Microcurrent Therapy

The practices used in microcurrent therapy seek to make use of information gleaned from the study of the repair process in damaged body tissues. Those studies showed that electrical signals are present in repairing tissue. The fact that such signals make their appearance during the repair process suggests that they are integral to that process.
Based on that suggestion, the practitioners of microcurrent therapy have developed a way to introduce a mild electrical current into an area of damaged soft tissue. They then claim that the introduced current will have the ability to enhance the healing process already underway in that same tissue.

The practitioners of microcurrent therapy use an extremely mild current. Patients do not suffer any pain from the introduction of that current. Sometimes patients object to the chilly and wet electrodes. The current is applied using electrodes that have been either moistened or coated with a gel.

Patients who seek the benefits of microcurrent therapy expect to get more than just an enhancement of the healing process. Microcurrent therapy promises to do more than simply increase the speed at which a soft tissue is able to heal itself. The information on microcurrent therapy claims that it delivers four additional benefits.

The use of microcurrent therapy promises to reduce swelling and inflammation. This promise must seem especially appealing to people with inflammatory bowel disease. Scientists have not yet found the specific cause of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).

Meanwhile, IBD patients suffer with swelling, pain and damage to the intestinal wall. Ulcers may form. Blood and fluid have been known to make their way into the intestinal lining. It is no wonder then that IBD patients have turned to microcurrent therapy as a way to counter the forces that are attacking their intestinal tissues.

A third benefit of microcurrent therapy is related to the issue of acute and chronic pain. Stimulation of tissues with an electrical current has been shown to cover-up both acute and chronic pain. Patients who do not want to become dependent on some sort of pain medicine can look to microcurrent therapy for help.

Stimulation of body tissues with electrical signals has an important affect on muscle "trigger points." Stress can often lead to the involuntary tightening of muscles at certain trigger points. When a patient undergoes microcurrent therapy, then he or she will enjoy a release from such muscle tightening.

Microcurrent therapy appears to assist with body operations that take place following the simple healing process. Once a cut or damage has benefited from the body's normal healing process, then the repaired tissue needs to undergo a process of regeneration. Studies have shown that use of microcurrent therapy has the ability to enhance soft tissue regeneration.

The public can expect to hear much more about the uses of microcurrent therapy. Men who have been injured in combat, and who have undergone repair to their damaged tissues need to experience tissue regeneration. Efforts focused on an enhancement of such regeneration will no doubt include the use of microcurrent therapy.
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