Pioneered at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine by Jennifer Chu, M.D., Emeritus Associate Professor with more than 30 years of clinical research in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, eToims(R) applies very brief, noninvasive electrical stimulation at the junction of the involved nerve and muscle, to elicit abrupt "twitch" muscle contractions to individual muscles. These twitches perform local exercise and scientific massage from within the muscle. The inability of common pain therapies to stimulate neuromuscular junctions explains why long-term pain management has for so long remained an unsolved mystery. With no downtime involved, eToims(R) Twitch Relief Method is an ideal treatment for those employed in high-performance, high-stress occupations such as athletics, entertainment, business ownership, law, and finance.
While the noninvasive eToims(R) technology (discovered in 2006) evolved from neuromuscular pain twitch relief work that began in 1990, eToims(R) has roots in the 5,000 year-old tradition of acupuncture. However, instead of rebalancing altered energy, eToims(R) attempts to restore to "normal" changes found in involved pathologic muscles associated with pain by ending:
(1) traction on selective pain-producing structures, (2) local muscle/nerve lack of oxygen by increasing inflow of intramuscular blood carrying oxygen and other nutrients, and (3) pain producing accumulation of local muscle tissue wastes by increasing outflow of fluids carrying these wastes.
Dr. Chu, President/CEO of eToims(R) Soft Tissue Comfort Center, LLC explains "Of the nearly 100 patients treated thus far ranging from 10-82 years of age with pain symptoms lasting from one month to as long as fifty years, 85% of eToims(R) patients continue to receive treatments after returning for more than 3 sessions. This is an encouraging statistic as patients pay for the procedure as an out-of-pocket expense, with their willingness to return weekly clearly illustrating the effectiveness of eToims(R) in improving quality of life." Please visit http://www.stopmusclepain.com for more information.