As I was reading it, I thought that I recalled (vaguely) reading about work having been done with this kind of thing, though I thought it was with bones, not generalized healing. So I GSearched it, and found this article on the Time Magazine site which spoke of the potential for use in encouraging bones to knit which otherwise would not. The article clearly said that it isn't for routine use, but rather times when bones simply aren't fusing, and where the alternative might be amputation, if not worse.Funny, I thought, it was sexier when Yanko said it. The power of clean design, huh? But the two really aren't the same -- they're talking wounds, not bones. I wondered if a more precise search would turn up something snappy. Well... how snappy does this sound?
"Electrical signals control wound healing through phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase-big gamma and PTEN"
Yeah, me too. Guess I'll stick with believing the pretty pictures....
2 comments:
It's possible that it works because the pain from the electical shock makes you forget the other ailment...bloody genius!
I would think that the ionizing aura is pretty impressive, too, especially in a darkened room, or one filled with flammable vapors.
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