
mattresses and mattress pads, jewelry and so forth, I am convinced that
there is no condition that bio-magnetic therapy would not be at least helpful.
Because of my experience with traditional Eastern systems of medicine,
including Traditional Chinese Medical (TCM) and East Indian Ayurvedic
medicine, I was able to tangibly experience the fundamental energetic basis
of healing with magnets described in various traditional healing systems
around the world. I could tangibly understand that the North facing side of a
magnet was equivalent in energy to the definition in TCM of Yin, or in
Ayurveda of Shakti energy. The South facing side was equivalent to TCM
Yang, or Ayurvedic Shiva energy. I also understood that the relative strength
of a magnet determined whether it was to be used as an important energetic
nutrient when in low strength (under 1000 gauss), or a high powered
therapeutic tool in high strength (over 3000 gauss) that should be used with
due respect. Essentially, like other forms of natural healing energy, if
reasonably used, magnets are very forgiving. Except for the obvious
contraindications noted, it is rare that anyone would experience anything
more than a minor discomfort or aggravation usually caused by using
magnetics that are too strong, applying the wrong North-South polarity for a
given area or generally an overexposure to a strong magnetic field. If, for
instance, one misapplies them over a wrong area, uses the wrong polarity or
uses magnets that are inappropriately too strong, there may be a period of
minor aggravation and discomfort that is easily remedied as soon as they are
appropriately changed or removed. As with herbs, acupuncture and all other
systems of natural healing, trial and error is a valid approach to biomagnetic
therapy.
Science recognizes a close relationship between electricity and magnetism. In
1820, Hans Oersted of Denmark discovered a direct relationship between
electricity and magnetism by showing that an electric current flowing in a
wire caused a nearby compass needle to be deflected. Following the
discoveries of Oersted, Ampere, the 18th century physicist whose notable
achievements were germinal to the harnessing of electrical energy,
discovered a quantitative relationship between the strength of an electric
current with the magnetic field it creates (Ampere's theorem). Noting the
close relationship between electricity and magnetism, he described
magnetism as "electricity thrown into curves".
Just as the stars and planets revolve in galactical orbits, each atom has a
nucleus around which spins various positively charged protons and negatively
charged electrons that in turn generate a magnetic field. To reiterate, health
represents a balance of these positive and negative forces described in TCM
as Yin and Yang, in Ayurvedic medicine as 'Shiva' and 'Shakti', and in
Western physiology as the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems.
The current theory of 'free radicals' as the cause of degenerative diseases
and aging, is based on the concept of a negatively charged electron spinning
out of their orbit, invading another cell which in turn causes a cellular
disruption that sends other subatomic particles off their respective orbits.
This results in cellular chaos. Biomagnetic healing is able to passively provide
a stimulus for the restoration of balance at a subatomic level and offset the
devastating domino-effect of harmful free radicals.
Because every atom generates an electromagnetic (EM) field, we, along with
all of nature, are imbued with the power of electromagnetism. It is also
possible for us to channel our innate positive electromagnetic energy for
healing both ourselves and others.
Stressing the importance of electromagnetism, Einstein said, "we may
therefore regard matter as being constituted by the regions of space in which
the field is extremely intense .....There is no place in this new kind of physics
both for the field and matter, for the field is the only reality." (Our italics)
The mystic founder of Theosophy, Madame Blavatsky states similarly in
different terms when she describes: "Matter is spirit at its lowest level and
spirit is matter at its highest level."
It is said that what may be described as matter, the nucleus of an atom, is
so infinitesimal that if we were to gather all the nuclei of a human body, it
would be no larger than a period at the end of a sentence. Thus, modern
physics theorizes that what we call matter may not be particles at all, but the
presence of an impenetrable electro-magnetic field.
Life, comprised of a complex chain of bio-chemical and physiological
processes is activated and animated by an invisible bio-magnetic force.
Apropos of this, Dr. F.K. Bellokossy of Denver Colorado, described life as an
"infinitely intelligent interaction of electro-magnetic energies carried by
chemical substances."
