ARP Therapy
Is Rooted In Solid Science
Dr. Bjorn Nordenstrom, one of the world's leading researchers,
in his book, "Biologically Closed Electric Circuits,"
provides compelling evidence that the human body is a biologically
closed electrical system.
Nordenstrom proved that disease and injury cause charge to
be formed in affected deep soft tissue. And for healing to
occur, the charge must be eliminated, either by the body itself,
or with external electrical current. If the charge of injury
is not dissipated, scar tissue forms, leading to restricted
range of motion which can become permanent.
Nordenstrom showed that chronic pain is often sourced in
old injuries to deep soft tissue, where the charge is stored
rather than released. The ARP Trainer penetrates low-voltage
current deep enough into soft tissue to dissipate charge of
injury without surface pain.
Dr. Yakov Kots, considered by many to be the innovator of
electrical stimulation used in athletics, believed that you
have to have high voltage with lots of power to get deep enough
penetration to affect soft tissue damage or muscle conditioning.
Russian Stim equipment, especially Stimul One invented by
Dr. Kots, are very high-voltage machines which can elicit
rapid results. However, the high voltage often burns the skin,
and the use of weights to secure electrodes is very uncomfortable.
Nevertheless, Dr. Kots proved to the world that deep penetration
of electrical current, in fact, increases the physical size
of muscle fiber in as little as 10 days.
In December 1977, Dr. Kots, under an exchange arrangement
worked out between Canada's Montreal Concordia College and
Moscow's Central Sports Institute, proved beyond a doubt that
electrically stimulating muscle, in fact, increases strength
and size of muscle fiber.
Dr. Robert Becker, in his book, "The Body Electric,"
determined that collagen becomes electrically charged and
forms scar tissue when physically abused.
Nobel Laureates, E. Neur and B. Sakmann, demonstrated that
cells communicate with each other electrically. Cells embedded
in charged collagen at injured sites have their communication
disrupted, preventing the reduction of inflammation and edema.
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