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We are searching for a specific frequency to induce resonant vibrations in microorganisms. Using two identical tuning forks, both tuned to 440 Hertz, we observe that tapping one fork causes the other to vibrate sympathetically. This principle is similar to how a singer can shatter a glass by matching its resonant frequency. We explore the idea of using resonant frequency therapy to target living cells, specifically cancer cells. After testing numerous frequencies over 15 months, we discover that using two frequencies—one low and one high, with the higher being 11 times the lower—can shatter microorganisms. This technique shows promise against leukemia cells, causing them to fragment and die when exposed to specific frequencies between 100,000 and 300,000 Hertz.

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Honey's long shelf life is attributed to bees' wing frequencies shaping hexagonal honeycombs. George Zlakovsky's device cured quadriplegia, and Anthony Holland found frequencies that kill cancer cells. Sound technology can cloak objects, create hurricanes, and form galaxies. Sound can extinguish fires quickly, oxygenate our bodies, and even generate DNA. Sonoluminescence suggests stars could be bubbles of light in water.

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In this video, the speakers discuss the potential of using waves to treat diseases like cancer. They suggest that by recording and re-emitting the waves produced by a medication, its beneficial effects can be stimulated. This could lead to medications being administered through methods like phone or smart card. The speakers also mention the importance of resonance in communication between molecules and propose using frequency spectra to disrupt the communication of bacteria, causing them to die. They emphasize that understanding the frequency used by molecules is more crucial than having the actual molecule itself. Overall, they believe that waves have the potential to revolutionize medicine.

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Cancer cells are vulnerable to frequencies between 100,000 and 300,000 hertz, with a 11th harmonic ratio. By adding the 11th harmonic, microorganisms are shattered within 3 minutes. The process destroys pancreatic, leukemia, and ovarian cancer cells, reducing their size and slowing growth rates by up to 65%. In laboratory experiments, 25% to 60% of leukemia cells were killed. Treatment rooms for children will feature healing plasma lights, silently destroying cancer cells.

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A physician named Dr. James Baer from Albuquerque, New Mexico, invented a method to shatter microorganisms using electronic signals. By adding the 11th harmonic frequency, these organisms are shattered like a crystal glass. This phenomenon is new and has caught the attention of biologists. Cancer cells are particularly vulnerable between the frequencies of 100,000 Hertz and 300,000 Hertz. Leukemia cells attempt to replicate but are shattered into fragments, causing their demise. This process is repeated with multiple leukemia cells.

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I used my background in physics and optics to find a better way to treat cancer without causing side effects like hair loss. I developed a harmless nanoparticle that heats up when exposed to laser light, killing the tumor cells it touches. By targeting the laser at the tumor site, we were able to completely eliminate tumors in lab mice with just one treatment over 15 days, without any side effects, chemotherapy, surgery, or radiation. This technology has the potential to revolutionize cancer treatment.

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The FDA has approved a new cancer treatment called histotripsy, which uses sound waves to dissolve liver tumors. This approach could replace traditional treatments like surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, which often have harsh side effects. Histotripsy works by directing ultrasound waves at the tumor, creating tiny bubbles that burst and break the tumor apart. The body's immune system then cleans up the remnants. The method has been proven effective and safe through human trials since 2021. The treatment offers precision, real-time imaging, and potential immune system training against cancer cells. It provides a less physically taxing alternative with reduced recovery times and discomfort, while also minimizing potential drug interactions. Scientists believe histotripsy could become a universal cancer treatment and potentially a cure in the future.

