Post by sidney33 on Apr 19, 2008 11:35:38 GMT
you all might find this interesting and mrhnhrm waiting for your comments Sidney...........................................................................Some Scientific Support for Energy Healing
In order to provide scientific validation for the human energy field, theorists and practitioners have attempted to perform scientifically sound, replicable experiments to measure and quantify the field. Researchers have also unified the theories of energy medicine with data from scientific fields to develop hypotheses to explain the observed phenomena. They have examined factors including electrical emissions, magnetic fields, temperature effects, and even infrasonic sound. It’s clear there are strong correlations between these factors and the theoretical aspects of the human energy field. It is not yet clear if all of the aspects of qi can be measured in these terms.
The notes below are merely a sampling of the research that has been done and theories that have developed, and are not meant to be a comprehensive review of the topic. For more information, please refer to the sources mentioned at the end of this section.
Are there any fields produced in and around the body which can be measured?
“Every event in the body, either normal or pathological, [produces] electrical changes, it also produces alterations of the magnetic fields in the spaces around the body.” (Oschman, 18)
Several illustrations of this appear in Oschman’s Energy Medicine. For example, in the 1930’s, Harold Saxton Burr reported “the timing of ovulation in women could be determined by daily measurements of the electric field between one finger from each hand.” (Oschman, 18-19) Other researchers had inconsistent results in studying this field. This was because the ovulation cycle is only one of many oscillating electric fields produced by the body, and “detection of the ovulation cycle requires careful filtering, to eliminate interference from the electrical rhythms generated by the other organs in the body, such as the heart and the brain.” (Oschman, 19)
In 1924, Willem Einthoven received a Nobel Prize for his discovery that heart electricity could be recorded with a galvanometer; the electrocardiogram and electroencephalogram are now standard tools for medical diagnosis. (Oschman, 28) In 1963, Baule and McFee were able to measure the magnetic field produced by the electrical activity of the heart muscle. This strong pulsating magnetic field spreads out in front of and behind the body, and instruments are now available that can detect the field of the heart 15 feet away from the body. (Oschman, 29-30)
Brain fields are hundreds of times weaker than the heart, yet they are measurable by a SQUID magnetometer, developed in the 1970’s. Virtually all the tissues in the body generate electrical fields when compressed and stretched. “Every muscle in the body produces magnetic pulses when it contracts, … any movement of any part of the body is ‘broadcast’ into the space around the body as a precise ‘biomagnetic signature’ of that movement.” (Oschman, 35)
Are these fields a mere by-product of life processes, or do they serve a purpose?
“The electric fields produced during movements are widely considered to provide the information that directs the activities of ‘generative’ cells… these are the osteoblasts, myoblasts, perivascular cells, fibroblasts, and other ‘stem’ cells that lay down or resorb collagen and thereby reform tissues so they can adapt to the ways the body is used.” (Oschman, 54)
These repair messages are apparently carried by the perineural cells, connective tissues which encase every nerve fiber in the body and are responsible for overall regulation of the classical nervous system. “Robert Becker, M.D. … demonstrated that the perineural cells, or nerve sheaths, carry a direct current of electricity, prompting the body to grow, heal, or regenerate and repair itself. For this reason, any change in health is always accompanied by electrical changes, both at the site of injury or repair and as an electromagnetic field around the body.” (Cohen, 45)
“The perineural system is a direct current communication system reaching to every innervated tissue… the current of injury is generated at the site of a wound, and continues until repair is complete… [it] attracts the mobile skin cells, white blood cells, and fibroblasts that close and heal the wounds. Finally, the injury current changes as the tissue heals, and therefore feeds back information on the progress of repair to surrounding tissues.” (Oschman, 94) Other bodily tissues are also sheathed in continuous layers of connective tissue, therefore it is possible that “a current of injury will arise in any tissue, epidermal, vascular, muscular, nervous, or bone, that is injured.” (Oschman, 95)
Can this “current of injury” be replicated by synthetic devices?
A modern medical technique called pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (PEMF) is used to treat bone fractures which have failed to heal after several months. A small, battery-operated pulse generator is placed next to the injury for 8-10 hours per day, and produces a magnetic field that induces currents to flow in nearby tissues, and “jumpstarts” a stalled healing process. “The scientific evidence is that PEMF therapy is effective because it conveys ‘information’ that triggers specific repair activities within the body. The currents… mimic the natural electrical activities created within bones during movements. Pulsing magnetic fields initiate a cascade of activities, from the cell membrane to the nucleus and on to the gene level…” (Oschman, 75)
Various electrical frequencies are being tested to determine the types of tissue they affect. Sisken and Walker found that 2 Hz is associated with nerve regeneration, 7 Hz with bone growth, 10 Hz with ligament healing, 15, 20, and 72 Hz with stimulation of capillary formation, and 25 and 50 Hz with synergistic effects with nerve growth factor. (Cited at Oschman, 76 and 86)
Can healers produce fields which can be measured?
