This reference explores the sources, characteristics, health hazards and benefits of electromagnetic fields (EM), of low-frequency fields and of radio frequency radiations. Pulsed Electro Magnetic Field Therapy (PEMF) is also expressed in pain relief, osteoporosis treatment, fibromyalgia treatment, fracture healing, rheumatic pain, and stress reduction. More over, electricity and electromagnetic fields do affect the spiritual quality of the human. Electricity can vibrate cells, nerves, bones, organs, and change the chemical reaction and metabolism. Disharmonious or unbalanced vibrations show themselves in many ways including discomfort, disease, illness, fatigue, and a variety of different symptoms. Higher vibrations mean healthy body, and low vibrations mean an ailing body.
Interestingly, particular electromagnetic waves can cause degenerative disorder of the central nervous system (the brain), which leads to Parkinson's and Huntington's diseases, and impairments both in sequence learning, and in the initiation and termination of voluntary movements.
The book contains materials describing different waves of EM of alpha, beta and Gamma to explain their interaction with biological systems.
Amin Elsersawi is a Canadian author, engineer and by consensus a biochemist. He received his Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering with emphasis in power electronic from Bradford University, U.K in 1980. His main research interests are twentieth-century engineering, astronomy and chemistry. His interests in astronomy took off at the age of 50, when he showed a great interesting in leaning toward mathematical and behavioral astronomy. He compiled his own celestial mechanics algorithms for the precise computation of astrophysics of planets and constellations, and other phenomena such as weak energy, dark universe, quantum radiations and lights. He presented several reports, articles and essays in electricity, chemistry and chemical engineering at several seminars and conferences. He is the author of seven books on different subjects. Dr. Elsersawi and his wife, Randa, have been happily married since 1969 and have three children. First daughter, a University of Toronto graduate is a practicing Obstetrics and Gynecology. The second daughter, a graduate in psychology from York University, and the son, a graduate in electrical engineering from Western Ontario University. Dr. Elsersawi and Randa are the proud grandparents of ten.