Scientific
Research

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Guy Cramer
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ASTHMA
AND IONS
Advanced Research on Atmospheric Ions and Respiratory Problems
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Ions are small particles
that take on an electrical charge. In nature we tend to find
between a few hundred to a few thousand of these ions per
cubic centimeter. The small particles that take on this charge
are either negatively charged, positively charged or neutral.
In a cubic centimeter of air out over a grass field, we find
the ratio is almost balanced between negative ions and positive
ions. In other words we are breathing quantities of electricity.
Positive ions are known to make asthma victims worse. Positive
ion winds such as the Chinook Wind in Calgary, Alta., Canada
and the Santa Ana Winds in Southern California are known to
coincide with Asthma attacks. There are many areas around
the would known for positive ion winds (times when the ion
balance has more positive ions per cubic centimeter than negative
ions).
A Doctor treating burn victims with negative ion generators
found that those patients who also had respiratory problems
- chronic bronchitis or asthma - all reported that negative
ion therapy helped them breath more easily. With these findings
the Doctor started research into the effects of ions on respiratory
ills. This research was carried out at the Northeastern Hospital,
at the University of Pennsylvania's Graduate Hospital, and
the Frankford Hospital in Philadelphia. He found 63% of patients
suffering from hay fever or bronchial asthma "have experienced
partial or total relief" because of negative ion therapy.
One hospital doctor who worked on the project said later,
" They come in sneezing, eyes watering, nose itching, worn
out from lack of sleep, so miserable they can hardly walk.
Fifteen minutes in front of the negative ion machine and they
feel so much better they don't even want to leave."
In Britain two Oxford University statisticians conducted a
study among 100 victims of asthma, bronchitis, and hay fever
chosen at random from a list of people who had purchased negative
ion generators in the hope that it would help their problems.
In the end their report was based on interviews with only
74 of the 100. They found that 18 of 24 asthmatics; 13 of
17 bronchitis sufferers; 11 of 12 hay fever victims; and 6
of 10 people afflicted with nasal catarrh reported that negative
ion generators had noticeably improved their condition. A
few claimed the generator had cured them.
Brazilian Hospitals have commonly used ionizing devices for
the treatment of breathing problems, including allergies,
following a test involving 36 children with asthmatic allergies.
All of them had consistent and in some cases crippling problems
before taking negative ion therapy; during the treatment only
one of them suffered an allergy attack and afterward all were
reportedly cured, at least to the point that they no longer
suffered problems so long as they took part in occasional
negative ion therapy sessions.
In 1966 at a hospital in Jerusalem, doctors performed a series
of tests on thirty- eight infants between two and twelve months
old. All suffered to about the same degree from respiratory
problems. They were divided into two groups of nineteen, one
kept as a control group in a ward without any ion charge and
the other where a negative ion generator was in use.
The researchers reported that negative ions without any other
treatment - that is, no drugs - seemed to cure attacks of
asthma and bronchitis more quickly than drugs, antibiotics
included. They also observed that there were none of the "adverse
side effects" frequently found when treating such children
with drugs. They concluded that the children treated with
negative ions were less prone to "rebound attacks" (relapses).
As to objectivity, the scientific report said that the tests
"demonstrated that the atmospheric ions have an effect on
infants, especially those suffering from asthmatic bronchitis."
Less scientifically, they found that babies didn't cry as
often and as loudly when they were breathing negative ions
as they did in normal air. And there is nothing subjective
about a bawling baby.
Humidity and Asthma
In humid areas - New York in high summer, for instance, or
in Toronto - part of the familiar discomfort is caused by
the fact that air becomes ion-depleted. Really humid days
are murder for anyone suffering from asthma or any respiratory
allergy, and the fact that such people find it difficult to
breath in hot, humid air may have less to do with the amount
of oxygen in the air then with the massive negative ion depletion.
Air electricity is quickly conducted to the ground by the
moisture in the air, and what negative ions there are attach
themselves to particles of moisture and dust and lose their
charge. We have seen how positive ions make breathing more
difficult and reduce the body's ability to absorb oxygen;
and how negative ions help breathing and improve oxygen absorption.
(*NOTE; DO NOT USE HUMIDIFIERS OR VAPORIZERS WITH NEGATIVE
ION GENERATORS. NEGATIVE IONS WILL ATTACH TO WATER MOLECULES
FROM THE HUMIDIFIER OR VAPORIZER AND CREATE POSITIVE IONS.
OUR OWN STUDIES HAVE SHOWN THIS EFFECT.)
Pollen, Pollution and Asthma
The ion count is always low in cities where there's precious
little open ground to generate them. Pollution makes a bad
situation worse, since it tends to deplete the negative ion
count even more. The high pollen count in certain parts of
North America each fall cuts even further into the negative
ion count, since pollen has the same effect as dust. The end
result is that the total ion count in cities is always down
to what many scientists consider perilously low levels. As
if that weren't bad enough, the normal 5 - 4 ratio of positive
ions to negative ions is distorted so that people are, in
a sense, victims of positive ion poisoning.
Central Air Conditioning and Heating
Hot or cool air forced through the duct work of most central
heating and air- conditioning systems sets up friction that
results in the loss of almost all the negative ions and also
draws most of the positive ions out of the air as well. Then
comes the coup-de-grace: This air with some positive and virtually
no negative ions is forced out through vents in to rooms,
offices and passages - and as it passes through the vents
more friction is set up that generates an additional overload
of positive ions. What finally comes out of most heating or
air- conditioning outlets in the offices we work in and the
rooms we live in is likely to be an overload of positive ions
which will upset the mental and physical equilibrium of everyone,
not only those of us who are ion sensitive.
