Just Pulse It PEMF Therapy in Aiken

Just Pulse It PEMF Therapy in Aiken Just Pulse It! Treating horses, dogs and people with PEMF Therapy….Pulsed Electromagnetic Fields. Exercise for your cells! Rejuvenating and healing…..

06/17/2024

Personal testimony from this week….I am so glad for PEMF…. Both of my hips are replacements and any sudden jerking side movement can cause issues. I was helping with a round bale delivery on Monday and the delivery person pushed the hay hut down on me while I was stuffing hay in strong the edges. To avoid decapitation, I quickly je**ed back and to the side. Immediately there was a sharp pain in my hip with every step. It continued through out the day. That evening I sat in the PEMF chair for an hour. I then wrapped the small loop attached around my hip for another 45 minutes. When I finished… 95% better! Woke up the next day with no pain and it’s been fine ever since!❤️

Sharing my photo shoot with Frankie.....I am not photogenic at all, so I didn't know what to expect......!  Thanks to Ph...
06/14/2024

Sharing my photo shoot with Frankie.....I am not photogenic at all, so I didn't know what to expect......! Thanks to Phoenix Walker Photography for some beautiful photos to commemorate our journey together. Which one is your favorite? I can't decide.

This post is packed with great information. PEMF could be an excellent complementary modality to assist with the reducti...
05/19/2024

This post is packed with great information. PEMF could be an excellent complementary modality to assist with the reduction of inflammation in the body while boosting the immune system during the treatment and recovery stages of craniosacral work.

Introducing barn kitty “Darla”❤️❤️She is the best at her job….. no mice, ever!
05/14/2024

Introducing barn kitty “Darla”❤️❤️She is the best at her job….. no mice, ever!

Borrowed from a fellow practitioner…. A PEMF client asked me if PEMF would help with her horses kick to the chest and th...
12/10/2023

Borrowed from a fellow practitioner…. A PEMF client asked me if PEMF would help with her horses kick to the chest and the fluid that was hanging around- it had been a week and wasn't making much progress.

The photo with the loops is the beginning of my session yesterday and then the other pic is the one she sent me this morning to update me on how he looked.

To this day PEMF still amazes me sometimes. 💓🥂

(Yes, I realize these photos are different angles 😉 this wasn't for a research paper, just showing the obvious changes!)

10/21/2023
08/31/2023

A little “self-care” today! Works great for twisted/sprained ankles!!!

It’s usually a puzzle we need to figure out…..
06/17/2023

It’s usually a puzzle we need to figure out…..

Herdbound horses -

Herdbound horses are a common complaint- all over the country, horses are attached to a buddy or buddies, often to a level that can make them dangerous to take out alone, or sometimes even five feet away.
There are many opinions on different “fixes,” everything from running them ragged near their friend in frantic circles and resting them away from their friend, to a carrot on a stick or Hansel and Greek trail of treats on the path away from the friend. But the reality is, a herd structure is central to a horses survival, and companionship of other horses is part of their feeling of safety- no training can override the horses desire to be a horse witbout shutting them down

AND

The Herdbound horse is one who is not doing well!

In almost every clinic I’ve taught, the most Herdbound horse in the group is the one in roughest shape- tight back, sucked up flank, pain face, tight groin - the works. Horses that are in physical crisis are much more likely to feel vulnerable, stressed, and feel a strong pull toward comfort- which is another horse.

A horse who is not feeling well in their body, who is not feeling confident in their handler who is fighting against their body (it’s a hard truth because that usually isn’t the desire of the handler, but that is what’s happening), who is in a new and unsafe environment is going to seek out safety, and that pull is as strong as the tide.