Modern medicine has come to depend upon such high tech diagnostic
procedures as the (ECG) electro-cardiogram, the (EEG)
electroencephalogram, the (EMG) electromyogram to measure the electrical
activity in the heart, the cerebral cortex and the skeletal muscles respectively.
If there were no electrical energy in the body, such tests would not be
possible.
From the perspective of bio-magnetics, health is based upon the individual
cells of the body vibrating at a characteristic normal frequency. Disease, on
the other hand, represents an abnormal change in cellular vibration. The
therapeutic application of magnets and herbs, at the deepest level, is based
on the principle of restoring normal cellular vibration.
This understanding should make magnetic therapy very accessible to those
who have an energetic approach to treatment and it would include
Traditional herbalism, TCM, Ayurveda and some Western 'holistically' oriented
mind-body therapies.

Healing Power of Magnets
By Richard Dean Jenkins
Magnetic fields work much more quickly and effectively than heat, infrared
light, anti-inflammatory drugs, trigger-point injections or microwave
diathermy. It's likely to be four or six months before an injured skier or other
athlete is back in play again from the conventional treatment of ice, followed
by heat to reduce swelling. Heat alone will not stimulate therapeutic repair of
injured tissue or muscle. An ample supply of nutrient-rich blood is needed.
Healing requires resumption of normal blood flow to the injured site, not
simply pain relief. In magnetic therapy, knee braces can be removed more
quickly; weightlifters can reduce lower back pain; sciatica (inflammation of
sciatic nerve running down the hip and thigh) and carpal tunnel syndrome
can be relieved.
Osteopathic physician Sanford Paul, Mercerville NJ, is convinced of the
effectiveness of magnetic therapy. "Though I use conventional medical
methods I find that the application of biomagnets has helped in some
difficult traumatic-injury cases. I feel that biomagnets should be part of the
total armamentarium of future physicians," he says. However, "Unless used
properly, their value is no greater than that of a regular magnet."
Orthopedic chiropractor Kurt Vreeland, White River Junction, Vermont,
physician for the U.S. Olympic ski jumping team, uses magnets for ski and
other injuries. "I have used magnets with good results on everything from
rotator cuff injuries to what they used to call in football 'hip-pointer'.
Source: Fitness Magazine, February 1992

Golfers Can Now Benefit From the Amazing Therapeutic Power of
Magnets
By Martin Meyer, Herbologist - Nutritionist
You can obtain more energy, enhance your ability to focus and relieve
chronic pain just by applying a magnetic bracelet or magnetic wrap. Are you
tired of daily pain killers for knee pain, neck pain, sciatica, arthritis, bursitis,
muscle pain, shoulder pain, tennis elbow, back pain. Then why not try
magnetic therapy? The newest neodymium rare earth permanent magnets
have helped millions and are used worldwide.
A powerful magnet smaller than a penny placed near a pain or injury may do
wonders for you and relieve your pain as many have experienced. The
magnetic field produced by permanent magnets is a safe natural energy
source. There are no known harmful exposure levels and no limitations by
Governmental agencies. All Magnet Force magnets are of the highest energy
neodymium rare earth and are identified, differentiating between south pole
and north pole.
SINCE THE EGYPTIANS
The science and use of Magnetic Therapy has been known ever since
Egyptian times, and has been continuously practiced all over the world.
Because many Americans have been fed up with the ever burdening cost of
medical care and its sometimes failures, it has forced them to look for
alternative therapies for their aches and pains. A host of therapies have
surfaced some old, some new. Chiropractic, massage, acupuncture, herbal,
vitamins, biofeedback, homeopathy, and permanent magnetic are just a few
therapies offered. Magnetic therapy has the most appeal, because of its
effectiveness. It is a natural therapy, non toxic, no pills, no needles, no
salves, no side effects and most important, a one time low cost for everyone.
Magnetic therapy, when coupled with professional therapy, proper nutrition
and exercise, has proven to be the most effective and economical. Magnets
can be used over and over, and will last for years.
BIOMAGNETISM IN THE HUMAN BODY
Biomagnetism works in the human body through the circulatory system, the
nervous system and the endocrine system. Magnetism is continuously
penetrating every known particle, right down to the single cell. Its ordering
effect on living systems arise from the fact that magnetism is a blueprint of
life itself. All known energies have, as a base, this electromagnetic field. The
latest research indicates that magnetism has a very significant beneficial
biological effect on human beings.
