REDUCTION OF DENTAL POSTSURGICAL SYMPTOMS USING NONTHERMAL/PULSED HIGH-PEAK-POWER ELECTROMAGNETIC ENERGY
David H. Aronofsky · 1971
Pulsed electromagnetic energy can accelerate dental wound healing, proving EMF affects biological processes in measurable ways.
Plain English Summary
This 1971 study examined using pulsed electromagnetic energy to speed healing after dental surgery. Researchers found that non-thermal electromagnetic pulses helped reduce swelling and accelerate wound healing by improving blood flow and tissue drainage. This represents early evidence that certain EMF exposures might have therapeutic benefits.
Why This Matters
This study offers a fascinating counterpoint to today's EMF health concerns. While we typically focus on potential harms from electromagnetic exposure, this 1971 research demonstrates that specific types of EMF can actually promote healing. The key distinction here is the therapeutic application of pulsed, high-peak-power electromagnetic energy versus the continuous, lower-level exposures we get from wireless devices. What makes this particularly relevant is the mechanism described - EMF affecting tissue permeability and fluid flow. This biological pathway shows that our bodies do respond to electromagnetic fields in measurable ways. The question isn't whether EMF affects us (it clearly does), but rather which frequencies, intensities, and exposure patterns help versus harm. This early therapeutic research reminds us that the EMF story is more nuanced than simple good-versus-bad narratives.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{reduction_of_dental_postsurgical_symptoms_using_nonthermal_pulsed_high_peak_powe_g5905,
author = {David H. Aronofsky},
title = {REDUCTION OF DENTAL POSTSURGICAL SYMPTOMS USING NONTHERMAL/PULSED HIGH-PEAK-POWER ELECTROMAGNETIC ENERGY},
year = {1971},
}