What’s the fix for Herdbound issues?
Lifestyle fixes
Horses need a herd, they can’t live happily alone, I don’t care who has a horse that tolerates it, solitary confinement is not a way of life for a horse. They need a group, or at least one other friend at the bare minimum. But they are likely to be less secure with just one friend, and far more worried about leaving

Body fixes
Don’t just write off their body because you get routine Bodywork. Get their back moving, help their groin function without being spastic, create a functional body with a moving back and healthy gut so they can think and not be stuck in survival mode

Rider fixes
Make it so whenever you’re around, they feel safe and they feel secure. That means calm your own energy, learn how to guide, be aware of your environment, don’t nitpick, and make your body make their body feel stable and wonderful. Good riding is moving Bodywork- make it so when you sit on their back they are in better shape than out in the pasture - that is a tall order but I believe it’s entirely possible, and I see it happen all the time.

A Herdbound horse is a stressed out horse - the fix is in your hands entirely.

06/17/2023

Some video of “Armani” enjoying and soaking in the PEMF session this week.😀

05/18/2023

One day ago and for the last month this 22 year old mare (my Lena) has been walking really slow and taking tiny steps like she was in pain. One PEMF session with me and you can see for yourself… she is back to being boss mare!

EPM——Can PEMF help???  Yes!From: Holistic HorseEPM: ELUSIVE, PERNICIOUS, MANAGEABLEJanuary 11, 2022EPM is one of the mos...
05/16/2023

EPM——Can PEMF help??? Yes!

From: Holistic Horse

EPM: ELUSIVE, PERNICIOUS, MANAGEABLE

January 11, 2022

EPM is one of the most difficult to pinpoint and progressively debilitating neurologic diseases to strike the horses we love. by LA Pomeroy

When it savages the central nervous system, it leaves behind gait abnormalities, ataxia (inability to control voluntary muscle movement) limb spasticity, sore backs, locked stifles, and muscle atrophy. If it attacks the brain stem, the results are depression, behavioral changes, facial nerve and/or tongue paralysis, roaring, vision problems, drooping eyelids, and difficulty swallowing. Left unchecked, it will take a horse’s life.

“It” is equine protozoal myeloencephalitis, or EPM, and in the United States, the number of horses who test positive after exposure to it varies from 5% or less among wild herds in Montana and Wyoming to 50% or more among backyard barns and professional show stables abutting the natural habitat of opossums. Yes, opossums have been identified as a vector (transmitter of disease) for EPM. But this “enigmatic infection,” as the UC Davis Center for Equine Health calls it, is more complicated.

horse therapy
Clinical researchers Chinedu Njoku, William Saville, and Stephen Reed, who have looked at how reduced levels of nitric oxide metabolites in cerebrospinal fluid are associated with EPM, observe: “EPM is the most prevalent cause of neurologic disease in horses in the Americas. In some parts of the US over 30% of horses have antibodies to Sarcocystis neurona (the most common protozoan parasite causing EPM infection), although a much smaller percentage develop clinical EPM, indicating that additional factors, which we do not yet understand, contribute to the onset of this disease.”

Alternative equine care practitioners who say they have been treating EPM symptoms in racehorses and performance horses for decades are also looking at some of those “additional factors,” and arriving at some bold new conclusions that may help take aim at a disease that has staunchly remained a moving target.

STATISTICS SHOW…
According to EPM expert Robert MacKay, BVSc, PhD, DACVIM, roughly 60% of horses who get an active infection will respond to drug treatment, with 10% recovering fully.

“That leaves 40% of cases in declining health, usually ending in death,” MacKay notes. “The better news is that, if diagnosed and treated early, the statistics rise to 80% responding well to treatment, with many recovering fully. You, the owner, can make the difference in where your horse falls in the statistics by learning prevention and how to identify symptoms of EPM before it strikes.”

Because 30% to 60% of horses in North America have antibodies to the primary protozoal parasite responsible for EPM, S. neurona, UC Davis researchers call EPM inherently difficult to diagnose: “At present, definitive diagnosis of EPM relies on post-mortem examination of neural tissue. No test in the live horse is currently considered definitive.”

One opinion says it’s the owner’s responsibility to diagnose EPM early; another says the only way to confirm it is after death. What’s a horse owner to do?

