Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

RE: Re: Extreme voltage / Article from 1880

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

I have read that early self defense zappers were touted to heal spider and

some other venomous bites, the FDA stopped these claims, the electrical

charge neutralized the venom, I was also told that some foreign armies issue

them for troops in the field to treat such bites or stings, I have a friend

on another forum that was bitten by a brown recluse and used a modified self

defense zapper to neutralize the venom he has pictures of the bite and

follow up healing pictures after using the electrical charge, I understand

the voltage is supposed to be equivalent to that delivered to a spark plug.

Terry

_____

From: Rife [mailto:Rife ] On Behalf Of

Tigchelaar

Sent: Friday, August 11, 2006 12:40 PM

To: Rife

Subject: Re: Re: Extreme voltage / Article from 1880

[THE LANCET] THE GOVERNMENT AND THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. [JAN.10, 1880]

---------------------------------

---------------------------------

THE LANCET. LONDON: SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1880. THERAPEUTIC EFFECTS OF

LIGHTNING UPON CANCER.

To the Editor of THE LANCET. SIR,-As I am not aware that the records of the

healing art furnish any case of cancer having yielded to the influence of

lightning, I venture to draw the attention of the numerous readers of THE

LANCET to the following remarkable case, which may awaken due interest in

the curative value of electricity in diseases of a malignant type. Many

years ago I heard the late Dr. Golding Bird express an opinion to the effect

that electrical sparks drawn from a cancerous structure until an eruption is

produced was the only reliable means of cure which he could endorse. In

confirmation of the theory of the celebrated electrician, I beg to submit an

extraordinary instance of the therapeutic freaks of atmospherical

electricity in the cure of cancer. The case loses none of its interest on

the plea of antiquity.

About thirty years ago, I attended Reuben S,---, a farm labourer, residing

at Langtoft, on the Yorkshire Wolds, who suffered from cancer of the

inferior lip and part of the chin for about a year, and who had agreed to an

operation for their removal. In the meantime he under took to assist a poor

farmer for a day in ploughing his land. During this Occupation he was struck

down by lightning, and carried home in a state of insensibility. Both of his

horses were killed, and the wooden beam of the plough was split and reduced

to considerable fragments. Soon after the occurrence I visited, and found

the ploughman in a state of great prostration, and emitting a strong odour

of ozone, indicating electrical condensation of the adherent oxygen. As soon

as reaction took place I bled him from the arm, which act constituted the

whole of the treatment. What seems to be the most astonishing feature in the

case is the healing process which was set up in the lip and chin soon after

the

accident. The cancer gradually lessened, and in a few weeks every trace of

the diseased structure disappeared, and for ten years he enjoyed complete

freedom from his former suffering and signs of the disease.

______________________________________________________

Many EMEM plasma driven systems are capable of delivering anywhere form 1500

to 45,000 volts when used in contact mode. (Warning: Use of some Rife

Systems are not safe in contact mode as the bulbs run HOT and may result in

burns)

The interesting aspect of some Plasma Driven Rife systems is the ability to

make contact with the bulb to ground, thus introducing not only frequencies

but very high voltages. This is a close as you can get to a " lightning

effect. "

The following study may have interesting implications for cancer. It appears

from this study that a higher pulse of: Pulse 64 75 may be of interest in

research of the effects of resonance on Cancer tumors.

We have been revising some programs to investigate the potential of these

higher pulses which will result in 64 burst of high voltage per second to

the tumor area to see if we may give us better resolution.

You can currently switch the pulse in existing Cancer programs if you like

to: Pulse 64 75.

Please keep me posted on any additional progress you may see with this

adjustment if you choose to implement this change in programming for

experimentation.

__________________________________________________________

By PHILIP WALZER, The Virginian-Pilot

C March 13, 2006

NORFOLK - A team of scientists from Old Dominion University and

Eastern Virginia Medical School has reported killing melanoma s in

mice using lightning-fast, high-powered jolts of electricity.

The researchers expect their paper to be placed online Wednesday in

the journal Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications .

It's the culmination of at least eight years of work seeking possible

health benefits from short, high-voltage doses of electricity. The

results, the researchers think , eventually could translate into an

effective cancer treatment that carries no side effects.

" We've never had a tumor that didn't respond, " said the lead

researcher, Nuccitelli , an associate professor of electrical

and computer engineering at Old Dominion. " Every tumor has shrunk. We

know we can eliminate them with the right conditions. "

The electric bursts often disrupted the blood flow to the tumor cells

and shrunk their nuclei by 50 percent, Nuccitelli said.

The scientists found that they could kill the tumors with hundreds of

electrical pulses in two treatments given two to three weeks apart.

Each burst of electricity carried 4,000 volts and lasted less than

one-millionth of a second.

Nuccitelli said they think the process worked by severely damaging the

DNA in the cells.

The method produced no scarring and did not harm adjacent cells, the

professors said. The mice survived, they said, with no ill effects.

Weaver , a senior research scientist for the Harvard-MIT

Division of Health Sciences and Technology , said Friday that the team

from ODU and EVMS is in the forefront of bioelectric research.

" People have known for a long time that certain kinds of big

electrical field pulses can kill cells, " he said.

This, Weaver said, might mark the first time tumor cells have been

killed without harming nearby cells.

" I think it's going to attract a lot of attention, " he said.

Another researcher on the team, Karl Schoenbach , who holds ODU's

Batten Endowed Chair of Bioelectric Engineering , said they focused

" on the one type of cancer which is the easiest one to access. " H e

said the work might have many more applications.

" It could give a new weapon to cancer research, " Schoenbach said.

" Maybe some tumors that are not responding now might respond

electrically. "

Nuccitelli, who also works for a biotechnology company, BioElectroMed

Corp. , said the corporation might try to adapt the research to treat

human skin lesions.

The scientists said they need to hone their techniques before they can

experiment on people. Doing that, they said, requires a federal grant,

which they have not yet won.

Eight professors and graduate students participated in the study. They

are affiliated with the Reidy Research Center for Bioelectrics ,

a collaborative effort between ODU and EVMS led by Schoenbach.

The center takes up the fifth floor of the Norfolk Public Health

Center , near Brambleton and Colley avenues.

The melanoma work is not the first piece of prominent research to come

out of the bioelectrics center in the past year.

Mounir Laroussi , an associate professor at Old Dominion, developed a

" plasma pencil " that kills E. coli bacteria but leaves skin cells

unharmed. Laroussi has been featured on the Discovery Channel and in

National Geographic.

Nuccitelli said he hopes the paper about melanoma will draw lots of

attention.

" As well as money, of course, " said Beebe , an associate

professor of physiological sciences at EVMS who helped to pioneer the

bioelectric research.

__________________________________________________________

Truerife

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Doctors have a method, I'm sorry the name evades me, I researched for my

wife, a needle is inserted into a tumor and the electrocuted, it then dies,

I understand they do it in Kansas City but do not know who

Terry

_____

From: Rife [mailto:Rife ] On Behalf Of

Tigchelaar

Sent: Friday, August 11, 2006 12:40 PM

To: Rife

Subject: Re: Re: Extreme voltage / Article from 1880

[THE LANCET] THE GOVERNMENT AND THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. [JAN.10, 1880]

---------------------------------

[sNIP]

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...