Bioresonance , bioresonance therapy , bioresonance diagnostics , vegetative-resonance diagnostics , vegetative-resonant diagnostics , electronic biofunctional organometry, bioresonant treatment are a group of directions in the so-called alternative [1] medicine, which assumes the existence of so-called. “ Frequency scales” of living organisms and tissues , as well as declaring the possibility of obtaining a therapeutic effect with a special “ resonant ” interaction of proven physical ( electromagnetic ) or unproven - torsion fields with biological objects .
Due to the contradiction to the concepts of modern physiology and the lack of a technically described and experimentally confirmed method of exposure, the concept of the existence of "bioresonance" is classified as pseudoscientific [2] [3] [4] [5] .
Often, in addition to the biofunctional therapy itself, homeopathic medicines are prescribed (the inefficiency of which has been proven) [5] [6] , which, in turn, further undermines its reputation.
Content
History
The method of bioresonance is a continuation of the ideas of Reinhold Voll [7] , a German doctor who decided to create his own syncretic teaching. Dr. Voll collected a motley mosaic from scraps of oriental medicine, Eastern mystical practices and homeopathy.
In medical circles, the attitude towards the Voll method [7] is negative; from the point of view of evidence-based medicine, it does not have diagnostic capabilities and does not give sustainable results in clinical trials. In the USA, import of electroacupuncture devices is prohibited by the FDA. Many court cases were lost by both doctors and doctors who did not have medical licenses, which misled patients by overstating the diagnostic capabilities of the method.
The theoretical substantiation of the bioresonance method is due to two other German inventors: Franz Morel and Erich Rasch. The first one was a doctor, the second an engineer. Together, they developed a simple, though not entirely original plan. It was decided to adapt the Voll method to affect the body for therapeutic purposes. To do this, it was proposed to simply deploy the device back to front and send the “biological field” back to the patient’s body.
The technique was developed in 1977 by F. Morel, together with engineer Erich Rache, under the original name MORA therapy (MORA therapy) [8] .
Scope
Proponents of the method argue that a way is known to achieve such an effect of waves on biological objects (for example, the human body ), which supposedly can be used to treat many diseases . In fact, there is no evidence-based evidence for this.
Clinical Studies
Clinical studies using the double blind control method , which allows to exclude the placebo effect, do not confirm the effectiveness of bioresonance therapy. [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16]
See also
- Dowsing
- Biofield
Notes
- ↑ Schäfer T, Riehle A, Wichmann HE, Ring J. Alternative medicine in allergies - prevalence, patterns of use, and costs // Allergy. 2002 Aug; 57 (8): 694-700
- ↑ E. Ernst . Bioresonance, a Study of Pseudo-Scientific Language. Forschende Komplementärmedizin und Klassische Naturheilkunde / Research in Complementary and Classical Natural Medicine 2004; 11: 171-173
- ↑ Nienhaus J, Galle M. (2006) Placebo-controlled Study of the Effects of a Standardized MORA Bioresonance Therapy on Functional Gastrointestinal Complaints, PubMed, Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 28-34.
- ↑ Galle, M. (2004) Bioresonance, a Study of Pseudo-scientific Language, PubMed, Vol. 11, No. 5, p. 306.
- ↑ 1 2 Sergeev, A. G. Sinekdoha answering, or Homeopathic Defense // In Defense of Science . - 2017. - No. 19. - S. 90.
... there are dozens of real pseudosciences, such as astrology and palmistry, extrasensory and parapsychology, cryptobiology and bioenergy, bioresonance and iridodiagnosis, creationism and telegonia, ufology and paleoastronautics, eniology and dianetics, numerology and sociology dowsing and contacting, dermatoglyphic testing and geopathic zones, geopolitics and lunar conspiracy, theories of ether and torsion fields, water memory and wave genetics.
- ↑ Arguments for the inefficiency of homeopathy. .
- ↑ 1 2 Fall Reinhold .
- ↑ Morell F. MORA-Therapie, Patienteneigene und Farblichtschwingungen Konzept und Praxis. - Heidelberg: Karl F. Haug-Verlag, 1987.
- ↑ Schoni MH et al. Efficacy trial of bioresonance in children with atopic dermatitis. Int Arch Allergy Immunol. 1997 Mar; 112 (3): 238-46.
- ↑ Wille A. Bioresonance therapy (biophysical information therapy) in stuttering children. Forsch Komplementarmed. 1999 Feb; 6 Suppl 1: 50-2.
- ↑ Wandtke F, Biorensonanz-Allergietest versus pricktest und RAST, Allergologie 1993, 16 S.144
- ↑ Wüthrich B, unproven techniques in allergy diagnosis, j invest clin immunol, 2005, 15 86-90
- ↑ Hörner M, Bioresonanz: Anspruch einer Methode und Ergebnis einer technischen Überprüfung, Allergologie, 1995, 18 S. 302
- ↑ Kofler H, Bioresonanz bei Pollinose. Eine vergleichende Untersuchung zur diagnostischen und therapeutischen Wertigkeit, Allergologie 1996, 19 S. 114
- ↑ Niggemann B, unkonventionelle Verfahren in der Allergologie. Kontroverse oder Alternative? Allergologie 2002, 25 S. 34
- ↑ Schultze-Werninghaus, paramedizinische Verfahren: Bioresonanzdiagnostik und - Therapie, Allergo J, 1993, 2 40-2
Links
- Bioresonance - fiction or myth
- Bioresonance therapy - breaking existing stereotypes. Analysis of methods and implementations of BRT offered for use in state and commercial medical structures // Resuscitator Gubin Nikolay Gennadievich (GNG), September 7-17, 2000
- Ya. Ya. Tsilinsky and I. A. Suetina, Center for Electronic Occultism // “In Defense of Science”, Bulletin No. 8, 2011 (p. 39-52)
- Fortune-telling by resonance: Bioresonance diagnostics // Popular Mechanics, December 2009, Alexey Vodovozov