Therapeutic and diagnostic apparatus and method

Surgery: light – thermal – and electrical application – Light – thermal – and electrical application – Thermal applicators

Reexamination Certificate

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C128S898000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06684108

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF INVENTION
This invention generally relates to apparatus and methods for diagnosing and treating cancer and other illness in humans and animals, and more particularly to a diagnostic method focused on detecting the effect of magnetic fields on blood and tissue samples, and a therapeutic apparatus and method based upon the administration of precisely regulated, low power, pulsed electromagnetic radiation (EMR).
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
There is a considerable body of early literature regarding treatment of various illnesses with radio frequencies (RF) in the 43 MHz range. In U.S. Pat. No. 2,545,087, F. J. Hart disclosed an apparatus for treating a subject with a sequence of radio frequencies in the 43 MHz. range, applied in a stepwise fashion. These frequencies were each modulated sinusoidally at 60 Hz., and further pulsed by a second slow sinusoidal oscillator operating at 90 cycles per minute (1.5 Hz.). The RF frequencies employed by Hart were specified to three decimal places.
The instruments available to Hart and the other researchers of his day were based on tube amplifiers, which resulted in oscillators with considerable drift that could not be precisely tuned. Hart's means for applying the RF energy to a subject most often consisted of a metal plate acting as an antenna. As a result of such oscillator drift and imprecision, and the inefficiency of the available output devices, Hart and his contemporaries were not able to conduct scientific tests with precisely controlled frequencies, or to discover optimal treatment modalities.
Modern electronic technologies make it relatively simple to construct more precise and stable instruments than Hart had at his disposal. As a consequence, it has become possible to study systematically the potential therapeutic value of EMR. The present inventors have undertaken such studies over the course of many years, and as a result have perfected apparatus and methods which have proved effective in treating cancerous tumors in laboratory mice. The inventors believe that the same methods can be effectively adapted for human treatment.
The present inventors have constructed an apparatus designed to overcome the limitations of Hart's approach. They have further sought to establish the utility of their invention through a program of animal testing, and have in turn used the results of such testing to refine the apparatus and the methods for effectively using such apparatus. The resulting apparatus and methods, and the experimental results of applying such apparatus and methods to treat cancerous tumors in mice, will be described below.
Diagnostic elements of the invention are used in conjunction with the therapeutic elements. Development of the diagnostic elements of this invention utilized an apparatus originally developed by Dr. Albert Abrams who was born in San Francisco in 1863. Abrams got his medical degree from the reputed German University of Heidelberg at the age of 19. He received another degree from the Cooper Medical School (later incorporated into the Stanford Medical School) in the San Francisco Bay Area.
One of Dr. Albert Abrams inventions was the Radioscope which was used for diagnosis. This diagnosis and treatment, to date, has come about in several progressive steps. First, Abrams found that when a cancer patient faced west, percussion revealed a dullness on the patient's abdomen. Second, when a piece of cancer tissue was held close to the forehead of a healthy person, whom Abrams called the “reagent,” percussion revealed the same dullness on the reagent's abdomen. Third, the energy radiated from the cancerous tissue could be conducted over a wire to the reagent and produce the same dullness as when the tissue was held to the forehead of the reagent. Fourth, by the same procedure not only cancer, but other diseases, could be detected by the energy radiated from the patient, or from a sample of the patient's blood.
It would seem obvious from Abrams' discoveries that disease could be identified by simply tuning in on the frequency that moved along the wire from the sample to the reagent's forehead. His first diagnosis device was made with wire-wound rheostats which when set at 30 and 50 ohms, Abrams said he found the “vibration rates” of carcinoma because the dullness then occurred on the abdomen of the reagent. It seems strange now but at that time Abrams thought he was dealing with resistance. But identification of “vibrations” in terms of ohms of resistance on its face makes no electronic sense at all. And so it is not surprising that medical science at once branded Abrams as a fake without any investigation to see if perchance, the rheostats could have been inductively wound so that the settings of 30 and 50 could have fortuitously turned in on the frequency radiated by cancer. At that time electronic science had not developed enough to accept any such explanation of the Abrams' phenomenon.
A Canadian doctor, T. Proctor Hall, was curious enough to attend an Abrams seminar demonstration. Hall was so thoroughly convinced by what he saw that he read a paper before the British Columbia Academy of Science on Apr. 27, 1923 in which he reported that Abrams' diagnosis and treatment really did work, although, “it seems ridiculously simple”.
A few years before Dr. Abrams passed away in 1924 he founded the Electronic Medical Foundation in San Francisco. Dr. Thomas Colson, B.S., L.L.B., D.O. was the one at the Foundation who developed and made practicable many of Abrams' procedures.
In 1953 The Foundation published a booklet entitled MOLECULAR RADIATIONS by Thomas Colson, Editor, Journal of Electronic Medicine, 1928-1946. Fred Hart assisted in preparation of the booklet for publication. In the booklet Colson explains why the Abrams' procedure permits functions and diseases of the body to be discovered in the molecules (which are present in the blood) before the cells of the body are effected. Colson also contributed to and reported on the development of the “Radioscope” which has a circuit designed after a radio receiver but which has no detector of its own but instead gets reactions from the reflexes on the abdomen of the reagent.
Fred Hart continued with the work of Abrams and Colson. Many tests were performed using the Radioscope to diagnose the bloods of both humans and animals. From about 1953 to present more tests and experiments were performed by Fred Hart's daughter using the Radioscope for blood analysis and diagnosis. Her research into the use of the Radioscope has proven to be successful, tests are repeatable, and her analysis of ailments to be accurate. She has perfected the procedures required for repeatable results and wishes to make her finding public for the benefit of mankind.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is generally the object of the present invention to provide a method for diagnosis and treatment of cancer and other illnesses using a Radioscope to diagnose the illness, a Therapeutic Apparatus to treat the illness, and a Radioscope to monitor the treatment such that the treatment can be modified as necessary.
It is also generally the object of the present invention to utilize electromagnetic radiation to provide effective treatments for cancer and other illnesses.
It is a further object of this invention to achieve reliable and reproducible therapeutic results from EMR treatment methods by achieving precise control over the treatment frequency.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide an efficient means of transmitting EMR from the generating means to the subject.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an EMR treatment that may be applied at very low power levels that can cause no harm.
These and other objects are achieved in accordance with the present invention through the use of a Radioscope for diagnosis, and a Therapeutic Apparatus for treatment.
The Therapeutic Apparatus is an apparatus involving an oscillator that outputs, at a power of less than one mw, an RF frequency in the 43 MHz range, regulated and stab

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