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High Resolution Blood Imaging
Dr. Alexander Angelov, MD, of Swampscott, MA, in his office,
with Susanna Bair, President of IAM.
Using a high-resolution photo-microscope attached
to a digital video camera and computer, Dr. Angelov is able
to examine the clumping of red blood cells, an
indication of stress.
Red blood cells normally repel each other because the membrane of each
cell has a slight electrical charge of the same polarity.
When the cells lose that charge under stress, the red blood cells
stick together instead.
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In the slide below, the red blood cells are
clumped together, stacked sideways, forming long, sticky chains.
This common condition is called
hemagglutination and results
in a reduced ability of the blood to transfer oxygen
to the surrounding tissues (anemia), since the surface of each red blood cell is
not exposed. The clumps of red blood cells may also be
a factor in strokes. |
The slide below shows the free-floating red blood cells
of the same person as on the left, after only 10 minutes of
Heart Rhythm Meditation (Water Breath).
These cells are not stuck together;
they float in multiple layers of plasma.
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Stressed condition |
After 10 minutes of Heart Rhythm Meditation |
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Under stress, when energy is needed most, the
blood goes into a condition, agglutination, which causes an anemia
that actually reduces energy in the body.
This is not a "fight or flight" response; it does not provide
the energy to flee.
Instead it is an energy strike that attempts to stop one from creating
more of their own stress. With
Heart Rhythm Meditation,
one can endure stress and still operate in a healthy condition.
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Call tollfree 1-888-310-7881, or email us
PO Box 86149, Tucson, AZ 85754
© Copyright 2006,
The Institute for Applied Meditation, Inc.
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