Energy Medicine in Therapeutics and Human Perormance by James Oschman.pdf

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B UTTERWORTH
H EINEMANN
An Imprint of Elsevier Science
The Curtis Center
Independence Square West
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106
ENERGY MEDICINE IN THERAPEUTICS AND
ISBN 0-7506-5400-7
HUMAN PERFOMANCE
Copyright © 2003, Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.
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NOTICE
Complementary and alternative medicine is an ever-changing field. Standard safety precautions must
be followed, but as new research and clinical experience broaden our knowledge, changes in treatment
and drug therapy may become necessary or appropriate. Readers are advised to check the most current
product information provided by the manufacturer of each drug to be administered to verify the rec-
ommended dose, the method and duration of administration, and contraindications. It is the respon-
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Oschman, James L.
Energy medicine in therapeutics and human performance / James L. Oschman; foreword by Karl Maret.
p.; cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-7506-5400-7
1. Energy—Therapeutic use. 2. Bioenergetics. I. Title.
[DNLM: 1. Energy Transfer. 2. Complementary Therapies. 3. Energy Metabolism. QU
34 O81 2003]
RZ999.O836 2003
615.8′9—dc21
2002043687
Acquisitions Editor: Inta Ozols
Developmental Editor: Karen Morley
Project Manager: Peggy Fagen
Designer: Mark Bernard
Printed in the United States of America
Last digit is the print number: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
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Dedication
This book is dedicated to the living spirit of the great
pioneers in science and medicine, especially John
McDearmon Moore (1916-2000) and Albert Szent-
Györgyi (1893-1986).
Our present and future science, medicine, and
evolution as a species depend upon the pioneers who
look beyond the way things seem to be, to the way
things can become. The distinguished individuals to
whom this book is dedicated are from opposite ends
of the biomedical spectrum: an osteopathic clinician
and a basic scientist. What they had in common, in
addition to their dedication to life, was not what they
knew but what they knew they did not know. John
McDearmon (Mack) Moore, DO, Kirksville College
of Osteopathic Medicine, became a country doctor, a
loving witness and an aid to countless births, suffer-
ings, and passings. Albert von Szent-Györgyi
Nagyrapolt, MD (Budapest), PhD (Cambridge),
Nobel Laureate, known to his colleagues as Prof or
Albi, was one of the great scientific pioneers of the
twentieth century. One of our continuing challenges
is to connect advances in basic science with day-to-
day clinical practice
The way of the pioneer is seldom easy, and we will
always wonder what our world would be like if we
could learn to embrace new ideas for the opportuni-
ties they offer.
John McDearmon Moore
Albert Szent-Gÿorgi
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Foreword
by Karl Maret, MD
Thomas Kuhn’s 1962 book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions made us keenly aware of the
principle of a “paradigm shift.” Paradigm, literally “an example that serves as a pattern or
model,” is an existing belief system that anchors consensual reality. “Normal science” is predi-
cated on the assumption that the scientific community knows what the world is like. Scientists
take great pains to defend that assumption and to this end often suppress fundamental novel-
ties because they may be seen as subversive to the existing set of beliefs. The scientific commu-
nity cannot practice its trade without some set of received beliefs that forms the continuity of
modern Western scientific thought. In turn, the scientific educational system is founded on a
process of rigorous, sometimes rigid, preparation that ensures that the transmitted beliefs exert
a “deep hold” on the students’ minds.
One existing paradigm in contemporary medicine is that we are primarily biochemical
beings. Consequently, the use of pharmaceutical agents, or alternatively herbs and vitamins,
ought to be the most effective and widely used method to bring healing to an ailing organism.
The paradigm shift that is beginning to occur, and to which this book so eloquently speaks, is
that we are not only biochemical beings, but even more fundamentally, energetic and informa-
tional beings with sophisticated, high-speed communications systems mediating a complex
information flow within our bodies.
No biochemist or physicist will deny that all chemical interactions fundamentally depend on
energetic, informational, or structural conformational interactions in molecules. But just
because molecules such as ATP are mediators of energy exchange, we should not assert that
these mediators are the cause of these energetic interactions.
For almost a century, physics has lived with an emerging new vision of energetic interactions
within matter by invoking such strange concepts as quantum mechanics, soliton waves, particle
entanglements, non-locality, and action-at-a-distance, to name only a few. This new physics
describes a world that is increasingly paradoxical and often counterintuitive and confusing to
our fundamental sense perceptions. In that context, the modern biological sciences and medi-
cine utilize concepts that are more analogous to the more traditional ideas of Newtonian
physics.
