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LiveO2 Therapy

LiveO2 / Oxygen Pulse Therapy

Oxy­gen Pulse Ther­a­py was first devel­oped by Man­fred von Ardenne as Oxy­gen Mul­ti­step Ther­a­py. Oxy­gen Pulse Ther­a­py induces a tem­po­rary max­i­mum in plas­ma oxy­gen con­tent, and oth­er fac­tors, to restore cel­lu­lar oxy­gen deliv­ery.

Ther­a­py tar­gets cap­il­lary chokes with a mul­ti­ple effect pulse of ele­vat­ed heart­beat, oxy­gen, CO2, pulse pres­sure, and nutri­ents.

Ther­a­py seeks a per­fect storm of simul­ta­ne­ous effects to over­come vas­cu­lar chokes, and resolve cell dis­tress.

The recipe is tech­ni­cal­ly com­pli­cat­ed, but phys­i­cal­ly sim­ple. The mod­el is to stack as many fac­tors as pos­si­ble, at the same time to pro­duce the prod­uct, not the sum, of effects.

The effects that enable oxy­gen deliv­ery must over­come the effects that inhib­it oxy­gen deliv­ery. In sim­ple terms, more is bet­ter.

Factors

Suc­cess­ful ther­a­py over­whelms inhibitors with enablers. The goal is to stack as many fac­tors as pos­si­ble at the same time in favor of suc­cess.

The mod­el seels a per­fect storm of oxy­gen dis­tri­b­u­tion uti­liz­ing con­cen­tra­tion, tur­bu­lence, flow, reg­u­la­to­ry effects, and detox­i­fi­ca­tion.

This table orga­nizes ther­a­py fac­tors accord­ing appar­ent effect.

Fac­tor Inhib­it Enable Ther­a­py Com­po­nent
Res­pi­ra­tion Slug­gish and frac­tion­al Full & tur­bid Exertion->Respiratory Tur­bu­lence
Blood Flow Slug­gish Tur­bid Exer­tion -> Pulse++
Plas­ma Sat­u­rat­ed Nor­mal Res­pi­ra­to­ry + Vas­cu­lar Tur­bu­lence + O2++
Dis­per­sion Clumped Sep­a­rate Exertion->CO2++ ->pH Reg­u­la­tion
Lymph Sat­u­rat­ed Clear Exertion->Tissue Tur­bu­lence
Chokes On Off O2+Plasma Saturation+Vascular Tur­bu­lence
CO2 Defi­cient Reg­u­lat­ed Exer­tion
Nutri­ents Deplete Ade­quate Sup­ple­ments
pH Acid / Alka­li Reg­u­lat­ed CO2 + Res­pi­ra­tion

The Perfect Storm

Phys­i­cal­ly the method involves three sim­ple and safe com­po­nents:

  • Extra oxy­gen in breath;
  • Exer­tion by exer­cise;
  • and a Nutri­ent Cock­tail.

The three fac­tors, in suf­fi­cient amounts, cre­ate a per­fect storm.

Sludge Tides

Progress is lim­it­ed by sludge tides and fit­ness.

Dis­tress areas release waste with­in moments of restored cir­cu­la­tion. This release forces the body to spend ener­gy on garbage cleanup, which leaves less ener­gy for exer­tion.

Ath­letes rec­og­nize this as “the wall” which hap­pens when lac­tic-relat­ed acids exceed the body’s abil­i­ty to recy­cle.

In ther­a­py, we call this a a sludge tide. Oxy­gen has reached a dis­tressed area that dumped waste into cir­cu­la­tion. Per­ceived strain per­sists until the tide is clears, usu­al­ly in a few min­utes.

One 15 minute ses­sion usu­al­ly trig­gers from 1 to 3 tides.

How Many Sessions

How many ses­sions will I need? Well, that depends on how much sludge your body has stored.

Each ses­sion will release only as much as you can tol­er­ate. Ath­letes, capa­ble of burst-exer­tion, usu­al­ly clean-up in under four ses­sions. Every­body else takes longer.

Rate of Progress

Tol­er­ance reflects the sludge clear­ance a per­son­’s body can han­dle in a ses­sion and this varies a lot.

Res­pi­ra­to­ry pow­er, from a fast heart rate, and hard breath, are vas­cu­lar tur­bu­lence.

This lung tur­bu­lence mix­es oxy­gen with blood plas­ma. Stronger mix­ing forces more oxy­gen into blood.