Blood contains ferrous hemoglobin (iron) that functions as a carrier of
oxygen and carbon dioxide. As blood circulates the lungs, fully magnetized
ferrous hemoglobin is able to transport more oxygen to cell tissue as well as
taking more carbon dioxide waste from the cell back to the lungs for
removal. This means more energy and less fatigue as tissue cells and internal
organs stay substantially healthier. Also golfers report an energy reserve
allowing their play on the 18th hole to match first tee energy, this in turn
enables greater concentration and execution for your game. Magnetic
bracelets and wraps recharge the body's magnetism. The body, like the
earth, is a biomagnetic unit that vibrates at approximately 7.9 cycles per
second direct current. Our electric devices, TV, computers, lights, appliances
etc. vibrate at 60 cycles per second alternating current. Magnetic devices
serve to balance the body and counter the deleterious excitement of the 60
cycle per second vibration.
Dr. Nakagawa, of Isuzu Hospital in Tokyo Japan, has identified a malady that
he calls "Magnetic Deficiency Syndrome". It is believed that we call this
problem Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

REACHING OUTER SPACE
Magnets are used in spacecraft to protect the astronauts from bone loss,
disorientation, and other magnetic deficiencies. Magnetic Therapy is the
cutting edge of a healing, health, energy boom that is sure to revolutionize
the way we treat our bodies. Magnets will not only help your golf game it
could also improve the length and quality of your life and that of your loved
ones.
Source: Long Island Golfer Magazine, October 1997
Life Begins At 50 For Players on Mature Tour
GOLF By Ken Fidlin
LANCASTER - The promotional slogan invites us to come on out and "Walk
With A legend." It doesn't even scratch the surface.
At Hamilton Golf and Country Club this week, you can indeed walk with a
legend. You can even talk with a legend. You can get a legend's autograph
without getting your head bitten off. You can share a joke with a legend.
You might even get a golf lesson from a legend. Or free medical advice from
a legend. There is no end to what a legend can do to enhance your day on
one of Canadian golf's most spectacular pieces of real estate.
The players on the PGA Seniors Tour who will compete in the du Maurier
Champions tournament tomorrow through Sunday are different from any
group of professional athletes you'll ever find. For starters, most of them
don't take themselves too seriously. Probably comes with having grandkids.
For example, as lee Trevino and DeWit Weaver prepared to hit their tee shots
on the ninth hole of a practice round yesterday, a toddler appeared from the
gallery and was immediately swept into Grandpa Trevino's arms. A photo
opportunity for the astounded father. When Trevino realized it was a video
camera in dad's hands, well, being the Merry Mex, he had to spin a yarn. So
he talked about attending a granddaughter's important piano recital, how he
photographed the event, then taped over the proud moment.
These for the most part are men who long ago learned that the world
doesn't owe them a living. In fact some of the most successful seniors have
turned out to be guys whose PGA careers were less than stellar. Nobody fits
that mold more precisely than Jim Colbert, currently the king of the tour. He
led in money last year and continues to do so this year.
His emergence from a middle-of-the-pack PGA career to star status as a
senior resulted from two factors: magnets and equipment. Equipment, we
can understand. But magnets?
Ever since he was 15 years old, Colbert has been plagued by painful disc
degeneration in his lower back. Several years ago, a fellow pro named Mickey
Gallagher told him about a doctor who was getting amazing results with back
problems by using magnets. Colbert tried it and the rest is history
"During the last three years, any day I wanted to play golf, I could," he said.
That was something entirely new for me."  He has a special mattress made
of magnets. He tapes magnets to key areas on his back and neck. Other
touring pros like Tom Weiskopf and Bob Murphy have used varying forms of
the therapy for pain and arthritis control. "For a lot of years there were a lot
of days when I just couldn't play he cause of the back pain," Colbert said.
"And on the days that I could, I was so full of medicine and muscle relaxants
that I couldn't score anyway."
