The mutual pulling force of human muscle fibers can treat mild cancer and rhinitis
Hongfa Zi, Ding Hua, Zhen Liu

TL;DR
This paper explores how increasing muscle tension through specific exercises can treat mild cancer and rhinitis, suggesting a systemic approach to disease management based on muscle pulling forces.
Contribution
It introduces a novel perspective linking muscle tension to the treatment of systemic diseases like cancer and rhinitis, supported by comparative experimental evidence.
Findings
Exercise can improve ventilation in mild rhinitis
Enhanced muscle tension may aid in cancer recovery
Older individuals may have higher risk of cellular variant cancer
Abstract
Muscles can store a large amount of genetic information, and in order to transform humans into computers, we need to start by increasing muscle tension. When people with cancer go on happy trips, some cancers often heal without treatment; Rhinitis can cause blockage of the nostrils, but after running, the nostrils naturally ventilate. Both are related to exercise, and the mystery behind them can treat both conditions. Cancer belongs to systemic diseases, and the eradication method for systemic diseases should start from the entire body system, treat the symptoms and prevent recurrence. This article uses special exercise methods and detailed methods to treat diseases, and finds that treating diseases from the perspective of the human system is indeed effective. This article adopts a comparative experimental method to compare the changes in the body before and after. Through this article,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsExercise and Physiological Responses · Muscle activation and electromyography studies · Biomedical and Chemical Research
