PEMF Therapy for Alzheimer’s disease research shows PEMF therapy has beneficial effects upon Alzheimer’s disease and the underlying causes of neurophysiological abnormalities. While magnetic field therapy has its benefits in pain management, pulsed electromagnetic field (PEMF) therapy works better for brain stimulation.

The neurological system (entire body) operates via electric and electromagnetic signals. Does it not make sense to address neurological disease states such as Alzheimer’s from an electrophysiological or electrochemical rather than from a chemical based point of view? Researchers continue to declare ‘YEARS’ before meaningful rTMS treatment for Alzheimer’s sufferers when several researchers already proved the benefit of Alzheimer’s disease sufferers. We believe minute stimulation during sleep every night is superior to huge amounts of stimulation over short course of days or weeks as in these studies below.

50 years of pulsed electromagnetic field (PEMF) therapy research suggests that some sort type of electrophysiological deficit exists in neurological disease states and that it should be addressed via same electrophysiological channel.

The addressable conditions for which there is peer reviewed research; include (but are not limited to) epilepsy, Parkinson’s, migraine, cluster and other headache syndromes, severe PMS, attention deficit disorder ADD, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ADHD, autism and autistic / autism spectrum disorders, depression, schizophrenia, anxiety, insomnia and sleeping disorders in general, muscle twitch, tremor disorders, muscle weakness, chronic wounds, bone non-unions and endometriosis.

One of the first animal studies of PEMF therapy for alzheimer’s disease in 2010 published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s disease found that PEMF can potentially treat Alzheimer’s disease and acts as an effecting memory-enhancing approach.

In 2017, scientists from Italy conducted a study on the effects of low-frequency PEMF on an experimental cell model of Alzheimer’s Disease. They found that PEMF can stimulate both tissue regeneration and brain signaling.

Several hundred pulsed electromagnetic field therapy citations contained in the research bibliographies are linked directly to PubMed a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine and the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

For more in-depth research, we recommend learning about transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) for alzheimer’s disease, as this cousin of PEMF has been more actively researched. TMS is nothing but strong PEMF applied in targetted fashion to the brain.