Conventional medical principles, indirect stresses and complementary frequency information Why tumor processes cannot be reduced to a single trigger The development of tumor processes is one of the most complex processes in medicine. It has long been known that in most cases tumors cannot be explained by a single trigger. RatherContinue reading

Conventional medical correlations, immune defense and complementary frequency information Why the development of tumors should be considered holistically How frequency therapy can help with the causes of tumors The question of the causes of tumors has occupied medicine for decades. Today it is clear that tumor processes are not usually caused by a single trigger.Continue reading

Author: NLS Informationsmedizin GmbH, Herbert Eder Abstract In frequency therapy, certain frequency ranges have been used for many years, which are assigned to individual tumor types, tissue changes and oncological stress patterns. These complementary tumor frequencies are understood as possible resonance ranges within information medicine. The following article provides an overview of their significance and contains aContinue reading

Conventional medicine, epigenetics and complementary frequency information Tumor prevention is a topic that many people only become intensively involved in when serious illnesses have already occurred in their family, among friends or in their own environment. However, prevention begins much earlier. It begins when we understand the biological basis of health, when we do notContinue reading

1 Introduction A blastoma - also known as an embryonal tumor - is a rare cancer that occurs predominantly in children and describes tumors that arise from embryonic or immature cells that were formed during the early development of the body. Depending on the tissue affected, a blastoma can occur in various organs,Continue reading

1. introduction Bladder carcinoma, also known as urothelial carcinoma, is one of the most common types of cancer of the urinary tract.the tumor mainly arises from the urothelial mucosa of the urinary bladder, which lines the inner wall.men are affected about three times as often as women. Risk factors: long-term smoking, contact with aromatic amines (e.g. in dyes), chronic bladder inflammation, radiotherapy, certain medications orContinue reading