Ultra-weak photon emission in healthy subjects and patients with type 2 diabetes: evidence for a non-invasive diagnostic tool
- 01The body emits a natural, ultra-weak light
- 02Light emission patterns differed between healthy people and those with type 2 diabetes
- 03This suggests a potential for future non-invasive diagnostic tools
- 04Measurements were taken from the forehead, neck, heart, stomach, and navel
Measuring the body's faint light emissions may one day help diagnose conditions like type 2 diabetes non-invasively.
Background: Spontaneous ultra-weak photon emission (UPE) is a common phenomenon in biological systems and has been linked to pathological states. Researchers have always considered ultra-weak photon emission a potential non-invasive diagnostic tool, but its application in the medical field is stagnant due to the lack of relevant data for pathological states.
Methods: Ultra-weak photon signals from five body sites (forehead, neck, heart, stomach, and navel) in fifty patients with type 2 diabetes and sixty age-matched healthy subjects were measured using a moveable whole-body biophoton detection system. Photon signal is measured for 10 min and detected in bins of 50 ms by a photomultiplier with a range of 290-630 nm. Each signal is a time series of 12 000 elements. Various parameters including photon intensity, Q value, squeezed state parameters (|α|, θ, ø, r) and SSI were analyzed.
Results and conclusion: we found significant differences in the abovementioned parameters between groups, and all subjects could be clustered into two groups according to the results obtained by principal component analysis. Methods and results from this study could be useful for constructing a UPE database for a range of diseases, which would promote the application of UPE in clinical diagnosis in the future.
- APA
- Meina Yang, Wenyu Ding, Yanli Liu, Hua Fan, Rajendra P Bajpai, Jialei Fu, Jingxiang Pang, Xiaolei Zhao, & Jinxiang Han (2016). Ultra-weak photon emission in healthy subjects and patients with type 2 diabetes: evidence for a non-invasive diagnostic tool. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/ultra-weak-photon-emission-in-healthy-subjects-and-patients-with-type-2-diabetes-evidence-for-a-non-invasive-diagnostic-tool/
- MLA
- Meina Yang, et al. "Ultra-weak photon emission in healthy subjects and patients with type 2 diabetes: evidence for a non-invasive diagnostic tool." 2016, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/ultra-weak-photon-emission-in-healthy-subjects-and-patients-with-type-2-diabetes-evidence-for-a-non-invasive-diagnostic-tool/.
- Chicago
- Meina Yang et al. 2016. "Ultra-weak photon emission in healthy subjects and patients with type 2 diabetes: evidence for a non-invasive diagnostic tool.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/ultra-weak-photon-emission-in-healthy-subjects-and-patients-with-type-2-diabetes-evidence-for-a-non-invasive-diagnostic-tool/
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