Aqua Detox Therapy: Questionable Detoxification
Aqua Detox therapy has somewhat taken the attention spans of people from all over the world. It is basically one from of alternative detoxification based on the study and research of a Dr. Royal Rife, a medical scientist, and the marketed products associated with Aqua Detox therapy is among the entries in the questionable medical devices roster.
Questionable, in the sense that no clinical results have come out proving that it works. It also hasn't been rated by the United States Food and Drug Administration, adding to its questionable nature as a detoxification procedure.
Aqua Detox therapy is basically marketed as various products and various names. The most common of which would include: Bio-Synch Detox, Bionic HydroTherapy, Energy Balancer Detox Footbath, Emerald Detox, Aqua Chi, Baby-D Foot Spa, Bio Detox, Bio-Clense, Foot Detox Spa, ionCleanse, Hydra Detox, Mary Staggs Ionic Spa, Platinum Detox, PediTox, Q2 Energy Spa, Pure-Charge Energetic Spa, Water Detox, SeaWalk Ion Cleanse Spa, IonDuo, Inonic Detox Box, IonPro, IonInfra, ionSpa, and P.E.P Body Purge.
The premise of Aqua Detox therapy basically simple. Aqua Detox therapy's "detoxification arms" basically appear no different from home foot spa equipment. Users are to bathe their feet in a solution of salt water, as a low voltage electric current is coursed through the water, completing the "detoxification" process. After thirty minutes, or so, the water would change in color. This change in color is said to be the indicator as to which part of one's body had gone through the detoxification process, or what materials or substances had been "flushed" out from one's system.
By introducing positive and negative ion frequencies to one's body, though one's feet, the cells in one's body is able to rebalance itself, getting rid of the toxins which have built up over the years. The color change in the water, would "inform" users as to which areas of their bodies had gone through the detoxification process. For example black would indicate that one's liver hade been through the detoxification, orange would mean one's joints had been though the detoxification.
All these do actually sound amazing, but without the clinical evidence, Aqua Detox therapy, along with other products associated with Aqua Detox therapy, has been branded as a scam, making people spend amounts of money, for items which don't yield any real therapeutic benefits. Most "personal testimonials" talking about the reliability of Aqua Detox machines are found on "mediums" aimed in selling them.
Unless clinical evidence pops up, Aqua Detox therapy, and all the other forms of detoxification associated with it are simply questionable medical devices.