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Earthing (Grounding) the Human Body Reduces Blood Viscosity—a Major Factor in Cardiovascular Disease

Gaétan Chevalier, Stephen T Sinatra, James L Oschman, Richard M Delany
Key takeaways
  1. 01Grounding for two hours increased the surface charge on red blood cells
  2. 02This change was associated with significantly less red blood cell clumping
  3. 03Reduced blood clumping may lower blood viscosity
  4. 04This was a small study with ten healthy participants

Two hours of direct contact with the earth's surface may reduce red blood cell clumping by increasing their electrical surface charge.

Abstract

Objectives: Emerging research is revealing that direct physical contact of the human body with the surface of the earth (grounding or earthing) has intriguing effects on human physiology and health, including beneficial effects on various cardiovascular risk factors. This study examined effects of 2 hours of grounding on the electrical charge (zeta potential) on red blood cells (RBCs) and the effects on the extent of RBC clumping.

Design/interventions: SUBJECTS were grounded with conductive patches on the soles of their feet and palms of their hands. Wires connected the patches to a stainless-steel rod inserted in the earth outdoors. Small fingertip pinprick blood samples were placed on microscope slides and an electric field was applied to them. Electrophoretic mobility of the RBCs was determined by measuring terminal velocities of the cells in video recordings taken through a microscope. RBC aggregation was measured by counting the numbers of clustered cells in each sample.

Settings/location: Each subject sat in a comfortable reclining chair in a soundproof experiment room with the lights dimmed or off.

Subjects: Ten (10) healthy adult subjects were recruited by word-of-mouth.

Results: Earthing or grounding increased zeta potentials in all samples by an average of 2.70 and significantly reduced RBC aggregation.

Conclusions: Grounding increases the surface charge on RBCs and thereby reduces blood viscosity and clumping. Grounding appears to be one of the simplest and yet most profound interventions for helping reduce cardiovascular risk and cardiovascular events.

Cite this study
APA
Gaétan Chevalier, Stephen T Sinatra, James L Oschman, & Richard M Delany (2013). Earthing (Grounding) the Human Body Reduces Blood Viscosity—a Major Factor in Cardiovascular Disease. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/earthing-grounding-the-human-body-reduces-blood-viscosity-a-major-factor-in-cardiovascular-disease/
MLA
Gaétan Chevalier, et al. "Earthing (Grounding) the Human Body Reduces Blood Viscosity—a Major Factor in Cardiovascular Disease." 2013, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/earthing-grounding-the-human-body-reduces-blood-viscosity-a-major-factor-in-cardiovascular-disease/.
Chicago
Gaétan Chevalier et al. 2013. "Earthing (Grounding) the Human Body Reduces Blood Viscosity—a Major Factor in Cardiovascular Disease.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/earthing-grounding-the-human-body-reduces-blood-viscosity-a-major-factor-in-cardiovascular-disease/