Humans have the latent ability to regenerate any part of the human body.
This ability is โturned offโ in most cases, but not all. And we have made an accidental discovery that will change the world.
There are many cases where regeneration takes place but the one that has been proven is finger regeneration in children below 11 years old. But ONLY of the wound is NOT closed.
This shocking discovery was made by western medically trained doctors observed children with almost entire fingers lost in accidents and the wound just kept wet with a salted cover. There was no surgery to close the stumps and the fingers returned with skin, bone, hair, nails in place. There was no scar tissue observed. This was so common of an outcome for some African and Asian regions few even thought about it.
But how did it work they the horrified doctors thought?
They still are asking this question today. In case of your child suffered such a fate, you may be forced by the hospital to have the stump closed because this is considered โanecdotalโ, not a standard of care and not safe and effective. And a judge would have your child have that stump closed and cut off the ability to ever have the digit return.
So what do we know about this regeneration?
It is modulated by very low current electricity, this is the driver. It is not stem cells or DNA. It is the electrical potential.
But how in undeveloped countries did they get the electricity?
The sodium/potassium electron pump.
By using a salted cover on the wound this forms a current potential and activates the memory of the cells to grow as if they are still in the womb.
This electrical potential is the most misunderstood and understudied part of medical research as there is no massive e pharmaceutical company โinvestmentโ at universities.
I have said many times, this next 100 years are about breaking the bioelectrical code and I am using AI to help understand the โlanguageโ.
Unfortunately the big advancements in this field will come out of garages and not universities.
Even the Silicon Valley VC startup culture has not yet a clue.
Iโll write much more about this soon.
Credit - @BrianRoemmele