It was Parazapper's comments "Blood electrification can be painful to some and has a lot more problems associated with it" that sort of motivated me to post of my limited experience with Blood Electrification.
I've had mixed results with Blood Electrification (BE), in my case the result of using a SOTA Silver Pulser, mainly for experimenting with making Ionic
Colloidal Silver , but it does double duty as a Beck BE unit with the included "bio probes".
Also keep in mind that there are NUMEROUS devices and methods for doing BE and I do not want people to get the idea that I'm lumping all of them into the same category with my post.......... I dunno.
On the up side, I'm pretty sure (although it's difficult to say 100% conclusively) that BE made the plantar's wart on the bottom of my big toe go away. I'm just being very conservative about stating conclusions since there had been a number of other health methods, to include an intro to using Colloidal Sivler, that I'd been experimenting with at the same time I first tried BE.
I had been zapping regularly with a Terminator for many months prior to getting the Silver Pulser, and whatever benefits I may have gotten from zapping, it did not seem to phase the wart. This wart, BTW, had been on my big toe for several years and had grown to be quite painful. Then I got the Silver Pulser and started experimenting with using it to make (and drink
Colloidal Silver ), and also using it as a Beck BE unit.
For BE treatment, on the initial sessions I experimented between sessions of 20 and 60 minutes while also toying with the intensity level, alternating one wrist one day, other wrist next day, back and forth each day. I did not find the deep pulsing sensation to be in anyway painful. To the contrary, it felt somewhat comforting to me (subjective), and yes, if you turn the intensity up to max, the pulse is so deep that it causes the muscles in the forearm to strongly contract, causing the fingers to clench, but I did not find this painful.
On about day 5 though, I noticed a rash had appeared on both wrists where the bio probes had been (bio probes is the fancy name SOTA uses for the assembly they include for hooking up to the Silver Pulser when running it as a BE device). For whatever reason, the rash was more prominent on the left wrist. This rash looked very similar to an outbreak of poison ivy (tiny, blister-looking rash, red, and itchy), something else I am well familiar with over many years. So, I stopped doing the BE sessions in order to monitor "what's up?" with the rash. It was quite itchy, and took about 6 days to clear, it cleared from the right wrist a little quicker than the left. I made a few inquiries on the web about this. One of the few to reply was 2Tuff, who suggested that this rash is just something that "may happen with some people doing BE" and in his opinion it is something to persevere and slog through. Despite the often enflamatory nature of his comments I respect 2Tuff's opinions and experience, but to myself personally this answer was not satisfactory enough for my own caution. Nonetheless, after about a week, I re-started BE sessions in the same alternating fashion. This time the rash came back sooner (by the third day) was again more prominent on the left wrist, and it was much worse this time. The affected area on the arm was much bigger, roughly 6
inches in length, the rash much redder and itchy, and it took nearly a month for it to go away completely.
I have not returned to doing BE since. The reaction I experienced may be something specfic to me and my body makeup, I don't know. With the number of people now trying various BE methods, it sort of surprises me that I have not seen other's experiencing these itchy rashes. To qualify, they may be out there, I just have not yet found/red them yet. If I can get to the point of being satisfied that whatever this reaction is that it is not indicative of something more serious to be concerned with as a result of BE, I will probably resume BE sessions, but for now I'm holding off.