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MAGNETIC JEWELRY
&
BENEFITS
Do you know many
Kings and Queens and other high dignitaries of the olden times used to wear a magnet on their persons?
They believed that wearing a magnet, which had a divine force, maintained vigor of life, arrested ageing, enhanced beauty and saved its wearer from many ailments and troubles.
The researchers made in this respect have found that it can be a valuable tool not just for the sake of mankind, to arrest, control, and destroy diseases, improve mental attitude, but it may also alter all concepts of medical approaches to healing and sick. The method of treatment with magnet is selected for every person or disease, according to the nature or place of ailment.
A magnetic bracelet is healing for Artromathoid, wrist joint pain, heart weakness.
A magnetic necklace is healing for headache,
migrant, sinusitis, and eyestrains, as well as a magnetic necklace reduce the pain at shoulder and neck area.

Magnet therapy shows promise for severe depression
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One patient, Ruth Wright, described the treatment,
"like a tapping on my skull."
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March 20, 1998
Web posted at: 2:05 p.m. EDT (1405 GMT)
ATLANTA (CNN) -- An experimental treatment for severe
depression, in which
powerful magnets are applied to patients' heads, is
showing signs of success, a medical journal reports.
Emory University researchers report in the journal
Psychiatric Annals that more than half of the patients
treated improved with no serious side effects.
Depression affects 37 million Americans. It is estimated
one in four women and one in 10 men suffer from depression.
In the experimental treatment, doctors use a powerful
electromagnet to stimulate a specific area of the brain. It
seems to work best in the left front portion of the brain,
believed to be underactive in people with depression. The
treatment lasts only about five minutes.
"The electromagnet induces electric current in the brain
and we know that that causes brain cells to fire, to become
active, to do things, to kick out brain chemicals which are
called neurotransmitters," said
Dr. Charles Epstein of Emory University.
**New research at the University of Virginia shows that
there is at least some truth to the oft-cited claim that
magnets can increase the flow of blood, thus providing more
oxygen and nutrients to injured tissue. Researchers have
shown that a mild magnetic field can cause the smallest
blood vessels in the body to dilate or constrict, thus
increasing the blood flow and suppressing inflammation, a
critical factor in the healing process.
So far, the findings are based on experiments with rats,
but the researchers hope to begin human clinical trials in
the near future, although that could prove to be a major
challenge.
What sets this work apart from most research into the
so-called healing effects of magnets is the fact that the
researchers were able to quantify their results by measuring
the changes in the blood vessels to determine the impact on
inflammation.
"It's the first direct measurements that show the
reduction in swelling," said Thomas Skalak, chairman of
biomedical engineering at the university, who reported on
his work in the American Journal of Physiology. Skalak and a
former student, Cassandra Morris, have been trying to nail
down the effects of magnetism for several years now.
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