1. *Summary: Arzhan and Garrett are discussing a case series of patients with acute depression treated with magneto-infrared laser (MIL) therapy, the predecessor to coMra therapy. The study showed that patients initially in stress or overactivation shifted to a more balanced state as treatment progressed. This highlights the importance of tracking progress in coMra therapy as individual needs change during the healing process.*
with you. Okay. Let's see some specific example. So this is an actual case series of patients with acute depression who were treated with MIl therapy. MIl therapy is magneto-infrared laser therapy. So if you remember, MIl therapy is the predecessor of coMra therapy and because they've been researched for so long in Russia is much more research data. So I want to show you some idea of what happens to a person once you start undergoing a therapy with magnetic field with low level laser and so on. So here what you see is a group of patients, I think it's about 30 patients with acute depression. And when they did testing, they used the blood testing, they found out that about 40% of them are in stress response, another 40% in overactivation, and then there is training and activation response as well. So several people are in a good state overall. And as you can see that as treatment progressed, so by week two, the majority of people, patients shifted away from stress and overactivation into the response, which is much more mild and much more calm condition of the neuron the brain system. And then by the end of the therapy by the day 28, I think there's only two people who are in stress response and a couple of people in overactivation, but most of the people in the group were in the conducive to healing activation type and training type of responses. So this things the type of response also would change in the person as the treatment would progress. It's not something that cast in stone, obviously. This is why, again, another to come back to that, it's important to track the progress because as the person gets healed or progressing across the spectrum of changes, then his needs for therapy will also start to change, which we talk