Biomodulation:

changing the natural biochemical response of a cell or tissue within the normal range of its function, stimulating the cell’s innate metabolism, thereby allowing the cell to heal itself.

Biomodulation naturally defines a difference between a Pharmacological dose and a Physiological dose of care.

Pharmacological dose:

any treatment that will change the function of diseased and injured tissue AND the physiology or function of normal healthy tissue. It inherently has the capacity to cause damage to normal healthy tissue. It always contains risk and can do harm. It is very predictable for symptomatic alterations. You may feel better, but in reality, be no better than before treatment.

Physiological dose:

a dose of any treatment that will only change the physiology or function of diseased and injured tissue, it will have no effect on the physiology or function of normal healthy tissue. It will do no harm. It will stimulate the body to produce, or provide the body what it needs to normalize and heal itself through biomodulation. It is patient dependant and the response is varied depending on the patient’s body.
When you feel better it is because you are better.

Photobiomodulation:

An energy transfer process that occurs when cellular function is stimulated as a result of the energy transfer from the photons (light).

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