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Histotripsy is a cancer treatment that uses targeted ultrasound waves to destroy tumors in a non-invasive way. The Edison system, made by Histosonics, is currently the only commercially available histotripsy machine for humans on the market. During treatment, the patient lies on a table and a device called the water bath sits on top of the patient, positioned over the tumor to prepare for therapy. The water bath serves the same purpose as gel in ultrasound imaging, preventing air pockets that would diffuse the ultrasound waves; the water is regular tap water run through a special filter to remove air bubbles. The procedure is performed in an operating room but is not sterile; no incisions are made. The most invasive part is obtaining IV access for sedation and typically anesthesia so the patient remains completely asleep and motionless during therapy. Histotripsy destroys tumor cells by rapidly expanding and contracting the gases inside them, producing a mechanical destruction of tissue rather than a thermal or radiation-based effect. The tissue is liquefied immediately as histotripsy is delivered; there is no waiting period. Dr. Burns showed before-and-after images indicating how the liver tissue healed after histotripsy. Currently, histotripsy is primarily used to destroy liver tumors, but there is potential for application to other body areas. An example patient received histotripsy to a single liver tumor; four months later MRI showed the entire lesion essentially resolved, with only a very small defect remaining and the liver having repaired and reabsorbed the area. Trials mentioned include a primary kidney tumor trial that has just closed, with results awaited, and a pancreatic trial underway in Barcelona, Spain, expected to be available in the US in 2026. Histotripsy is described as a technology platform with potential to expand to every organ, including possible future applications such as prostate (BPH or cancer), uterine fibroids, breast tumors, thyroid nodules, and brain tumors. Air-filled organs pose a challenge because ultrasound waves dissipate in air (lungs, stomach, and intestines). A histotripsy session can take about one to three hours, depending on how many tumors are targeted. Most patients go home a few hours after the procedure; some experience pain or discomfort at the treatment site, and some have no symptoms. Afterward, patients may have systemic inflammatory symptoms (fever, flu-like malaise) starting the day after — considered normal as the body reacts. Histotripsy does not replace all surgeries but may benefit patients who might otherwise require surgery, and the procedure can be repeated multiple times as long as liver function is normal. Histotripsy received FDA approval in October 2023 and is expanding availability as more machines are produced. There are centers near many patients, with expansion planned to the UK and other parts of Asia, as the technology becomes more globally available.

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Histosonics' histoTripty, a noninvasive ultrasound technology, has been cleared by the FDA for use in hospitals worldwide. This treatment, known as histotripsy, uses ultrasonic pulses to disrupt tumor cells with minimal recovery time for patients. Liver cancer patients, who often have limited treatment options, could benefit from this precise and effective therapy. The Edison Platform, a robotic arm developed by Histosonics, enables clinicians to target tumors and monitor the treatment in real time. The success of human trials and FDA approval paves the way for histotripsy to be used in a wider patient population, potentially extending its applications to other types of tumors and even non-cancer conditions. This technology has the potential to revolutionize healthcare.

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A multiple wave oscillator was used to cure the speaker's father of quadriplegia. After treating him for 4 weeks, 6 weeks later, his father walked out of the hospital on crutches. The speaker also mentions a TED Talk by Anthony Holland, where he explains that frequencies between 100,000 hertz and 300,000 hertz can kill cancer cells. This information challenges the conventional understanding of cancer treatment.

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A new cancer treatment called histotripsy, approved by the FDA, uses sound waves to dissolve liver tumors with minimal side effects. This method breaks tumors apart using ultrasound waves, allowing the body's immune system to remove them. Histotripsy is precise, targeting only the tumor, and offers real-time imaging for monitoring. Studies show it may boost the immune system's ability to fight cancer. Patients experience quicker recovery and less discomfort compared to traditional treatments. Histotripsy could become a universal cancer treatment and potentially a cure in the future.

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A music professor discusses his moonlight activities in science and the breakthrough he made in cancer research. He explains how he used a resonant frequency therapy device to induce a resonant vibration in living organisms and cells, ultimately shattering them. By finding the magic combination of two input frequencies, he was able to target specific microorganisms. He then conducted experiments on cancer cells, including pancreatic cancer, leukemia, ovarian cancer, and MRSA. The results showed significant destruction of cancer cells and slowed growth rates. He envisions a future where cancer treatment for children is painless and non-toxic, with healing plasma lights above them.

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In 1938, Dr. Royal Raymond Rife cured 16 cancer patients using frequencies and resonance. He discovered that cells and molecules vibrate at distinct frequencies, and by beaming plasma arrays of the same frequency at these cells, their frequency could be amplified and destroyed. This is known as resonance. Rife's machine destroyed 60% of cancer cells. However, his invention was suppressed by those who wanted to profit from cancer patients. Other researchers have also found success using frequencies and resonance to destroy cancer cells. Cancer is vulnerable between the frequencies of 100,000 hertz and 300,000 hertz. Resonant frequency therapy has been called a hoax by some medical websites, possibly due to the financial implications it poses.

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Humans possess natural killer cells, present for 460 million years, that protect against infection, cancer, and trauma. Current cancer treatments like chemotherapy, radiation, and steroid therapy destroy these cells. A new therapy, approved in 2024, aims to activate these natural killer cells, enabling the body to fight cancer. One injection can unlock these cells so they proliferate and protect you from cancer. Bladder cancer patients have remained disease-free for ten years using this therapy. According to the speaker, the prior presidential administration blocked this therapy along with a COVID treatment and vaccine. This therapy may also treat long COVID, HIV, and sepsis. The speaker plans to discuss this further in a series called "Cancer Decoded."

