its concept of the elimination of toxins and harmonization.
The specific and impressive potential of the bioresonance therapy to treat allergies will be covered extensively in this book. Before going into detail, I would like to present a general overview of the method, its technique, and its manifold possibilities.
The technical aspect of the therapy is easy and in no way additionally stresses the patient. At least two electrodes, which are connected to the therapy device via cables, are placed on the patient's body. One of these cables is the input cable, usually black. It is attached to the input beaker of the device and transmits the patient's frequency patterns to the device. A second cable, the output cable (always red to avoid confusion), returns modulated therapeutic frequency patterns (signals inverted in the device or via other methods) to the patient via the output electrode (Fig. 1.2)
Electrodes come in all shapes, sizes, and forms. Each can be placed on various parts of the body. In our practice it is customary to run a basic therapy on each patient, regardless of diagnosis and treatment indication. This serves to collect the complete spectrum of a patient's information. Everyone familiar with acupuncture knows that all acupuncture meridians start or end at the hands or feet. Therefore the basic therapy usually uses hand and/or feet electrodes. Electrodes can basically be simple conducting metal plates. The development of multicoated electrodes, which use a permanent magnetic field and act like antennae, subsequently have a deep-reaching effect (BICOM electrodes, Regumed, Inc.). They have brought about significant improvement. These magnetic electrodes are flat and come in different sizes. Flexible electrodes for uneven body parts (including the head) have proven rather useful as well.
Fig. 1.2 Schematic representation of the bioresonance therapy. The patient's own frequencies are transmitted to the therapy device via cables where they are electronically modulated (i.e. inverted) and are returned to the patient as therapeutic frequency patterns.
As children are generally unable to keep their feet still, we almost always use hand electrodes. Commonly used electrodes are the brass cylinder electrodes, as is customary in electro-acupuncture (Fig. 1.3). For babies (in their mother's or father's lap), we tend to use clamp electrodes as used in electrocardiography (Fig. 1.4).
Following the basic therapy that primarily aims at altering and bringing the entire body into balance, the second step primarily directs treatment to the focal infection. Various specialized electrodes are available for this localized therapy. When treating children we found the so-called gold-finger electrode with its rounded tip most useful. It is suitable for point and surface therapy. The patients also seem to like it a lot (Figs. 1.5–7).
Special roller or point electrodes can also be used for these indications. A magnetic depth probe is used when a particularly deep-reaching effect is required (Fig. 1.8).
While the basic therapy aims to improve the patient's general condition, subsequent therapies aim to register the primary and disruptive oscillations with as much detail as possible and then address them. It is possible to treat painful areas or cramps directly or via acupuncture points and meridians. Other proven indications of the bioresonance therapy are focal infections, scar tissue, and interferences.
Placement of the electrodes depends upon the location and the type of illness. In the case of acute inflammations, the body's entire frequency spectrum is fed to the input of the device via hand or feet electrodes. The output leads to the area of inflammation. In case of chronic degenerative illnesses, the problematic area is interfaced to the input. The output is connected to the entire body via a surface electrode. This procedure, recommended by Morell more than 10 years ago, takes into consideration the basic differences as to how an organism reacts. This distinction is no longer an issue with newer bioresonance devices. They collect the information from the problematic area and carry it via a magnetic mat to the points of the bladder meridian along the back (BICOM 2000, Regumed, Inc.).
Fig. 1.3 Applied basic therapy using two hand-held electrodes. The pathological fluid (i.e. cotton swab with saliva, nasal discharge, ear fluid, throat swab) is placed in the input beaker of the BICOM device.
Fig. 1.4 ECG clamp electrodes are used for this basic therapy on a baby.
If possible, the basic therapy should already include the body's own corresponding “pathological fluid.” At the least, it should be part of any subsequent therapies. We use cotton swabs with the patient's saliva, tonsil secretions, nasal discharge, puss, urine, etc. To avoid contamination of the electrode, the cotton swab is placed in a small bag of parchment paper in a beaker that is plastic on the inside, brass on the outside. It is attached to the input of the therapy device.
Using the body's own fluids, secretions or excretions, in the input of the device has proven effective and illustrates the therapy principle of physical oscillations to a lay person. This method illustrates to the patient the particular pathological portion that is part of the body's own complex frequency spectrum (received via the input cable). Consequently, the therapy signal also reflects this ratio more clearly.
Fig. 1.5 Localized therapy using the gold-finger electrode applied around the nose.
Fig. 1.6 Local therapy for otitis: gold-finger electrode in the auditory canal, ear fluid in the beaker electrode connected to the input of the BICOM device.
Fig. 1.7 Therapy for bronchial asthma at the acupuncture point Bladder 13 (corresponds to the lung).
Fig. 1.8 Treating bronchial asthma using magnetic depth probe (point cv 17).
Theoretically a very interesting phenomenon, and one commonly used within bioresonance therapy, is the possibility to charge liquids with physical information.
Early on the developers thought of storing therapy signals, fed to the patient via the output cable of the device, in some way in order to extend the therapy's effect over a longer period of time. It turned out that water's ability to carry information was ideal for this purpose. Due to particular physical properties, water molecules are able to build “clusters” and in this way store electromagnetic information. Informational input via the patient and processed in the device is “charged” onto (that is to say stored in) a vial containing water or a water-based solution (usually diluted alcohol) that is connected to the output of the bioresonance therapy device.
This liquid now contains the patient's vibrational information used during the therapy for remote use. The patient can take it drop by drop on days when he/she is not receiving therapy. According to physical law, other carrier substances can be charged with this vibrational information, for example ferrite or iron alloys. The BICOM 2000 uses BICOM chips made from stainless steel, which the patient can attach to a body reflex zone correlating to the therapy.
Later, we will address dosage issues for allergy therapy in greater detail. For now, I would just like to point out that these drops—in no way chemically altered, which an analysis can confirm—have been transformed into a highly effective therapeutic substance for the patient.
Veterinary medicine favors this option and uses it routinely when the application of therapy encounters technical problems. Animals respond particularly well to bioresonance therapy. In many cases a single therapy session followed