More oxy­gen fix­es more cap­il­lary chokes — faster; so res­pi­ra­to­ry pow­er deter­mines the rate of progress with ther­a­py.

Accumulation

Less able indi­vid­u­als go slow­er because the body must start by fix­ing the crit­i­cal sys­tems that move oxy­gen.

The lungs, heart, blood and vas­cu­lar sys­tem must work. With­out these, oxy­gen can­not reach oth­er part of the body.

Ther­a­py affects the core sys­tems first. Mild exer­tion that increas­es the heart rate only 10% above rest, usu­al­ly increas­es lung and heart tur­bu­lence enough to begin the process.

Progress con­tin­ues as long as the ther­a­py repeats before ear­li­er progress fades.

Con­ser­v­a­tive meth­ods, appro­pri­ate for frag­ile indi­vdi­uals, appro­pri­ate for a doc­tor’s admin­ista­tion are pub­lished on whnlive.com.

Overwhelmed Cori Cycle

Over 50% of NFL play­ers who use this pro­to­col to resolve sea­son fatigue release enough waste to over­whelm the Cori Cycle.

When the liv­er floods with too much waste, the excess dumps into the diges­tive sys­tem.

The first clue that this is hap­pen­ing is gur­gling under the right rib cage; The sec­ond clue is a series of loose stools last­ing up to six hours.

Oth­ers have report­ed pro­fuse sweat­ing, and strong urine. These flows evi­dence clear­ance of accum­lat­ed waste, through a nor­mal elim­i­na­tion path­way.

Rebooting & Well being

Oxy­gen Pulse Ther­a­py reboots cell metab­o­lism and restores cell func­tion. Func­tion con­tin­ues until some­thing stops it again.

A sense of improved well being almost always occurs, and per­sists after each ses­sion.

This improve­ment reflects pro­gres­sive reduc­tion of dis­tressed tis­sue and restora­tion of nor­mal metab­o­lism.


      
      
    

2 comments

    • Russell Mazelsky on October 25, 2011 at 2:20 pm
    • Reply

    How do I receive O2 treat­ments?
    Can I do this at home?
    What nutri­ents / diet are involved?
    What is the cost and loca­tions?

    1. Here is the set­up-video that explains how to set­up the ExtremeO2. LiveO2 is the same, except that it does not include the High Alti­tude func­tion­al­i­ty.
      The sys­tem is an oxy­gen con­cen­tra­tor and a reser­voir. The con­cen­tra­tor runs, to gath­er oxy­gen into the reser­voir, and then you do 5–15 min­utes of exer­cise on any piece of sta­tion­ary exer­cise equip­ment. The com­bi­na­tion of exer­cise and oxy­gen helps your metab­o­lism. The phys­i­ol­o­gy is ful­ly explained in Man­fred von Ardenne’s book.

      As for low­er cost sys­tems, the short answer is no. This sys­tem out­per­forms com­mon­ly avail­able Hyper­bar­ic Cham­bers that cost around $10K, and take many hours to use. Our design portable and effi­cient. The $1375 sys­tem uses a refur­bished oxy­gen con­cen­tra­tor – which ships with­out a doctor’s pre­scrip­tion, which you will need to pur­chase even a hyper­bar­ic cham­ber.

      For the fatigue, there are two major ref­er­ences: Our Fatigue Site explains the main rea­son why you prob­a­bly have fatigue. We explain both cause, and care. The Cause and sub-menus, give a real expla­na­tion of what’s wrong with you. The fatigue care Page , explains the mechan­ics and method of how to fix it. It is by far the most use­ful and com­plete ref­er­ence that you will find any­where.

      I see fatigue with our ath­letes a lot, due to dis­rupt­ed ener­gy metab­o­lism from cap­il­lary chokes. Most of the NFL play­ers had very low ener­gy the day before I fixed them. See http://www.whnsports.com, look at the vids that talk about late sea­son fresh. Your descrip­tion sounds like the chron­ic ver­sion of what they have.

      For sup­ple­ments, each of the pro­to­cols, on the LiveO2.com, hov­er for drop-down, site sug­gests a nutri­ent cock­tail, before and after ther­a­py. The Oral Myers Cock­tail, is supe­ri­or by far, Instruc­tions Here, they are $34 each, but per­form bet­ter than an IV Myers Cock­tail, my NFL play­ers buy a case a month because they improve their ener­gy and make them look and feel young.
      Sin­cere­ly,
      Mark Squibb

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Fatigue