Electrical and Magnetic Measurements. During qi gong, the electrical conductivity of acupuncture points changes dramatically. (Cohen, 45) Within experimentally designed copper room; qi gong practitioners’ electrical body potential had frequent surges ranging from 4 volts to 221 volts: 10,000 times larger than EKG voltages produced by a human heart. (Cohen, 49)
In the 1980’s, Dr. John Zimmerman used a SQUID detector (designed to study human biomagnetic fields) to study fields produced by a Therapeutic Touch practitioner during a healing session in a magnetically shielded room. A biomagnetic field emanated from the practitioner’s hand, pulsing at a variable frequency, ranging from .3 to 30 Hz, with most of the activity in the range of 7-8 Hz. The field was so strong that it was outside of the calibrated range of the SQUID magnetometer, so signal strength could not be quantified.A study by Seto in Japan confirmed “a large biomagnetic field emanates from the hands of practitioners of a variety of healing and martial arts techniques, including QiGong, yoga, meditation, Zen, etc. The fields were measured with a simple magnetometer consisting of two 80,000 turn coils and a sensitive amplifier. The fields had a strength of about 10-3 gauss, which is about 1000 times stronger than the strongest human biomagnetic fields (from the heart)… about 1,000,000 times stronger than the fields produced by the brain… As in Zimmerman’s study, the biomagnetic field pulsed with a variable frequency centered around 8-10 Hz.” (Oschman, 79)
These studies did not document that any clinical healing took place; however, “the evidence shows that practitioners can emit powerful pulsing biomagnetic fields in the same frequency range that biomedical researchers have identified for jump starting healing of soft and hard tissue injuries. This implies that biomagnetism is one form of the elusive Qi...” (Oschman, 80)
Brain wave activity in healers. Robert C. Beck has used EEG recordings to study brain wave activity in ‘healers’ from all over the world: psychics, shamans, faith healers, a Hawaiian kahuna, practitioners of wicca, etc. All these healers produced similar brain wave patterns when they were … performing a healing… all healers registered brain wave activity averaging about 7.8-8.0 cycles/second… Beck performed additional studies on some of the subjects and found that during healing moments their brain waves became phase and frequency synchronized with the earth’s geoelectric micropulsations – the Schumann resonance.” (Oschman, 107)
In order to provide scientific validation for the human energy field, theorists and practitioners have attempted to perform scientifically sound, replicable experiments to measure and quantify the field. Researchers have also unified the theories of energy medicine with data from scientific fields to develop hypotheses to explain the observed phenomena. They have examined factors including electrical emissions, magnetic fields, temperature effects, and even infrasonic sound. It’s clear there are strong correlations between these factors and the theoretical aspects of the human energy field. It is not yet clear if all of the aspects of qi can be measured in these terms.
The notes below are merely a sampling of the research that has been done and theories that have developed, and are not meant to be a comprehensive review of the topic. For more information, please refer to the sources mentioned at the end of this section.
Are there any fields produced in and around the body which can be measured?
“Every event in the body, either normal or pathological, [produces] electrical changes, it also produces alterations of the magnetic fields in the spaces around the body.” (Oschman, 18)
Several illustrations of this appear in Oschman’s Energy Medicine. For example, in the 1930’s, Harold Saxton Burr reported “the timing of ovulation in women could be determined by daily measurements of the electric field between one finger from each hand.” (Oschman, 18-19) Other researchers had inconsistent results in studying this field. This was because the ovulation cycle is only one of many oscillating electric fields produced by the body, and “detection of the ovulation cycle requires careful filtering, to eliminate interference from the electrical rhythms generated by the other organs in the body, such as the heart and the brain.” (Oschman, 19)
In 1924, Willem Einthoven received a Nobel Prize for his discovery that heart electricity could be recorded with a galvanometer; the electrocardiogram and electroencephalogram are now standard tools for medical diagnosis. (Oschman, 28) In 1963, Baule and McFee were able to measure the magnetic field produced by the electrical activity of the heart muscle. This strong pulsating magnetic field spreads out in front of and behind the body, and instruments are now available that can detect the field of the heart 15 feet away from the body. (Oschman, 29-30)
Brain fields are hundreds of times weaker than the heart, yet they are measurable by a SQUID magnetometer, developed in the 1970’s. Virtually all the tissues in the body generate electrical fields when compressed and stretched. “Every muscle in the body produces magnetic pulses when it contracts, … any movement of any part of the body is ‘broadcast’ into the space around the body as a precise ‘biomagnetic signature’ of that movement.” (Oschman, 35)
Are these fields a mere by-product of life processes, or do they serve a purpose?
