Treating Inflammation with Needles

You can use electrical charge to treat an infection (especially on the skin) by interfering with the pathogen’s ability to attach itself to the membrane of the cell. This can be done easily by simply putting needles around the outside of the infection. The infection usually creates a red ring around the area that is infected so just put needles just outside of the redness. In order to inhibit the pathogen (bacteria or virus) from attaching to the cell (in particular the cell wall) you need to cancel out the charge on the surface of both the cell and the pathogen. An acupuncture needle is the perfect tool to accomplish this. Here is how: When you insert a needle anywhere in the body, two things happen automatically. First, the free electrons on the surface of the skin will go through the needle (and even through the hole after the needle is removed until the current that drives this process is used up). The electrons will gather mostly at the tip of the needle since that is where the electrical field is strongest. Since opposite charges attract and the electrons are free or loosely bound, the electrons will be attracted by the positive charge at both the outside of the cell membrane and the outside of the pathogen’s membrane as well. That takes care of the positive charges that attract them together. The second phenomena that happens is that since the needle is made of surgical stainless steel, the needles surface is thus hydrophilic. Therefore, when it comes in contact with extracellular fluid it will automatically create structured water on its surface driven by the heat (infrared electromagnetic energy). As a part of this process, Hydrogen atoms are released ||(a separation of charge occurs) into the extracellular fluid. These positively charged ions are then attracted to the negative charge on the membranes of both the cell and pathogen. Since by doing thus you provide a way to cancel the charges on both the cell’s membrane and the pathogen’s membrane, you have removed the attractive force necessary for the pathogen to infect the cell. This should be enough to stop the spread of the infection. Even for antibiotic resistant strains. And all without any drugs or their side-effects. This can also explain why acupuncture typically does not lead to infections (but that doesn’t mean you don’t have to use clean needle technique). It just means that why infections from acupuncture are quite rare.

From my upcoming book “Treating With Charge:

A New Way to Use Acupuncture and a New Understanding of Another Way Acupuncture Works”.

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