Cranial electrical stimulation

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Cranial electrical stimulation

johnlankes
CES devices may reduce EMR damage, claims Eric Braverman MD in his
book THE EDGE EFFECT. I once tried a BT5 Brain Tuner which is a
battery-powered gadget with electrodes that attach to your ear lobes.
The small amount of current it produces is supposed to boost or
balance neurotransmitters in the brain. I did not get any benefit from
this, but didn't feel worse either so any EMR present must have been
insignificant. Dr. Braverman's device is FDA-approved so there must be
some scientific evidence behind it.

John Lankes          

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Re: Cranial electrical stimulation

Drasko Cvijovic
Sounds too simpe to be effective.
But such stimulation has been peer reviewed as having some influence, there
are different devices on the market. I myself am lazy, but have a plan to
buy a Shakti, one among several such.

Drasko


----- Original Message -----
From: "johnlankes" <[hidden email]>
To: <[hidden email]>
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2005 7:23 PM
Subject: [eSens] Cranial electrical stimulation


> CES devices may reduce EMR damage, claims Eric Braverman MD in his
> book THE EDGE EFFECT. I once tried a BT5 Brain Tuner which is a
> battery-powered gadget with electrodes that attach to your ear lobes.
> The small amount of current it produces is supposed to boost or
> balance neurotransmitters in the brain. I did not get any benefit from
> this, but didn't feel worse either so any EMR present must have been
> insignificant. Dr. Braverman's device is FDA-approved so there must be
> some scientific evidence behind it.
>
> John Lankes
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> Yahoo! Groups Links
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