Property Owned As Tenants In Common
Law1 min ago
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As a general summary magnets have been shown not to live up to any of it's healing claims.
This from wikipedia:
No magnet healing product manufacturers have demonstrated scientifically that they actually achieve what they claim, and most cannot even agree on what exactly the magnetic fields do. Some claim that the magnets help to circulate the blood by some interaction with the iron in hemoglobin, a major component of red blood cells. However, in its ionised form, iron is not ferromagnetic. If it were, use of magnetic resonance imaging would instantaneously kill patients
Right, so having disproved the theory of magnetic therapy, has anyone actually given any practical advice??
I do not follow research into the results of magnetic therapy, but can tell you what I know through first hand experience.
I have treated dogs riddled with arthritus with magnets, and a dog that would not move will now potter about without squealing. I have also seen my grandmother re-pass her driving test after having used magnets to ease her joint pain- with no other medication.
As for shin splints, there may well be some more valid opinions out there on the web, but unless it will prove expensive, it would be worth a try!