Evoked Photon Capture
Evoked photon capture (EPC) is a tool of quantum medicine. Simply put, it allows us to measure the energy level at which the body is operating.
The EPC technique measures the body’s photon and electron emissions. The EPC machine emits a weak electric current that is pulsed and measured in micro-amps. It is safe for the human body because it causes no substantive physiologic effect.
The body has electrical properties. Electrons are generated first from the surface of the skin, and within a short time, electrons from deeper tissues within the body are included in the current flow. The electrons come from the protein chain. According to principles of quantum mechanics, these electrons are dispersed among many molecules, and form an “electron cloud,” occupying a specific region in space. Other sources of electrons are the free radicals which form in response to metabolic processes.
When the body is functioning normally, electron clouds are distributed among all systems and organs. The mitochondria inside cells use the electron chain to convert molecules to ATP, packets of energy. When there is imbalance or dysfunction, electrons are not transferred normally to the blood and redistributed to all tissues. This prevents the normal flow of electrons (the basis for energy production), resulting in overall decrease of energy of the system. Accumulation of electrons also allows free radicals to build up in specific organs, resulting in tissue damage. This decrease in energy both to the body as a whole, and to specific organs, is measured by the EPC technique.
Information exchange occurs between the organs and the autonomic nervous system all the time. In a state of health, there is excellent information exchange, the autonomic nervous system can respond to all the needs of the different organs, and the body is in a state of balance (or homeostasis), and is healthy.
When information channels are blocked, by inflammation or tumor or injury, this information transfer is suppressed or completely cut off, and the autonomic nervous system can no longer respond as rapidly or completely. At a given point, the information suppression gets so severe that the body undergoes a sudden jump to another zone of homeostasis or balance. At this point, health is not so good; there may be insomnia, abdominal pain, fatigue, susceptibility to infection. The body is still in balance or homeostasis, but less healthy, even though there is no organ damage. In conventional “allopathic” medicine, this is still considered to be a state of “health.”
Eventually, the compensatory mechanisms are overwhelmed, and illness becomes manifest. This zone is generally associated with organ damage, and is the zone of “disease” or “ill health.” At this point, allopathic medicine gives a “diagnosis.”
EPC is a means of assessing the energy state of a person, from the point of view of the balance of autonomic nervous system function. It is a unique way of assessing how the body is functioning. The EPC evaluation can be added to other forms of assessment – EKG, ultrasound, blood analysis, etcetera – to give a more complete picture of the state of health of a person’s organ systems.
At the Arizona Center for Advanced Medicine, we typically make use of an EPC assessment during the initial visit. |