Our internal organs can be seen digitally through the nervous system's connections with the skin. Regulation Thermography looks at problems originating in the head, teeth, thyroid, lymph, thymus, lungs, heart, stomach, liver, pancreas, colon, ovaries, prostate, kidneys, back and breasts. It may give an indication of the severity of the condition, if allergies are a consideration, if there is heavy metal toxicity involved and if there is degeneration involved. It can reveal a suspicion for breast disease so clients can be referred for an ultrasound, a non-contrast MRI or digital mammography. In most cases, a secondary or primary cause is identified, such as an old infection in the lymph of the neck or a hormonal problem. In such cases we start by treating the imbalance that has the highest priority. Progress is then monitored with Thermography and in many cases, may remove the person out of the danger zone, saving time and life. Thermography is effective by narrowing down the hit or miss therapies by focusing on the most important concerns first.
How Computerized Regulation Thermography Works
Thermography measures precise skin temperatures of body organs and visually displays the readings in the form of graphs. Infrared measurements of skin temperatures from 90-120 body points are taken before and after exposure to a cool-ambient room temperature. Skin temperature determined by influences of the nervous system's innervations to the capillary beds constrict or dilate in response to the cool air. Your thermogram is very specific to your unique biochemical profile.
As the nervous system reacts to the cool air, analogous to the "fight or flight" reaction, signals travel from the spinal cord through the regional nerve ganglia that innervate the organs of that region. They continue to the skin's capillary beds, where temperatures providing organ and tissue health information can be measured. Comparing temperatures before and after stress has proven to correlate with imbalances often related to degenerative or inflammatory conditions. CRT measures the difference between the two temperatures taken before and after the cool air exposure. This data is compared by CRT to a database of healthy patients and reveals deviations that identify patterns, reflected in an easy to understand report.
Digital Breast Thermography Screening
Now digitized, each point behavior is evaluated and compared to databases of Ideal Health. Seventy-five percent of women who get breast cancer have no family history of the disease. Mammography, although the digitized low-radiation devices are a step in the right direction, the new European Digitized Dynamic Breast Thermography device can be used with an 80% confidence level, with the additional ability of the device to see diseases as they are in their infant stages. (One study showed that followed 300 women 10 years after thermographic analysis, there was a 70% accuracy for predicting breast cancer up to 4 years before it was detected by mammography).
An Important Role In Breast Cancer Prevention
Is there a hormone imbalance in your breasts? Since the single greatest risk factor for the development of breast cancer is lifetime exposure to estrogen, normalizing the balance of the hormones in the breast may be the first and most significant step in prevention. Breast thermography is the only known non-invasive procedure that can detect estrogen dominance in the breasts. If a woman's thermographic images suggest a relative progesterone deficiency (estrogen dominance), treatment of this condition may play an important role in prevention. With treatment from her doctor, a woman can use this information to balance the hormones in her breasts. Follow-up thermograms are compared to the baseline estrogen dominant images as part of the treatment monitoring process.
Sensitive Non-Invasive Screening For Younger Women
Do you know that 23% of all breast cancers occur in women under 49? This is the most common cancer in women in this age group. Breast cancers in younger women are usually more aggressive and have poorer survival rates. Breast thermography offers younger women a sensitive non-invasive (no radiation and painless) addition to their regular breast health check-ups beginning with baseline screening at age 20.
Breast thermography and mammography are complementary procedures, one test does not replace the other. Studies show that the earliest detection is realized when a multiple testing approach to screening is taken. This multimodal approach includes breast self-examinations, physical breast exams by a doctor, mammography, and thermography.