You may want to consider a magpulser or if you live near a Papimi clinic get 
some treatments. There is a lot of research going on right now into the 
benefits of magnetic energy. This article from the NY Times was in the 
magpulser forum a few days ago. Very encouraging.


 Laws of attraction

Doctors used to dismiss magnetic therapy as ancient quackery. Until
they discovered that it really can help wounds to heal faster, treat
epilepsy and even ease depression

By Alex Murray
18 January 2005 NEW YORK TIMES


Is it possible that the magnetic therapy used by physicians in
ancient Egypt to keep their young queen healthy does have a positive
effect? Not so long ago, magnetic therapy was pretty much shunned by
mainstream medicine, dismissed as ineffective and, even worse,
condemned as quackery. Any benefits that it might have, said the
sceptics, could be explained by the placebo effect: patients believed
that it worked, ergo it did.

But there is now mounting evidence that magnetic therapy can be
effective. More than 300 research teams around the world, at
institutions as prestigious and mainstream as Imperial College
London, and California, Yale and Harvard universities, have found
evidence of positive effects.

It has been shown to work in conditions as diverse as arthritis,
depression, incontinence, wound healing, epilepsy and spinal
injuries, and is being investigated as a treatment for many more,
including cancer, migraine and MS. It can even, it is suggested, help
to straighten crooked teeth, encourage bone to grow and help people
who hear voices but have not responded to drug treatments.

Back in ancient Egyptian times and beyond, it is likely that the
original idea of magnet therapy stemmed from the unusual effects of
natural stones. That is almost certainly why Cleopatra wore a
naturally magnetic lodestone on her forehead to slow down the ageing
process.

Before and since, many cultures have used magnetic therapy, and
although it has always been part of the treatment portfolio of
alternative medicine, it has remained largely at the margins of
mainstream medicine because of the lack of good scientific evidence
that it works. Over the years, one or two good studies have surfaced
hinting that something might be happening due to magnetic therapy,
but the real turning point came when gold-standard, double-blind
clinical trials, in which no one knows who is being treated with
what, began to support some of the earlier claims.

There are two main ways of using magnets in medicine. The hi-tech way
is magnetic stimulation of the brain, while the more traditional
technique uses others types of magnet to stimulate specific areas of
the body. There is now evidence that both approaches work in
different ways for different conditions.

One of the landmark studies for the hi-tech way has come out of the
Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, which showed that magnetic
stimulation of the brain eases severe depression. After two weeks of
treatment, half of the patients showed a 50 per cent improvement in
symptoms. Half the patients also had no need for further treatment
with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), while all those who had been
given a dummy treatment did need it. "Our findings are very exciting
since they provide clear evidence for the effectiveness of magnetic
therapy, at least over the short term," says Dr Ehud Klein, who led
the study and whose findings have now been replicated in three other
studies.

In a study at the Medical University of South Carolina, 20 depressed
patients, who had not been helped by medication, had the treatment
for 20 minutes a day for two weeks, and 10 had a magnet applied to
their scalp but no treatment. In half of the 20 patients, symptoms
were reduced by 50 per cent, while none of the group of 10
improved. "This allows us, for the first time, to stimulate the brain
non-invasively while the person is awake and alert," says Dr Mark
George, professor of psychiatry at the university.

The technique, transcranial magnetic stimulation or TMS, works on the
principle that the brain can be manipulated by small electric
currents because brain cells communicate with each other and pass
instructions by pulses of electricity. "We can demonstrate it quite
easily," says Dr Declan McLoughlin, a consultant psychiatrist at the
Institute of Psychiatry in London. "For example, if I were to take a
magnetic coil and move it over parts of the brain that control the
movement of body parts, I could make the little finger, then the
middle finger, and then the thumb move."

The trick with TMS is to set up the fields over the particular area
of the brain that needs retuning. It is known from the results of
scanning patients with depression that there is reduced activity and
blood flow in the left frontal lobe, an area of the brain above the
forehead that is involved in thinking and planning. In the therapy, a
wire coil is held close to the patient's scalp above the left frontal
lobe to produce a magnetic field that passes through the skull and
into the brain to get activity up to normal levels.

At Imperial College, they have used the same kind of approach in
people with incomplete spinal-cord injuries, leading to improvements
in their ability to move muscles and limbs, and feel sensations. In
the therapy, an electromagnet is put over the cerebral cortex. "The
[electromagnet's] repeated signals may work a bit like physiotherapy,
but instead of repeating a physical task, the machine activates the
surviving nerves to strengthen their connections," says Imperial's Dr
Nick Davey. The same hi-tech approach has been used successfully,
too, in cases of epilepsy and schizophrenia. Yale researchers used
magnetic stimulation on patients who had been hearing voices. The
researchers say 70 per cent of such patients appear to benefit from
TMS for up to a year, sometimes more.

Other forms of magnetic therapy are applied directly to the problem
area. At Harvard University, patients with osteoarthritis were given
high-strength magnet or dummy sleeves for their knees, which they
wore for six hours a day, for six weeks. The researchers found that
the beneficial effects of the magnetic sleeve began to kick in after
four hours, with a sevenfold difference between patients who had the
real sleeve and those who had the sham device. The team ruled out
placebo effects because 77 per cent of the people who had the dummy
treatment believed that they had had the real thing.

Researchers at the Peninsula Medical School in Plymouth also found
that osteoarthritis pain was helped by wearing a standard magnetic
bracelet compared to a dummy one. "Pain from osteoarthritis of the
hip and knee does decrease when wearing magnetic bracelets," they
reported.

For a study at the University of Washington, researchers put a magnet
on the shoulder of patients who had suffered chronic pain for many
years as a result of spinal-cord injury. After the magnet was put on
the shoulder for one hour, pain levels halved.

The researchers in this last study said that the therapy might work
by the magnet acting on the nerves. But just how this laying on of
magnets works is still not clear. One theory is that it has some kind
of impact on the blood, and research in North Carolina with animals
shows that blood flow is stimulated by the movement of magnetic
fields through tissue. Other theories suggest that magnet therapy
changes skin temperature; has an effect on iron in the blood;
improves oxygenation of the blood; alters the pH balance; improves
electrical conductivity of cells; or stimulates new cell growth.

But researchers in Canada, who reviewed all the research on magnetic
therapy and osteoarthritis, suggest that magnetic therapy works by
stimulating new cartilage cells to grow. More conditions are now
being tested for magnetic therapy, and sales of many devices are
booming.

And the success with humans has spawned magnetic therapy for pets,
too. The Magna-Cell Health Collar, for example, is an adjustable
collar with a sealed magnetic unit; with the blurb reassuringly
stating: "Tested on humans for animals."






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