3.8 Review

Human Ultraweak Photon Emission and the Yin Yang Concept of Chinese Medicine

Journal

JOURNAL OF ACUPUNCTURE AND MERIDIAN STUDIES
Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages 221-231

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S2005-2901(10)60041-6

Keywords

Chinese medicine; connective tissue; radical oxygen species; triboluminescence; ultraweak photon emission; yin yang

Funding

  1. Samueli Institute of Information Biology
  2. Rockefeller-Samueli Center for Research in Mind-Body Energy

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The relationship between connective tissue and meridian function is discussed in terms of energy transmission. The network of hydrogen-bonded water molecules interspersed within the collagen fibrillar matrix is especially significant for both the sensitivity of connective tissue to weak signals of mechanical pressure, heat, or electricity and the electrical intercommunication that may correlate with the meridian acupuncture system. Special electromagnetic properties of connective tissue have similar collective properties of ultraweak photon emission. A relationship between ultraweak photon emission and yin yang dynamics is based on three types of ultraweak photon emission studies, focusing on diurnal and annual dynamics, diseased states, and acupuncture points. A novel concept explains the functional (health) integrity of physiologic systems in relation to the left-right balance in ultraweak photon emission by pointing to, (1) balanced corticoneuromusculoskeletal activities and tribolumi-nescent aspects of ultraweak photon emission by skeletal structures, and (2) local fine-tuning in oxygen supply and the formation of radical oxygen species. This approach offers testable hypotheses for further validation utilizing a combination of human photon recording techniques and specialized metabolomics for the estimation of organ-specific oxidative states.

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