Just how bad these systems are depends to a great extent on
their design and the material from which the duct work is
made. The design or layout of the whole system is crucial.
At bends and curves and right-angle junctions the friction
between ducts and air increases and has the effect of increasing
the number of positive ions in the air. What comes out of
the heating and cooling vents in any centrally heated or air-conditioned
building is air that is not only low in total ions, but also
has a heavy positive ion count when measured against the almost
negligible quantity of negative ions. It is because of the
design of this duct work that some parts of a building may
be more "uncomfortable" to work in then others. That depends
on whether you're on the receiving end of air that has passed
a particular section of duct work, where there is a sharp
bend near the outlet - as the air is forced around bends and
corners there is greater friction and a consequent increase
in positive ions.
Asthma and Synthetics
Asthmatics or people with emphysema and other respiratory
ills often suffer additional agonies because of the cloth
they wear, and are just as often unaware of the reason why
they suffer. Dr. Bernard Watson, professor of medical electronics
at Britain's St. Bartholomew's Teaching Hospital in London,
says: "Changing the immediate unhealthy ion environment to
help asthmatic means changing everything, clothes, sheets,
furniture - just everything." One of his patients a girl at
that time of fourteen, who had begun to suffer from serve
migraine because of clothing - and then cured it herself.
When she grew to adolescence and began to wear, with great
pride, nylon bras and panties favored by most women, she began
to suffer from occasional headaches for the first time in
her life. When she graduated to slips and night-dresses and
pretty nylon blouses, she became a full-fledged migraine sufferer.
Her local general practitioner could offer neither explanation
nor help beyond suggesting the onset of menstruation as a
cause. But the girl was bright enough to associate the clothes
of blooming womanhood with her problem and promptly abandoned
the feminine underwear and nightdresses. Now her clothes are
of cotton, which is the only fiber that creates no charge
at all, and of natural fibers like wool, which carry little
charge of either kind. However, once migraine has taken root
it is not easy to cure and Dr. Watson is still treating the
girl, in part by suggesting to her parents that certain items
of furniture in their home should be removed.
The Director of the Danish Air Ionization Institute, Christian
Bach (electrical engineer) has studied the clothes and environments
of asthmatics and others who suffer from positive ion poisoning,
then pinpoints the offending fabrics and articles that are
throwing the ion effect out of balance. Bach and his colleagues
have worked with many hospitals in treating many victims of
asthma and other respiratory ills.
Bach tells of what has become a classic case history involving
a woman who had asthma in her own apartment but not in the
homes of friends. Even a negative ion generator was of no
help, so Bach conducted what must have been one of the oddest
investigations in history: Was the culprit the furniture,
the television set, the bedding, the lamp shades? Bach found
that the lady's taste ran mostly to modern synthetic fabrics.
However, that alone was insufficient to explain the problem,
so Back began cross-examining the woman about her housekeeping.
He found that her furniture was treated with cellulose and
silicone-based furniture finishes. Laboratory tests proved
that such finishes, when rubbed with polishing rags and dusters,
produce a positive charge. Then he visited the friends in
whose home her asthma condition disappeared. There he found
that the furniture was hand polished with old-fashioned wax
and elbow grease, which produced no static charge at all.
Bach coated the victim's furniture with an anti-static compound,
told her to buy antique furniture without modern wood treatments,
and her asthma attacks ceased.
In all, Bach had by 1967 treated almost 1,000 hay fever and
asthma cases whose problems were cured or eased by his "passive
therapy" approach. in one case, he says, a man became an asthma
victim because his wife bought two new lampshades that led
to overproduction of positive ions; In another instance several
members of the same family became sufferers because their
new television set had a teak cabinet that had been treated
with cellulose. He also. He also tells of one instance in
which he was called in to help save the fortunes of a chicken
farmer. The farmer had two monstrous chicken houses each housing
20,000 chickens. In one of them between 150 and 200 chickens
died every week. Bach found that both chicken houses were
of identical design and construction, except that the one
where the chickens died had a roof lined with sheets of plastic
while the other had a roof lined of wood. Whenever there was
a change in whether the death rate went up. Bach concluded
that when the whether changes affected air electricity the
plastic stimulated the production of positive ion overdoses.
He treated the roof with anti-static substance, and within
weeks the chicken mortality rate was normal in both hen coops.
Bach says like all Scandinavians, the Danes keep their homes
spotless, forever flourishing dusters, wielding brooms, pushing
vacuum cleaners, and otherwise raising clouds of dust to which
negative ions are attracted, and so disappear as physiologically
active small ions. It is it would seem, healthier to be a
sloppy housecleaner then a meticulous one. At the International
Ion Research Conference in Philadelphia in 1961. Dr. Hansell
ended his speech by saying that to prevent a buildup of potentially
harmful ions the person who comes home from work should promptly
take his shoes off and walk around the carpets in their stocking
feet. And he added, "My suggestion to the house cleaner is
that it is very well known fact that it is very difficult
to get a charge from a dirty surface. They should not, I suggest
be too house proud."
REFERENCE: Author Guy Cremer
"The Ion Effect" by Soyka, Fred ( Lester and Orpen Limited,
1977) these references can be found on pages 31, 35, 45, 56-57,
63, 75, 76, 77, 79-80, 84, 85, 90, 128, 129-131.
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