Nearly 100 years ago, when this revolution in physics was occurring, American medical prac-
tice and education were also being fundamentally altered. The 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act
declared that electrotherapy was scientifically unsupportable and should be legally excluded
from clinical practice. This was followed in 1910 by the Flexner report sponsored by the
Carnegie Foundation that reformed American medical education. The standardization of med-
ical education resulted from Flexner’s recommendation when he stated, “The curse of medical
education is the excessive number of schools. The situation can improve only as weaker and
superfluous schools are extinguished.”
From these beginnings came a growing emphasis on a surgical and drug-oriented therapeu-
tics, while effectively discouraging the use of the widespread electrical and magnetic treatment
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modalities that had found favor with many American consumers up to that time. Robert Becker
and Andrew Marino estimated that by 1884, 10,000 physicians in the United States were using
electricity every day for therapeutic purposes. Some of these ubiquitous “energy medicine”
devices were sold by American retailers such as Sears through their catalog.
Although historians may one day determine whether the Carnegie Foundation–sponsored
Flexner report had a self-seeking economic and political agenda to reform American medicine,
one thing is for certain: the potential value of energy medicine treatments was effectively
removed from American medical practitioners’ consciousness. Over the ensuing years, research
and education in electromagnetic medical approaches was actively discouraged if not outright
shunned or ridiculed by the academic establishment.
Only in the waning years of the 20th century was there a renewed interest in this field, driven
in part by consumer demand in complementary and alternative medicine that is facilitating a
paradigm shift in health care. With U.S. levels of health care spending (or, truthfully, should we
call it disease-care spending?) in 2000 reaching $1.3 trillion, and showing no signs of abating,
we are now spending over $4500 annually for every American man, woman, and child to pro-
vide health/disease care. Only a minuscule percentage of this spending is for energy medicine
diagnostic and treatment modalities, even though these have demonstrated many beneficial
effects.
Diagnostic modalities such as the key EKG, EEG, and MRI, even though relegated to sub-
specialties of medicine such as cardiology, neurology and radiology, are essentially energy med-
icine modalities. Great promise also lies with newly emerging energy medicine therapeutic
devices ranging from microcurrent stimulators, low level lasers, bone growth stimulators to
broad-spectrum multiple frequency Tesla coil devices used for healing and performance
enhancement. Although the genie is barely out of the bottle in the emerging field of energy med-
icine, yet already health-care benefits with lower delivery costs look very promising.
What Jim Oschman invites us to do is to journey together into the mysterious world of
energy inside living systems. He pursues this path like Sherlock Holmes looking for clues, and
we, the reader, collectively become the amazed Dr. Watson being led into the “heart of the mat-
ter.” The reference to heart mentioned here is not without forethought.
One of the 11 definitions of heart in the American Heritage Dictionary is the “most import-
ant or essential part,” as in “to get to the heart of the matter.” To get to the heart of the current
paradigm shift, we are invited to reexamine our current Newtonian medicine in the light of
energy medicine involving the principles that belong to the quantum physics and information
theory. A useful starting point might be to examine the actual heart in our bodies and discover
what new revolutionary findings have emerged here over the last quarter-century.
The heart is not simply a muscular organ that pumps blood around the body and lungs of
vertebrates. It has always been seen as a vital center and source of one’s being, emotions and sen-
sibilities. New research has shown how the heart is in intimate dialogue with our brain, body
and the world at large. Dr. J. Andrew Armour, one of the pioneers of the newly emerging field
of neurocardiology, introduced the concept of the functional “heart brain” in 1991. The heart’s
complex intrinsic nervous system contains tens of thousands of sensory neurites which detect
circulating hormones and neurochemicals and sense heart rate and pressure information.
Aggregates of the heart’s neural structures have direct connections with the emotional-cognitive
part of the brain, the limbic system, that can be called the old mammalian brain. An ongoing
dialogue takes place between the heart and the brain through these ganglionic connections.
About 20 years ago it was also discovered that the walls of the atria of the heart had the
capacity to secrete atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), a very potent blood pressure lowering agent
which also affects sodium excretion by the kidneys and lowers blood volume. This hormone also
affects many other organ systems, including the immune and reproductive systems, with hor-
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