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DevSolar
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Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. Hard to prove non(See comments -existence, though- they don't.)


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor, not the internet (or someone who would directly make money from a given therapy).


Post Scriptum:

I had a look at the website you linked. This one (from the "about us" page) is a howler:

Till date over 6500 cases of Osteoarthritis have been treated...

Note that it says "treated", no mention on success rates.

...and clinical trials on terminally ill Cancer patients have been successfully completed.

The trials have been "successfully completed", but not a word about the results. I think if they had been curing "terminally ill Cancer patients", even just a couple of them, we would have heard about it in mainstream media for sure.

And I mean mainstream media, not the kind they present on their website. My personal favourite there is the DNA Sunday "article" which is marked "ADVI" (advertisment). So they list one of their own advertisments as media reference?

Stay well clear.

Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. Hard to prove non-existence, though.


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor, not the internet (or someone who would directly make money from a given therapy).


Post Scriptum:

I had a look at the website you linked. This one (from the "about us" page) is a howler:

Till date over 6500 cases of Osteoarthritis have been treated...

Note that it says "treated", no mention on success rates.

...and clinical trials on terminally ill Cancer patients have been successfully completed.

The trials have been "successfully completed", but not a word about the results. I think if they had been curing "terminally ill Cancer patients", even just a couple of them, we would have heard about it in mainstream media for sure.

And I mean mainstream media, not the kind they present on their website. My personal favourite there is the DNA Sunday "article" which is marked "ADVI" (advertisment). So they list one of their own advertisments as media reference?

Stay well clear.

Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. (See comments -- they don't.)


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor, not the internet (or someone who would directly make money from a given therapy).


Post Scriptum:

I had a look at the website you linked. This one (from the "about us" page) is a howler:

Till date over 6500 cases of Osteoarthritis have been treated...

Note that it says "treated", no mention on success rates.

...and clinical trials on terminally ill Cancer patients have been successfully completed.

The trials have been "successfully completed", but not a word about the results. I think if they had been curing "terminally ill Cancer patients", even just a couple of them, we would have heard about it in mainstream media for sure.

And I mean mainstream media, not the kind they present on their website. My personal favourite there is the DNA Sunday "article" which is marked "ADVI" (advertisment). So they list one of their own advertisments as media reference?

Stay well clear.

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DevSolar
  • 19.2k
  • 8
  • 78
  • 74

Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. Hard to prove non-existence, though.


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor, not the internet (or someone who would directly make money from a given therapy).


Post Scriptum:

I had a look at the website you linked. This one (from the "about us" page) is a howler:

Till date over 6500 cases of Osteoarthritis have been treated...

Note that it says "treated", no mention on success rates.

...and clinical trials on terminally ill Cancer patients have been successfully completed.

The trials have been "successfully completed", but not a word about the results. I think if they had been curing "terminally ill Cancer patients", even just a couple of them, we would have heard about it in mainstream media for sure.

And I mean mainstream media, not the kind they present on their website. My personal favourite there is the DNA Sunday "article" which is marked "ADVI" (advertisment). So they list one of their own advertisments as media reference?

Stay well clear.

Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. Hard to prove non-existence, though.


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor, not the internet (or someone who would directly make money from a given therapy).


Post Scriptum:

I had a look at the website you linked. This one (from the "about us" page) is a howler:

Till date over 6500 cases of Osteoarthritis have been treated...

Note that it says "treated", no mention on success rates.

...and clinical trials on terminally ill Cancer patients have been successfully completed.

The trials have been "successfully completed", but not a word about the results. I think if they had been curing "terminally ill Cancer patients", even just a couple of them, we would have heard about it in mainstream media for sure...

Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. Hard to prove non-existence, though.


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor, not the internet (or someone who would directly make money from a given therapy).


Post Scriptum:

I had a look at the website you linked. This one (from the "about us" page) is a howler:

Till date over 6500 cases of Osteoarthritis have been treated...

Note that it says "treated", no mention on success rates.

...and clinical trials on terminally ill Cancer patients have been successfully completed.

The trials have been "successfully completed", but not a word about the results. I think if they had been curing "terminally ill Cancer patients", even just a couple of them, we would have heard about it in mainstream media for sure.

And I mean mainstream media, not the kind they present on their website. My personal favourite there is the DNA Sunday "article" which is marked "ADVI" (advertisment). So they list one of their own advertisments as media reference?

Stay well clear.

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Source Link
DevSolar
  • 19.2k
  • 8
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  • 74

Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. Hard to prove non-existence, though.


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor, not the internet (or someone who would directly make money from a given therapy).


Post Scriptum:

I had a look at the website you linked. This one (from the "about us" page) is a howler:

Till date over 6500 cases of Osteoarthritis have been treated...

Note that it says "treated", no mention on success rates.

...and clinical trials on terminally ill Cancer patients have been successfully completed.

The trials have been "successfully completed", but not a word about the results. I think if they had been curing "terminally ill Cancer patients", even just a couple of them, we would have heard about it in mainstream media for sure...

Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. Hard to prove non-existence, though.


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor...

Nuts.

Vostok 1 reached an Apogee of 327 km. That is well within Earth's magnetosphere.

Aside from that, and aside from certain sensory effects that can be experienced when exposed to strong magnetic fields, the human body doesn't care much for magnetism, or the lack of it.

The one thing that would make a lack of magnetism in space harmful would be solar wind (which Earth's magnetic field deflects). Before you get that high, you'd pass through the Van Allen radiation belt, where the presence of Earth's magnetic field results in an increase of radiation.

Either way, "pulsed magnetic devices" in a space suit won't make a difference, and I seriously doubt they exist. Hard to prove non-existence, though.


In the end, the most competent person to answer these kind of questions would be a doctor, not the internet (or someone who would directly make money from a given therapy).


Post Scriptum:

I had a look at the website you linked. This one (from the "about us" page) is a howler:

Till date over 6500 cases of Osteoarthritis have been treated...

Note that it says "treated", no mention on success rates.

...and clinical trials on terminally ill Cancer patients have been successfully completed.

The trials have been "successfully completed", but not a word about the results. I think if they had been curing "terminally ill Cancer patients", even just a couple of them, we would have heard about it in mainstream media for sure...

Source Link
DevSolar
  • 19.2k
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