If you look over G. N. Ling, and want more, there is Dr. Björn E.W. Nordenström
who "became interested in streaks, spikes and coronas that he saw in X-ray
images of lung tumors" I recommend his original monograph only.
"Biologically Closed Electric Circuits" the hardback. His later work went
off the deep end into metaphysical acupuncture theory. However, his initial
surgical study is an awesome start on internal body currents and the effect
on metabolism of charge differential in our organs and the non-vascular
pathways between them. I do not recommend Nordenstrom's irrational plunge
into acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine.
http://www.iabc.readywebsites.com/page/page/623957.htmThe "right answer" to investigation of scientific acupuncture is by George
Ulett and J.S. Han, or his son S.P Han. I had the pleasure to study with
Dr. Ulett when I was a student in St. Louis years ago. His work is
summarized in The Biology of Acupuncture.
http://www.amazon.com/Biology-Acupunctu ... 0875275346 . Ulett
and Han and Han spent a lifetime of research effort to show a clear pathway
of how specific frequencies cause the human and some animal model nervous
systems to produce natural neuro peptitide opiates. A well designed 30
minute stimulus can produce the anesthetic effect equal to 10 m.g. sodium
morphine sulphate in 80% of the human population. (The other 20% are non
responders by genetics, and actually preceive pain differently). The work
begs the question if other frequency specific stimuli could cause other nero
peptide production in humans as a beneficial therapy. It is a very powerful
and harmless treatment procedure, a "new field" of medicine, but nobody want
to study it! The dogma of physicians won't allow acupuncture, and the dogma
of acupuncture-ists wont drop their TCM roots to use science! I have an
interest in this potential field and hope to "get around to it" in the near
term. It is not EU related, but the real harmless treatment therapy
breakthroughs may utilize both frequency stimulus to produce RNA synthesis
and small applied current over long periods of time to preferentially move
the metabolites.