Magnets. Hey, we don't make this stuff up. There is an understanding from
these old pros who ply their trade from week to week on the Mature Tour
that the world does not necessarily revolve around them. They have come to
Hamilton and are of one voice in praise of the golf course.
"You won't hear anything but raves from anyone this week," Weaver said. "If
anyone says this isn't the nicest golf course we've played all year, I'd like to
know which one he's thinking of." "We don't get to play many of these
special old courses," Colbert said. "You can't buy or build what 100 years of
natural evolution can bring."
"Can we play here the rest of the year?" Trevino asked. "You should see
some of the ranches we play on."
Imagine that. A professional athlete, appreciative that he has been invited
into our midst. A senior event on Canadian soil would be incomplete without
a visit from our own legend, Moe Norman. Trevino himself has called
Norman the finest striker of the golf ball ever, and hundreds were crowded
around Norman, including many of the touring pros on the range yesterday
for one of his famous clinics. Ho-hum, Moe hit 'em straight again.
I've heard people say that life begins at 50 and never once considered that it
could be true. Until you stop and consider Colbert and many of his buddies.
"We always ask ourselves if we could lock in at a certain age, what would it
be," Colbert said. "For me, it would be my early 50's, the way my life is
going. The most fun I've had to date has been Senior Circuit."
Take a walk with a legend and you might begin to believe it.
Source: The Financial Post, Wed. June 12, 1996 Section: SPORTS

Athletes Put Their Faith in Power of Magnets
By Sal Ruibal
Contributing: Jim Lassiter
Denver Broncos linebacker Bill Romanowski KO's quarterbacks, then sleeps
like a baby on a magnetic mattress pad. Yankees pitcher Hideki Irabu throws
a wicked split-finger fastball with dozens of magnets stuck to his body.
Senior PGA Tour golfer Jim Colbert swings for the greens with dollar
bill-sized magnets strapped to his lower back.
Magnetic therapy is the hottest trend among professional athletes. But the
idea of using magnetic fields to increase blood circulation in injured tissue
and encourage healing by stimulating the nervous system goes back
thousands of years to ancient Greece and Egypt. The original Olympic
athletes might have used magnets. And in the same way that today's top
athletes influence fashion and language, their eagerness to embrace
alternative healing techniques is influencing the public: U.S. consumers will
spend more than $500 million this year on magnetic pads, bracelets, shoe
inserts, back wraps and seat cushions, the magnet companies say. The trend
is so lucrative, athletes are adding brand-name magnets to their list of
endorsements, along with sneakers and soda pops.
Romanowski began using magnets seven years ago while a member of the
49ers but didn't take them seriously. The team trainer had recommended
them, but it was not until Romanowski had off season surgery that he
adopted the idea. "I'm a believer, definitely," he says. "The first time I tried
them, I got pain relief. It wasn't mental. I know it wasn't mental because I
know my body." Because they know their bodies, it's natural that top
athletes would be attracted to alternative therapies, says Dinnie Pearson, a
Cranial-Sacral therapist with the Mind/Body Center in King of Prussia, Pa.
"Athletes use a lot of mental imagery, visualizing the correct muscle
movements for their sport," Pearson says. "They can use that same powerful
tool for healing, contacting injured areas to focus on that tissue to help it in
the natural healing process." They had an acupuncturist travel with the team
earlier this year. The team credits the therapy with helping second baseman
Quilvio Veras get over hamstring problems. "I think it's great," Towers says.
"I know it worked on me. It blocks the nerve endings and takes the pain
away. It's very relaxing. I'd go back."
Not understanding how an alternative therapy works is no roadblock for
jocks in search of relief, but it can be for the federal government. Magnetic
therapy has not been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration,
but the National Institutes of Health are investigating the phenomenon.
The NIH Office of Alternative Medicine, which was created only five years
ago, is funding a study of magnetic therapy at the University of Virginia's
School of Nursing. Broncos safety Steve Atwater isn't waiting for the
scientists to bless his magnets. "I don't know what it is, but it works," the
30-year-old, seven-time Pro Bowl player says. "I figure it can't hurt me, and
it may help me."
Source: USA Today, Wed., Aug. 20, 1997 Section: SPORTS