Bioresonance
What is Bioresonance?
Bioresonance is a complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) technique that involves using a device to measure and treat electromagnetic frequencies emitted by the body. According to proponents of bioresonance, every cell in the body emits electromagnetic waves that can be measured and analyzed to detect imbalances or disturbances in the body’s energy fields.
Bioresonance practitioners use a device called a bioresonance machine, which is said to detect and then manipulate these electromagnetic frequencies in order to restore balance and improve health. The machine may use electrodes or other sensors to pick up these frequencies and then send them back to the body with altered frequencies that are intended to correct any imbalances.
Pic. Vega-Test Programme view
What is and how does Vega Test work?
The Vega test is a diagnostic tool used in complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) that involves measuring the body’s response to various substances through skin conductance. The test is named after the German physician Helmut Schimmel, who developed the technique in the 1970s and called it the “Vega test” after the Russian physicist and inventor Léon Theremin, whose work inspired him.
During a Vega test, the patient holds a metal electrode while the practitioner touches patient’s second hand with an electrode in a shape of a pen. The practitioner then measures the patient’s skin conductance to determine whether the patient has a positive or negative response to certain frequencies.
Pic. Device for Vega-Test testing
We would like to enclose that our bioresonance test is a non-medical test that requires further testing.