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Organisms are shattered using electronic signals, similar to radiation but without drugs. Vibrating forks at 440 hertz send energy pulses to shatter microorganisms. Resonant frequency therapy induces vibrations in cells, with pulsing output for targeted destruction. Using 2 input frequencies, one low and one high (11 times the lower), microorganisms can be shattered. Broadcasting an 18 gigahertz signal in pulses can cause lipid nanoparticles to release pathogenic contents, potentially causing a Marburg epidemic.

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Speaker 0: Medicine follows a chain from diagnosis to prognosis. If the diagnosis is misdiagnosed as a genetic disease, the prognosis won’t match what’s actually happening. Speaker 1: The ultimate approach is to look under the microscope at a biopsy. People rely on staging—stage one, two, three, four—a system used for over a hundred years. There are also stage zero ideas where there might be something or nothing. Then they remove breasts, use toxins, and do aggressive treatments to some patients. They define stage four, but what does that really mean? We look at tissue removed from the body, examine it under a microscope, and assess how many mitotic figures there are and how crowded the cells are. The pathologist makes a decision, which is passed to the surgeon or oncologist to tell the patient they have this kind of disease, stage three or stage four, depending on cell crowding and mitotic figures. The problem, which has persisted for decades, is that we take a biopsy of a tumor—a section of it—and the pathologist quickly decides. Then we stick the patient with something that can actually make things worse and spread the disease. I have dozens of articles showing that biopsies from breast, colon, liver, and lung can spread the tumor through the body, creating medicine. Why? I say: don’t do anything. Don’t poke the bear. Shrink it down, make it weak, then come in and take the whole thing out. Why stick it for nothing? Just remove the whole thing after you shrink it with metabolic therapy. Then what they say is, this is not an aggressive tumor. Yes, because we shrunk it a lot. If you had stabbed it initially, it might have said it would kill you. But you have to know the biology: you don’t poke the bear; you take the food away from it. It becomes docile, you can cut it out, then follow with non-invasive imaging. We have non-invasive imaging—CT, PET, MRIs—and you can start looking at things before you poke them. If it goes away, why poke it in the first place? So we have all these tools available, but they aren’t used in the correct order or way. Once the knowledge comes out, people will realize what I’m saying and start doing things the right way.

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A new FDA-approved therapy called AMTOGV is now available at the University of Chicago Medicine to treat melanoma. This treatment, known as tumor infiltrating lymphocyte therapy, involves removing T cells from a tumor, multiplying them in a lab, and infusing them back into the patient. This innovative therapy offers long-term control and potential cure for advanced melanoma patients. Additionally, this treatment may be applicable to other cancers where the immune system can recognize the tumors, such as lung and cervical cancer. Exciting advancements in cancer treatment are on the horizon.

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Cancer can be targeted and destroyed using specific frequencies between 100,000 and 300,000 hertz. By adding the 11th harmonic, microorganisms are shattered within about 3 minutes. This process has been observed in various experiments, including attacks on pancreatic cancer and leukemia cells. The destruction of cancer cells leads to changes in shape and size, and the tumor shrinks. Laboratory experiments have shown a 25% to 42% average kill rate for leukemia cells, with some cases reaching 60%. Additionally, the growth rate of cancer can be slowed by up to 65%. This non-toxic and painless treatment can potentially transform cancer treatment rooms for children.

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In a pilot clinical trial, researchers extracted teeth from patients who were going to get braces. They applied forces to induce root erosion and used an ultrasound device on each patient. After 4 weeks, the teeth that didn't receive stress showed erosion, but the ultrasound application resulted in the formation of new dental tissue. Encouraged by these results, they applied even higher forces in another experiment and found that ultrasound preserved the root while the inside root was severely resolved in the control group. This confirms that ultrasound is effective in orthodontic treatments.

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Cancer can be cured using frequencies and resonance therapy, as discovered by Dr. Royal Rife in 1938. He found that by beaming plasma rays of the same frequencies at cancer cells, their vibrations could be amplified and destroyed through resonance. Dr. Rife's machine destroyed 60% of cancer cells in patients. However, his career was destroyed by those who wanted to profit from cancer patients. Despite this, there are still practitioners who continue Dr. Rife's work, such as the engineers at Spooky2. They offer effective and affordable RIFE systems, including the Spooky2 Portable Starter Kit and the Generator X Pro Essential Kit. These kits help with detoxification, boosting energy, and killing harmful microorganisms. Dr. Rife's achievements were documented in various newspapers and he may be recognized as a giant in medical science in the future.

