trepanation alternative  Trepanation


    Trepanation Alternative













Trepanation Alternative


Trepanation

Trepanation (or trephination) is the making of a small hole in the skull of the adult by use of a surgical drill known as a trepan. It is not synonymous with brain surgery (e.g.lobotomy) as it is performed solely on the skull bone and does not enter the brain. The purpose of trepanation is to give the closed skull of the adult an expansion window and thereby to restore the full pulsation which was lost when the skull sealed. The pulse wave then blows up the brain capillaries with blood to the level of childhood, accelerating brain metabolism and empowering the brain to permanently regain its youthful level. An equivalent volume of cerebrospinal fluid is squeezed out to make room for the extra blood and thereafter the ratio between the two fluid volumes in the brain is altered in favour of blood. Proponents claim that an increase in energy and well being is the result, and that with more contact between capillaries and brain cells the brain functions more efficiently.

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    Top: Health: Alternative: Trepanation
See Also:

  • - Overview focusing on the work of Bart Huges.
  • - Article on trepanation from Eccentric Lives and Peculiar Notions by John Michell.
  • - The experience of a person who had a hole drilled through his skull. Includes photos of the procedure.
  • - Article by Jon Bowen discussing this procedure citing the pros and cons.
  • - A newsbrief from Archaeology Magazine describing a 7,000-year-old burial in France that has yielded the earliest unequivocal evidence for trepanation.
  • - A personal interpretation of this procedure by Mei Nah Khoo. From Metaphysical Insights archives.
  • - An interview with self-trepanner Dr. Bart Huges as questioned by Joe Mellen. The Transatlantic Review No. 23, Winter 1966-1967.
  • - Information on trepanation, the art of drilling holes into people's skulls.
  • - Backgroung information on trepanation and the risks associated with it.
  • - An indepth source of information on medical and historical aspects of this ancient surgical procedure. Includes references and citations as well and advanced reading suggestions.
  • - Scientific article by Daniel Witt of Temple University.


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