Treatment of General Health Problems
Fine Treatment integrates latest advancements in medical research into the development of non-invasive solutions facilitating improvements to health and well-being.
Health disorders can be local and general.
Local health disorders, such as lower back pains, kidney stones, chronic prostatitis, Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy and others, affect a particular organ or an area of the body.
General health disorders affect the whole body, for example, stress, obesity, high blood pressure and the process of aging.
Dr Allen’s devices help with both local and general health disorders.
Disorders develop under the impact of different triggers, such as infection, fear, hunger, excess of salt or sugar, smoking, etc.
As the Theory of Capillaries’ Activity explains, local disorders develop when capillaries react to a trigger in a specific part of the body, while general disorders appear when triggers disturb capillaries throughout the whole body sending a large amount of signals to the brain causing it to suffer. An overwhelming amount of signals in critical conditions lead to a shock making the brain to switch off.
That is why an improvement to the blood flow through the capillaries in the brain can help with the treatment of various general health disorders.
This is why Dr Allen’s Head and Brain Care device is currently undergoing an R&D process for its production.
General Health Disorders Treatment for general health problems Brain and General Health Disorders That is why an improvement to the blood flow through the capillaries in the brain can help with the treatment of various general health disorders.
Why are general health problems linked to the brain?
Body temperature is regulated by the hypothalamus in the brain. It serves as a thermostat, initiating physiological measures to lose or gain heat. Normal body temperature varies between individuals but is typically just over 37°C. Should this drop by even a small amount, then hypothermia sets in. At 36°C, reaction times and judgment become impaired. At 35°C you will be unable to write your own name and even walking is very difficult. At 33°C you may become completely irrational, throwing away survival gear and stripping off your clothing. At 32°C, most people will collapse, becoming unconscious when their core temperature drops to around 30°C.
Heat is conserved by constriction of the small arteries supplying blood to tiny capillaries near the surface of the skin. This reduces blood flow in the capillaries. To lose heat, small arteries dilate, increasing blood flow in the capillaries. Heat is lost from them. As sweat is produced, the evaporation of the water from the sweat cools the skin.
Many people at various times in their lives find that washing with cold water becomes unpleasant for them and they often catch a cold after washing in this way. When people are young, different methods of tempering their body (i.e. to make their body stronger) are well known, such as:
- Walking in the garden and at home without shoes.
- Putting feet in a bowl of water, day by day decreasing the temperature of water from 28°C to 8°C.
- Taking a cold shower regularly.
These procedures are training the temperature neural feedback mechanisms of the body which are under the regulation of the hypothalamus.
However, after the age of 50 such tempering of the body may only worsen the feeling of cold and could be the cause of a health problem. This happens because brain cells have been exhausted with age and do not have enough capacity to react effectively.
Dr Allen’s devices, by improving the blood flow in the cerebral capillaries network help its structures to react properly.