Plenty.

ACUPUNCTURE: GOOD VIBRATIONS
Dianne Volz has dedicated more than 20 years to using acupuncture points, electric muscle stimulation, ultra- and infra-sound, and laser and photon therapy to listen to the equine immune system and respond accordingly. Her mentor has been Dr. Marvin Cain, founder of the Equine Acupuncture Society of America, who is credited with identifying acupuncture’s EPM immune points, and has suggested a link between suppression of the immune system and EPM.

“Eighty percent of horses we look at are in some stage of EPM,” she says. “Those who don’t have a strong immune system are in greatest need of a defense against the protozoa.”

In Chinese acupuncture, diagnostic points are called “Au Shi” and are sensitive during periods of illness, when the body’s electrical systems are disrupted. Blockages of energy or Qi (pronounced ‘Chi’) cause buildups in inappropriate places (much like a tree falling across a stream blocks the water, flooding areas nearby). When an aggravating condition in the body is resolved (the “tree” removed), Au Shi points ebb away, too.

Volz identifies EPM acupuncture points as located in a triangle over the rib cage, hip, hind leg, and shoulder. “When these points are reactive, we find soreness, hock tenderness, and a tendency to shift weight to the forehand. Therapeutically, we look at the whole body, but we tend to see EPM expressed in the right hind leg.”

This right-sided affliction is important, since EPM mirrors other neurological diseases including Wobbler Syndrome, Equine Herpes Virus (EHV-1), or Lyme Disease. Dr. Cain has observed that soreness or lameness expressed in the left hind tends to lead to a diagnosis of EHV-1; signs in the right hind are more likely attributed to EPM.

Pocono Downs Race Track veterinarian, Dr. David Sachs, who uses acupuncture and acupressure on its racehorses, also sees problems in the right hind trace back to EPM. He thinks EPM has reached “nearly epidemic” proportions and for young racehorses following a circuit, without time off to rest and rebuild their immune system, recovery is difficult.

BLOOD SAMPLE
“Without three to four weeks off, a racehorse can’t bounce back,” Dr. Sachs says. He prefers avoiding corticosteroids (“It bothers the immune response”), and has seen his best results over the last three years treating EPM with kinesiology and injecting “hot” points with the patient’s own blood.

The theory behind blood injections is that, through spinning the blood in a centrifuge, red blood cells are removed, and the remaining platelets (containing helpful hormones and proteins) de-granulate, so they can be injected more “cleanly” back into receptors in the horse’s body.

Lindsay McLean, an acupuncturist who also identifies EPM by what she calls “Environmental Illness” points, says horses get “very beneficial effects when blood is injected. It is especially helpful for depressed states, chronic fatigue, and autoimmune disorders.”

Dr. Sachs emphasizes that the degree of success depends on where in the EPM cycle the treatment begins. He has had “good results” when injecting sites two to three times per week. “Check the points to see if they are hot, and if necessary, inject again.”

Gary and Michaela Young opened Camden Equine Rehabilitation and Conditioning Center in Camden, South Carolina, earlier in 2010 to offer alternative sports medicine and veterinary technology for equine injury recovery, post-surgical care, and accelerated conditioning.

“We started with Dr. Cain a long time ago,” Gary Young says. “Along with our vet, Dr. Sam Tetterton, we have probably brought more horses back from EPM than just about any stable in the country. We have been treating it for over 25 years.”

Like Dr. Cain, Young has discovered markers for EPM on the hindquarters, with signs arising in the right stifle first, and in immune points in the shoulder. One test he uses to determine if a horse is EPM-positive is to blindfold the animal and see if it can walk a straight line. “Since EPM can affect the brain stem and coordination, they can’t walk straight.”

IMMUNE TO HARM
Young calls EPM the single most misdiagnosed equine disease in America today: “In the 1960s my parents believed horses who showed ‘Wobbles’ were showing the first signs of EPM. The parasite has since changed and evolved.” He cites how blood tests identify two protozoa (S. neurona, and less commonly, Neospora hughesi), but who’s to say we are not missing others?

