Research - Critics long maintained that cellular therapy was a non-specific stimulation therapy. Only after researchers succeeded in using radioactive, phosphorus-marked cell components to demonstrate the transfer of the marked material into the corresponding receptor cells did this alternative therapy become a science. Phagocytes – the body’s “hunter” cells – consume the injected organ cells and then drift on to the respective bodily organ. There, the active components from mitochondria, amino acids and ribonucleic acids are installed, while other active ingredients such as interleukines and growth factors regenerate the immune system and promote rejuvenation. The principle is similar to that of postal codes. Corresponding specific cells and organs carry the same postal code. These cells are transported to the target organ.
The 2000 Nobel Prize was awarded in 2000 for this seemingly simple principle from energy medicine. Hundreds of scientific publications deal with cellular therapy.
Prof. Schmid of Heidelberg, one of the great cellular therapists of the previous century, demonstrated the positive impact of cellular therapy injections on the blood count. He also provided the proof of improved cell respiration in the so-called Wartburg Apparatus. In 1971, Prof. Kment demonstrated an increase in the size and numbers of mitochondria in somatic cells after cellular injections. That is how cellular therapy increases the energy of somatic cells and the body as a whole. It also improves reproductive capabilities. Prof. Schmid documented hundreds of cases of the beneficial effects of cellular therapy on paediatric development disturbances and Down’s Syndrome.
Prof. Wraba demonstrated organ-specific increases in respiration in tissue cultures through the addition of certain cellular suspensions marked by radioactive isotopes.