“The electric fields produced during movements are widely considered to provide the information that directs the activities of ‘generative’ cells… these are the osteoblasts, myoblasts, perivascular cells, fibroblasts, and other ‘stem’ cells that lay down or resorb collagen and thereby reform tissues so they can adapt to the ways the body is used.” (Oschman, 54)
These repair messages are apparently carried by the perineural cells, connective tissues which encase every nerve fiber in the body and are responsible for overall regulation of the classical nervous system. “Robert Becker, M.D. … demonstrated that the perineural cells, or nerve sheaths, carry a direct current of electricity, prompting the body to grow, heal, or regenerate and repair itself. For this reason, any change in health is always accompanied by electrical changes, both at the site of injury or repair and as an electromagnetic field around the body.” (Cohen, 45)
“The perineural system is a direct current communication system reaching to every innervated tissue… the current of injury is generated at the site of a wound, and continues until repair is complete… [it] attracts the mobile skin cells, white blood cells, and fibroblasts that close and heal the wounds. Finally, the injury current changes as the tissue heals, and therefore feeds back information on the progress of repair to surrounding tissues.” (Oschman, 94) Other bodily tissues are also sheathed in continuous layers of connective tissue, therefore it is possible that “a current of injury will arise in any tissue, epidermal, vascular, muscular, nervous, or bone, that is injured.” (Oschman, 95)
Can this “current of injury” be replicated by synthetic devices?
A modern medical technique called pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (PEMF) is used to treat bone fractures which have failed to heal after several months. A small, battery-operated pulse generator is placed next to the injury for 8-10 hours per day, and produces a magnetic field that induces currents to flow in nearby tissues, and “jumpstarts” a stalled healing process. “The scientific evidence is that PEMF therapy is effective because it conveys ‘information’ that triggers specific repair activities within the body. The currents… mimic the natural electrical activities created within bones during movements. Pulsing magnetic fields initiate a cascade of activities, from the cell membrane to the nucleus and on to the gene level…” (Oschman, 75)
Various electrical frequencies are being tested to determine the types of tissue they affect. Sisken and Walker found that 2 Hz is associated with nerve regeneration, 7 Hz with bone growth, 10 Hz with ligament healing, 15, 20, and 72 Hz with stimulation of capillary formation, and 25 and 50 Hz with synergistic effects with nerve growth factor. (Cited at Oschman, 76 and 86)
Can healers produce fields which can be measured?
Electrical and Magnetic Measurements. During qi gong, the electrical conductivity of acupuncture points changes dramatically. (Cohen, 45) Within experimentally designed copper room; qi gong practitioners’ electrical body potential had frequent surges ranging from 4 volts to 221 volts: 10,000 times larger than EKG voltages produced by a human heart. (Cohen, 49)
In the 1980’s, Dr. John Zimmerman used a SQUID detector (designed to study human biomagnetic fields) to study fields produced by a Therapeutic Touch practitioner during a healing session in a magnetically shielded room. A biomagnetic field emanated from the practitioner’s hand, pulsing at a variable frequency, ranging from .3 to 30 Hz, with most of the activity in the range of 7-8 Hz. The field was so strong that it was outside of the calibrated range of the SQUID magnetometer, so signal strength could not be quantified.A study by Seto in Japan confirmed “a large biomagnetic field emanates from the hands of practitioners of a variety of healing and martial arts techniques, including QiGong, yoga, meditation, Zen, etc. The fields were measured with a simple magnetometer consisting of two 80,000 turn coils and a sensitive amplifier. The fields had a strength of about 10-3 gauss, which is about 1000 times stronger than the strongest human biomagnetic fields (from the heart)… about 1,000,000 times stronger than the fields produced by the brain… As in Zimmerman’s study, the biomagnetic field pulsed with a variable frequency centered around 8-10 Hz.” (Oschman, 79)
These studies did not document that any clinical healing took place; however, “the evidence shows that practitioners can emit powerful pulsing biomagnetic fields in the same frequency range that biomedical researchers have identified for jump starting healing of soft and hard tissue injuries. This implies that biomagnetism is one form of the elusive Qi...” (Oschman, 80)
Brain wave activity in healers. Robert C. Beck has used EEG recordings to study brain wave activity in ‘healers’ from all over the world: psychics, shamans, faith healers, a Hawaiian kahuna, practitioners of wicca, etc. All these healers produced similar brain wave patterns when they were … performing a healing… all healers registered brain wave activity averaging about 7.8-8.0 cycles/second… Beck performed additional studies on some of the subjects and found that during healing moments their brain waves became phase and frequency synchronized with the earth’s geoelectric micropulsations – the Schumann resonance.” (Oschman, 107)