A strong immune system is the first line of healthy defense.

“Stress and/or a weakened immune system can cause relapses,” Young says. He often suggests administering an ulcer-prevention drug prior to shipping, to lower the chance of relapse, since “parasites love ulcers.”

Young owns a horse with EPM, and his personal strategy is low-stress, low-impact therapy. “Aquatherapy – working on a treadmill in water – keeps muscles conditioned while minimizing stress.”

He also uses Pulsed Electro-Magnetic Field (PEMF) MaganWave to stimulate cell metabolism and tone down “hot” nerves: “Cell protein synthesis is enhanced, which allows the body to take advantage of all the protein available. Circulation is improved, not by increasing heartbeat or blood pressure, but by opening and dilating arteries and capillaries, and the lymphatic system is stimulated, to clean damaged areas and detoxify the body.”

Young and Volz both use Chinese herbs to help boost the immune system. “Twice a year, I ‘clean out’ their systems with Chinese herb supplements,” Young says. “I also supplement before shipping. Even if my horse is ‘clean’ at home, shipping can cause a relapse so I keep them on supplements while at a show and for several days after coming home.”

Volz sees herb supplements as conducive to restoring nerve endings, boosting the immune system, and easing gastric ulcers. She agrees that protozoa love ulcers, where holes in the stomach lining allow entrance into a horse’s bloodstream. Among her favorite “protozoa killers” is the hardy American herb, artemsia, related to the daisy family, Asteraceae.

EPM: THE NEXT GENERATION
“We have become more aware” of EPM, Volz says. And more open-minded to the use of Chinese herbs or blood injections, and to earlier diagnoses through acupuncture points.

“EPM is a battle,” acknowledges Gary Young, “but don’t panic. It is manageable and you and your horse can learn to live with it.”

Young concludes, “If your veterinarian is not trained in Eastern medicine, i.e. acupuncture, Chinese herbs, etc., they might miss the early warning signs, but even the top ‘traditional medicine’ vets are starting to believe they can learn more about this disease by keeping an open mind to alternative medicine, which can minimize the dependency on drugs, save money, and ultimately and most importantly, save the horse.”

L.A. Pomeroy of Northampton MA is an equestrian photojournalist and award-winning publicist. A member of American Horse Publications since 1992, she is a prolific participant in the horse care realm. She enjoys trail riding in her native Catskill Mountains of upstate New York, and collecting/researching equestrian art and collectibles.

Holistic Horse provides owners, grooms, trainers and riders of horses a holistic, down to earth, pragmatic, no nonsense and integrative approach to the care, and well-being of the horse. All content is copyright protected and can only be used with permission from the producers.

12/26/2022

Cardinals appear when angels are near.

08/18/2022

The Skeleton Flower’s petals become transparent when it rains.

08/18/2022

Two frogs using a flower as an umbrella.

08/18/2022

Some people are poor, but rich by heart.

08/05/2022

What do you see in this cloud? ☁️🐾

08/05/2022

The true face of happiness!

08/03/2022

17 year-old Juliane Koepcke was sucked out of an airplane in 1971 after it was struck by a bolt of lightning. She fell 2 miles to the ground, strapped to her seat and survived after she endured 10 days in the Amazon Jungle.
After ten days, she found a boat moored near a shelter, and found the boat's fuel tank still partly full. Koepcke poured the gasoline on her wounds, an action which succeeded in removing the maggots from her arm. Out of 93 passengers and crew, Juliane was the only survivor of the LANSA flight 508 crash that took place December 24th, 1971.

08/01/2022

This is what the entrance to heaven looks like ❤️

06/23/2022

Mesa being treated for a sore back.....

Address

Knoxville, TN

Telephone

+18654667646

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Just Pulse It PEMF Therapy in Aiken posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Videos

Share