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The Problem of Pain

Chronic pain affects over 1.5 billion people globally, with traditional medications often causing significant side effects. coMra therapy presents a safer alternative by combining laser therapy with magnetism, ultrasound, and…

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The Problem of Pain
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4.3.10. Universal 3 - Why those Points for 10 minutes

1. *Summary: This text is a discussion between Arzhan Surazakov and Garrett Murrin about the application of coMra therapy, specifically focusing on blood irradiation protocols. Garrett asks about the exclusion of the popliteal artery in the standard treatment and whether it would be beneficial to include it for localized issues. Arzhan explains that the standard protocol focuses on major arteries in the torso and convenient locations like the elbow, but that other arteries can be included depending on the treatment goals.*

Garrett: I have one question around the placement or the choice of the blood vessel treatment. So I've always been curious to know why the popliteal artery was left out of the mix and the elbow. So does it matter? I mean, I know you've treated five points bilateral, you get a total of 10 minutes. So is that enough for the systemic flow? But if you have a specific part, let's say a knee that's in trouble or an ankle, would you opt to treat the popliteal and get better results? I know it's a systemic versus a local treatment, but I just can you comment on why it was left out and not treated at the back of the knee like it is in the front of the elbow, please?

Arzhan: You can certainly add it in. Most of them are to do with the torso itself. So they're all major arteries. And the elbow ones are really very convenient place to get us. If you want to treat behind the knee, the blood supply, down by the ankle, all of these are perfectly depending on what you're trying to achieve or the approach you're taking. You're still going to irradiate that blood supply, and that's the key thing. And of course, it's always good to irradiate that blood supply at the point that's reasonably close to, let's say, knee trauma. So behind the knee, the femoral artery, whereas if it's a carpal tunnel than in the arms. Yes, if you can do that, that's great. We put those treatments in there because remember, user guide is designed for the home user. And so for a professional in office, you can buy all means expand in every direction.

Garrett: Yes. Thank you. I was wondering if there was something magic about the 10 minutes. Did you need 10 minutes to irradiate all the blood or not? Did it matter which arteries you were using?

Arzhan: No, but the time was not relevant. But as for 10 minutes being a magic number, it's like the rest of the treatments. middle of the road conservative yet effective amount of time. I don't want to treat and treat and treat. We want to do the minimum amount of treatment for the maximum effect. So 10 minutes is a good number for that.