What Is Far Infrared
What Does It Do
How The Process Evolves
Far Infrared Dome Benefits
Research
Fir Heat Is Felt To Produce Therapeutic Effects
Case Study
Metal Toxicity Testimonial
CASE STUDY
Rheumatoid arthritis in a 14-year-old Swedish girl who couldn't walk comfortably downstairs due to knee pain since she had been eight years old. Her rheumatologists told her mother that she would be in a wheelchair within two years. However, after three infrared treatments she began to become more agile and subsequently took up folk dancing, without the aid of the conventional approach in her recovery.
CAUTION
If you have a disease or are using any prescription drugs, be certain to consult with a primary care physician before use. Some authorities consider its use inadvisable with systemic lupus, erythematosis, chronically hot and swollen joints, enclosed infections, predisposition to hemorrhage, multiple sclerosis, or during pregnancy. If you have a recent (acute) joint injury it should not be heated for the first 48 hours after an injury. If you have metal pins, rods, artificial joints or other surgical or silicone implants, consult your surgeon prior to using FIR. (Metal pin rods, etc. generally reflect infrared rays.) FIR use must be discontinued if you experience pain near any implants. Heating of the low back area of women during the menstrual period may temporarily increase their menstrual flow. The data presented herein is offered for reference purposes only and to stimulate further observation. No implication of Infrared to cure or treat any disease is implied nor should it be inferred.
METAL TOXICITY TESTIMONIAL
A Doctor's Experience With the FIR Dome.
Two weeks ago I examined the blood of a student of the Institute where I work under Ultra Darkfield to determine the extent of metal toxicity. In Ultra Darkfield) heavy metals reflect within their characteristic spectral index and they can be observed in either low or high density, whichever the case may be. This student was observed to have a very high degree of copper, aluminum and mercury) and I was very concerned for her.
She asked me to take her blood again, this time before and after using the FIR Hot House. The Manufacturer indicates in its literature that the machine is useful in chelating metals, and she wished to give it a try.
We took a blood sample before the treatment and it showed a tremendous amount of free heavy metal. So much metal was observed that the red blood cells could hardly be made out because of the greater reflectivity of the metals in the sample. She then lay for 15 minutes under the PIR Hot House. We took another sample and observed something that I must admit surprised me greatly. The metals were just as abundant in the second sample but they had been completely sequestered in a thin veil of fat. A line of demarcation was clearly seen and on one side of the
line, or veil, of fat, the red blood cells were clearly visible against a black background. On the
other side of the line, however, the metal concentration continued to be as it had been in the previous sample. The red blood cells could hardly be seen. The metals had been clearly sequestered by fat.
My preliminary conclusions are that this sequestering will make it possible for the liver to remove the metals by downloading them with the fat, to the gut for disposal. This experience clearly points to the need for repetition and I plan to do further research on the use of the FIR Hot House as a possible alternative to intravenous chelation and other invasive therapies and procedures for the removal of metals and chemical toxicity.