Vega Test method
The Vega Test is a diagnostic method also known as the Shimmel Reaction Test, or VRT (Vegetative Reflex Test). It is one of the newest types of electronic diagnostics. It is based on the principles of electromagnetic bioresonance, i.e. we study the reactions of the human vegetative nervous system to specific frequencies and electromagnetic pulses. The VRT test reveals with a probability of 80-90% all causes that cannot be diagnosed in a classical way, e.g. sources of persistent migraine, pain in the spine, joints, chronic fatigue, sleep disorders, etc. It is perfect for diagnosing functional and clinically unclear diseases and subclinical disorders . The Vega Test method as a bioresonance test allows not only to detect functional organ changes used for the presence or absence of a resonance response, but also to determine the significance of this change for the whole organism.
The VEGA TEST method, as well as the classic Voll method, uses the comparison of changes in electric conduction at measurement points with the state of the organism, but on a slightly different methodological basis. The theoretical assumption in the VEGA TEST method is the theoretical assumption that, in the functional sense, the human body is the whole of many cyclical processes that interact harmoniously and synchronously and determine the homeostasis (internal constancy of the environment) of the organism as a whole. In the management of homeostasis, the vegetative nervous system plays a key role, which simultaneously manages and interprets all information signals inside the body. Referring to the vegetative nervous system (as an information and energy “skeleton”), one can capture its response to the impact of vibrations that are not indifferent to the organism. This response occurs in the form of a resonance phenomenon.
The history of the development of the VEGA TEST (WRT) diagnostic method
The VEGA TEST method of bioresonance was developed in Germany by the doctor Helmut Schimmel in 1978. It is based on R. Voll’s electroacupuncture diagnostics and functional bioelectron diagnostics by W. Schmidt and H. Pflaum. Over 15 years of research by Dr. Schimmel and his followers has transformed this method into an extremely effective way of diagnosis. Modern engineering and technical solutions make it possible to closely combine both methods – the Voll method and the Vega-test method, because both of these methods irreplaceably complement each other.
Bioresonance therapy
Bioresonance therapy was discovered in Germany by Dr. F. Morel and engineer E. Rashe in 1976. Its idea is in full harmony with the concept of man as a coherent, self-regulating system that requires taking into account the presence of a multitude of interrelationships between his cells, tissues, organs and systems. The basis of the organism’s functioning are the processes of energy-information exchange.
The organism, as a self-organizing system, has everything that is necessary to maintain homeostasis. That is why the task of electroinformation medicine, whose branch is bioresonance therapy, is to activate natural mechanisms aimed at restoring and maintaining health.
The basic principles of bioresonance therapy are based on the fact that every living organism and all its functioning systems are a source of extremely weak electromagnetic vibrations with a wide spectrum of frequencies, which in turn covers a wide range of wavelengths of various lengths, from very long to extremely short. These vibrations, inherent in an organism, are called physiological or harmonic oscillations.
The organism becomes ill when it is unable to maintain a dynamic balance between physiological and pathological vibrations, it cannot neutralize pathological fluctuations and bring them to an acceptable level. Therefore, the task of bioresonance therapy is to “cleanse” the body of harmful vibrations and to “recharge” it with physiological frequencies.
It should be said that bioresonance therapy is perfectly combined with therapeutic methods of classical medicine. In particular, it allows you to control various variants of physiotherapeutic or pharmacological treatment, i.e. to determine the dose, amount of daily consumption and sensitivity to the action of each agent. Significant help in pharmacological treatment can be provided by bioresonance therapy, thanks to reducing the side effects of taking medications, optimizing their selection and dose.
The effectiveness of using bioresonance therapy, according to various data, is from 75 to 95%. Currently, it is used to treat a wide range of diseases in various fields of medicine.