uWave therapy in patients with hypersensitive disease
Fastrykovskii AD · 1972
Soviet researchers studied microwave radiation as hypertension therapy, contrasting sharply with today's concerns about cardiovascular EMF effects.
Plain English Summary
This 1972 Soviet study investigated using microwave radiation as a therapeutic treatment for patients with hypertensive (high blood pressure) disease. The research represents early exploration of microwave therapy applications, examining how controlled electromagnetic field exposure might benefit cardiovascular health conditions.
Why This Matters
This fascinating 1972 research highlights a striking paradox in our understanding of microwave radiation effects. While Soviet researchers were exploring microwaves as potential therapy for hypertension, today we know that chronic EMF exposure may actually contribute to cardiovascular stress and elevated blood pressure. The science demonstrates that what seemed promising as controlled medical treatment decades ago now raises concerns about uncontrolled daily exposure from wireless devices. What this means for you is understanding that the same electromagnetic frequencies once studied for healing can become problematic when we're exposed continuously at lower levels throughout our environment. The reality is that context matters enormously in EMF health effects.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{uwave_therapy_in_patients_with_hypersensitive_disease_g6451,
author = {Fastrykovskii AD},
title = {uWave therapy in patients with hypersensitive disease},
year = {1972},
}