Guest guest Posted March 3, 2005 Report Share Posted March 3, 2005 > I've had the owner of Pantheon come to my class to talk and he basically says he has no idea about microcurrent... if it works any better or what the mechanisms are. But since people are using it and requesting it he puts it on his machines. He stresses always that he is an engineer type person, not an acupuncturist. doug > _____________________ > _ > _____________________ > _ > > Message: 14 > Thu, 03 Mar 2005 16:41:57 -0000 > " cameronhollister " <cameronhollister > Re: Microampere (microcurrent) v. Milliampere > Electro-Stimulation > > > Chinese Medicine , " Alon Marcus > DOM " <alonmarcus@w...> wrote: >> >> Alpha-Stim 100 microcurrent >>>>>> It works well to relax patients. That is about it >> >> > Alon, > What about Pantheon Clinical Microcurrent? Not the electro- > acupuncture one? Any idea? Or the Mentor thing. Are they more > powerful? What do you use most often? > Cameron >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 3, 2005 Report Share Posted March 3, 2005 I've had the owner of Pantheon come to my class to talk and he basically says he has no idea about microcurrent... if it works any better or what the mechanisms are. But since people are using it and requesting it he puts it on his machines. He stresses always that he is an engineer type person, not an acupuncturist. >>>>>The problem is that if it is not a current controlled unit then depending on tissue resistance it becomes miliamp stimulator and not microamp. As those of you that have it know, even when set to microamp if turned up the patient can feel the stimulation and can even fire motor neurons. The stim at that point is probably not in the microamp range. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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