Frequency medicine: The silent power that shapes our skin and health

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A contribution by Dr. Hans Ulrich Jabs, Medical Advisor at LIPOSANA


Frequencies: Invisible vibrations that determine our lives

Whether it's our heartbeat, brainwaves, or skin texture – our entire body is a concert of vibrations. Frequencies, measured in Hertz (Hz), determine how fast something vibrates. But not all frequencies are created equal: The type, intensity, and shape of these vibrations determine how our organism reacts to them. This knowledge is now being used specifically in modern medicine and dermatological aesthetics.


What is frequency medicine?

Frequency medicine is based on the knowledge that biological systems communicate not only chemically but also electromagnetically.

Instead of introducing active ingredients, it uses physical waves such as:

  • Ultrasound
  • Light
  • electric or magnetic fields

These are used to stimulate cell communication, support regeneration, and activate regulatory processes. Unlike medications, frequencies have a non-material, profound, and selective effect—and can be individually adapted.

Frequencies
Frequency spectrum

The language of nature: frequencies in harmony

Even the Earth speaks in vibrations: The Schumann resonance at approximately 7.83 Hz influences our brain waves and our sleep. Our bodies also have their own natural rhythms:

  • Heartbeat: approx. 1 Hz
  • Respiration: 0.2–0.4 Hz
  • Alpha brain waves: 8–12 Hz

These biological frequencies are vital. They structure our health on a subtle level.


When technology interferes: High-frequency fields in everyday life

Our modern everyday life is permeated by technical frequencies:

  • Wi-Fi & mobile phones: 900 MHz – 2.4 GHz
  • Induction cookers: 20–60 kHz
  • Cosmetic radiofrequency: 0.5–10 MHz
  • Medical ultrasound: 1–15 MHz

Such high intensities and unnatural modulations can irritate or even damage biological cells, especially when exposed to long-term stress.


How do cells react to frequencies?

Cells aren't deaf. They "hear" via membrane voltages, calcium channels, and protein receptors. Different cell types respond to different frequency ranges:

  • Brain cells synchronize via EEG-effective waves (e.g., alpha, theta)
  • Muscle cells contract at 10–50 Hz (known from EMS devices)
  • Skin cells react to radio frequency with deep heat and collagen formation
  • Stem cells can be influenced in their division by certain frequencies

If frequencies are used incorrectly

Not all frequency applications are healthy. Too high an intensity or duration can lead to:

  • Oxidative stress
  • Mitochondrial dysfunction
  • Disturbance of circadian rhythms
  • Altered cell communication

In cosmetics, incorrect radiofrequency application can even lead to burns or nerve damage. Particularly critical: High-intensity ultrasound (HIFU), which destroys fat cells, can cause severe inflammation of the connective tissue (panniculitis).


The way of frequency application with physiological effect

LIPOSANA3 uses targeted ultrasound waves, among other things, to cause the fat cell membrane to vibrate. This removes triglycerides without damaging the cells. This is important because fat cells are our most efficient energy stores.

This form of frequency application:

  • works cell-friendly
  • promotes natural lipolysis
  • can support long-term effects with a healthy diet

What do cells need to respond healthily to frequencies?

Frequency medicine works best when cellular metabolism is functioning optimally. For this, the body needs:

  1. Mineral conductivity: magnesium, potassium, zinc
  2. Intact cell membrane: Omega-3 fatty acids & phospholipids
  3. Antioxidant protection: Glutathione, Selenium, Vitamin C
  4. Good hydration: water with high cellular availability
  5. Rhythm: Alternation of stimulus and rest

Conclusion: Frequencies are medicine – if used intelligently

The future of aesthetics, longevity and pain therapy lies not only in creams and active ingredients, but in intelligent frequency medicine :

Gentle. Targeted. Biologically sound.


Written by Dr. Hans Ulrich Jabs – medical advisor of Swiss Health Concepts GmbH