Editorial Team

The skin is the boundary between the external and internal world. It is what shapes our being.

Furthermore, in the light of scientific reports, it seems appropriate to conceive the skin as a transceiver antenna that influences and in turn is influenced by the environment, which is represented by biological elements (microorganisms), biochemical elements (environmental molecules), neurosensory elements (proprio-nociceptive stimuli), frequency elements (electromagnetic fields). Thermal elements.

The skin system can be seen as the membrane of a large cell.

“The skin structure, on a cellular and biochemical level, is therefore able to perceive the surrounding world (proprioceptive and nociceptive sensitivity) but can also send messages to the environment through its own odor, perspiration and visible manifestations (dermatitis, eczema, etc.).”

(Human skin as arrays of helical antennas in the millimeter and submillimeter wave range – physical review letter March 2008)

The skin, therefore, performs two functions that we could define as centrifugal (in the state of emitting structure) and centripetal (in the state of receiving structure). It is therefore classified within the orthosympathetic and parasympathetic binomial which, according to Reckeweg's vision, characterizes contraction and expansion and in the clinical field inflammation (orthosympathetic) and degeneration (parasympathetic).

If the skin is unable to adequately and harmoniously perform the two functions, it will be compromised. The aim of therapy must therefore be to maintain or restore the dual function of the skin, receptive and transmitting, in dynamic equilibrium with the individual and the environment.

In my opinion, it would be useful for doctors to take this into account when diagnosing skin diseases.

In light of the above It doesn't make much sense to talk about skin diseases but rather diseases on the skin.

Messages are drawn on the skin, it is up to the doctor to decode them and treat them with drugs that are consistent with this concept of the skin structure. Last but not least are homeopathic and homotoxicological drugs, some of which have a centrifugal action (e.g. Sulfur) and others a centripetal action (e.g. Thuya).

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