By
Annie
Tietje
PORT GAMBLE —
In a time when new technology is available
every week, Dr. Glen Gordon is working with
a science that has been around for years and
may solve the world’s pain problems. It
involves working with electro-magnetic
pulses, and at first glance, looks like
something out of an Isaac Asimov or Philip
K. Dick novel.
“Science fiction always leads science,”
Gordon said, adding that the pain relief
he’s offering may sound out of this world,
but it’s as down to earth as it gets. “We
sold 5,000 EM Pulse units in 2002. They are
sold by word of mouth, and they simply
relieve pain in muscles and joints.”
The EM Pulse sends out a burst of electro-magnetism
that reduces inflammation, decreasing pain
and allowing the body to heal faster, Gordon
said. Though relatively new to the United
States, devices similar to the one Gordon is
manufacturing have been used in other
countries for years.
Gordon first came into contact with
electro-magnetic healing while he was
working as a sports doctor for track and
field teams. He heard about a device Russian
coaches were using to help their injured
athletes heal faster.
“I saw this technology restore athletes
faster than anything else I’d ever seen,” he
said.
Curious, Gordon delved deeper, and soon
discovered that some race horse trainers in
Canada were using something similar on
injured equines, also with a high healing
rate.
In 1979, Gordon looked into what it would
take for the Food and Drug Administration to
approve such a device. In 1980, he received
the OK to begin studying it.
Now, an FDA-approved device, the EM Pulse
offers a solution to all kinds of health
problems, he said.
“This device is not consumed,” said Bill
Couch, who works with Gordon to promote his
device. “Once it is purchased, it can
effectively last for multiple treatments.
Every time I see this device work, I become
more and more fascinated by it.”
“It’s amazing, the deeper I research this
technology, the more impressed I become with
it,” Gordon said. “It will really assist us
in the future to heal faster, after surgery
or an injury, and stay healthier longer.”
Gordon said he is also working with the
United States Department of Defense to study
the EM Pulse further to see if it was
interested in having soldiers carry the
product in the field, in case of injury.
Members of Congress have also shown interest
in the device for use by the Armed Forces.
The EM Pulse is also now being considered
for an Index Award, which are given out in
Denmark every year and could result in
$100,000 for product research, Gordon said.
Different products are nominated for their
concepts and designs being revolutionary to
the scientific world. The EM Pulse is being
nominated by the Arlington Institute, Gordon
said, and a win could mean big things for
the small device.
“It makes such incredible sense to me,”
Gordon said. “We evolved in an
electro-magnetic environment. It makes sense
that we would be healed by it as well.”
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