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- "Hey. Did you know your liver is basically your body's engine room? It powers your energy, keeps your blood clean, and controls your metabolism." - "Low intensity ultrasound can calm down inflammation, reduce early signs of scarring, boost how your body handles sugar, and help balance your cholesterol and liver enzymes." - "People in early studies saw better energy, clearer thinking, less bloating, and healthier blood markers after consistent use." - "You've got two main targets." - "First is the porta hepatis." - "That's the gateway to your liver." - "It's about two to four centimeters below your right rib cage near the middle." - "The second is directly over the liver tissue." - "For direct liver work, use a low pulsed setting, around 0.08 to 1.5 watts, three to five times a week."

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Honey lasts forever due to bees' wing frequencies creating hexagonal honeycombs. Frequencies of bee wings can potentially kill bacteria. George Lakovsky's oscillator cured quadriplegia. Sound frequencies between 100,000-300,000 Hz can kill cancer cells. Sound technology can create hurricanes, supercluster galaxies, and put out fires. Oxygen in the air is energized by sound as it enters the body. Luc Montagnier generated DNA with sound frequencies. Sonoluminescence creates light in water, suggesting star systems may be bubbles of light in water.

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Using mRNA technology similar to that used for COVID, researchers are taking biopsies of a patient's cancer, extracting protein, and reintroducing it into the patient's cells. In clinical trials, 10,009 humans have been treated. All 10,009 are now cancer free. The researchers claim to have cured cancer.

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Cancer cells are vulnerable to frequencies between 100000 Hertz and 300000 Hertz, with the higher frequency being 11 times the lower. By adding the 11th harmonic, microorganisms are shattered within 3 minutes. The video shows the destruction of various cancer cells, including pancreatic cancer and leukemia cells. The tumors shrink and break up in controlled experiments. The treatment rooms for children will have healing plasma lights above, shattering cancer cells painlessly.

The Peter Attia Drive Podcast

363 ‒ A new frontier in neurosurgery: brain-computer interfaces, new hope for brain diseases, & more
Guests: Edward Chang
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Neurosurgery still feels like peering into a black box, yet the frontier is shifting as brain computer interfaces promise new ways to diagnose, treat, and restore function. The episode centers on GBMs, strokes, and other brain diseases, highlighting awake surgery and real-time brain mapping as a way to maximize tumor removal while preserving language and movement. The brain itself has no pain receptors, so a patient can be awake under local scalp anesthesia and light sedation while surgeons work. The guest recalls that seeing the cortex pulse and measuring neurons sparked her lifelong fascination with brain function. Historical milestones anchor the field, from Harvey Cushing, the father of modern neurosurgery, to Wilder Penfield and awake epilepsy surgery. The discussion traces cranial openings to the present, where laser probes, focused ultrasound, and endovascular techniques now shrink invasiveness and extend life. Vascular work that once required large craniotomies is increasingly done through catheters, coils, and stents, and clot retrieval has turned strokes into treatable emergencies. The speakers emphasize that stroke care now resembles heart attack care, with rapid, catheter-based interventions redefining outcomes and shortening hospital stays. GBMs emerge as particularly lethal because of their heterogeneity and diffuse invasion beyond visible margins. The conversation notes that modern centers now perform genetic profiling of tumors, guiding targeted chemotherapy and immunotherapy as we learn to unleash the immune system while preserving normal brain tissue. The blood-brain barrier remains a barrier, but focused ultrasound and related approaches are opening it to deliver molecular therapies. Surgery still extends survival by enabling more complete resection, but the goal is to combine biology, imaging, and immune strategies to create personalized, durable control. Brain-computer interfaces become central as a practical therapy, illustrated by the Bravo trial and Ann’s case. An array of 253 ECOG sensors placed on the speech-related cortex captured a patient’s intention to speak and translated neural signals into text, achieving initial accuracy around 50% and reaching near-perfect decoding within a week. New work demonstrates streaming decoding with sub-second latency. The approach combines neural decoding with language models to generate fluent speech, and plans toward fully implantable, wireless devices. The discussion also envisions regenerative and biotech advances, including stem cell strategies, while acknowledging ethical questions.
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