bioflow ecoflow - UK distributor-natural health products

Natural Products for People & Pets

Tel : 0845 838 6263

Home     Gift Ideas  View Basket  Contact   Brochure   

Magnetic Products l Pets HealthHimalayan Salt l Heat Therapy l Breathe Easy

**FREE GIFT WITH ORDERS OVER £30** Wheat Bag Hand Warmer * Must be added to basket more

Natural Health Products
Magnetic Therapy
Heat Therapy
Himalayan Salt
Salt Lamps
Breathe Easy
Pain Relief

Supplements

Well Being
Easy Living
Detox and Cleanse
Food & Nutrition
Beauty Products
Body Care
Weight Loss Aids
Fitness
Kids Health
Water Treatments
Ecofriendly
Aromatherapy
Books
Gift Packs
Natural Health Pets
All Pet Health Products
Magnotherapy
Pet Supplements
Herbal Remedies
Natural Pet Treats
Raised Dog Beds
Pet Steps
Pet Heat Pads
Comfy Collar

>>BESTSELLER<<

Microwave Slippers

Heatable Slippers

 

>>BESTSELLER<<

Microwave Teddies

Heatable Teddies

 

Shiatsu Back Stretcher

Reduce Back & Neck Pain

Back Stretcher

 

>>Mood Balls <<

Aqua sensory Mood balls

floating balls

 

HookandGo

hook and go

New innovative shopping trolley for all ages

HookandGo

 

>>NEW<<

Acupuncture Pen

Acupuncture Pen

acupuncture pen

 

>>NEW<<

Adopt a Donkey

Adopt a Donkey

charity gifts

 

Why not join our mailing list?

click here to join

 

 

Magnetic Therapy & Depression

Magnets 'can cure depression'

Extracted from Daily Mail August 2003

Psychiatrists are carrying out trials using electrical magnets as a treatment for depression - targeting those people who fail to get better with conventional drug therapy.

The vast majority of patients get well with a course of modern antidepressants, but for a sizeable minority, drugs have little or no impact on their illness.

As a result, some of these patients are in and out of hospital as they battle with a depression they cannot beat.

As a last resort, psychiatrists will turn to electro-convulsive therapy (ECT), using electrical currents to cause a brain seizure.

This is designed to restore normal electrical activity in the brain - and so lift depression.

But now doctors at the Maudsley Hospital in South London are experimenting with a much gentler approach to treating drug-resistant depression.

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) uses pulses of magnetic energy on a very small area of the brain where triggers for depression are thought to be centred.

Trials funded by the Department of Health are only just under way, but studies carried out elsewhere in the world show that the technique is at least as good as ECT, with TMS working for between 50 and 70 per cent of the patients who tried it.

It is estimated that between 10 and 30 per cent of people with clinical depression are either partially resistant or completely resistant to drug therapy, and doctors hope the new method will be of benefit to these.

Dr Declan McLoughlin, who is leading the research at the Maudsley, says psychiatrists have been looking for alternative treatments to ECT, which is seen as a last resort.

'While many patients do well using ECT, they would probably prefer to be given TMS because it is a gentler technique,' he says.

'Although ECT is now used much more selectively and is incredibly safe, there are some risks because a general anaesthetic is used.

There are also issues surrounding personality changes and loss of memory after treatment.

'The benefit of TMS is that it is a straightforward and painless procedure that doesn't involve a patient being induced to have a fit. And, because there is no need for a general anaesthetic, it doesn't require a whole medical team on hand.'

Treatment involves applying a magnetic field to the brain through a coil which is held over the scalp. Before treatment starts, the coil is lined up with the left frontal lobe - the area of the brain associated with mood disorders.

'The treatment area is the size of a 50p piece, and we establish that we are in the right place by sending magnetic stimuli through the scalp,' says Dr McLoughlin. 'If we are on target, it will cause the patient's right thumb to twitch.'

Magnetic therapy is then delivered in twenty 10-second pulses, with pauses in between. Treatment lasts about 20 minutes.

Patients are normally treated every day over several weeks, then assessed to see if there has been an improvement.

There are few side-effects, though some patients have a sensation similar to a finger being flicked against the side of their head, while others suffer mild headaches.

No one is clear how TMS works, but doctors suspect it is stimulating increased electrical activity in the area of the brain affected by depression.

'We know that there is less electrical activity in this area in those who are depressed, and research indicates that the pulses of magnetic waves lead to an increase,' says Dr McLoughlin.

The patented Central Reverse Polarity magnet module used by our Bioflow magnets produces a unique field that has a similar effect of a pulsed field without emitting any electromagnetic resonance.

They are portable, a one off cost & can be used all the time.

If you suffer from depression it is well worth trying one, they come with a 90 day money back guarantee, if not satisfied.

See our range of Bioflow magnets