Hi Duncan, I can appreciate you doubting nature with regard to the electrical 
conduction situation.  Still trying to figure that one out myself.  Have the 
reports from the Doc, and it is still not clear. Think Terry Wayne figured 
out the problem with the 9v battery, having a bite.  The electrodes were 
placed too close together.  

As for anyone providing advice, no one is responsible for me but me.  I am 
here by choice to learn from some very bright minds, and am grateful for the 
knowledge and insight.  If I try something, no matter what the outcome, I am 
responsible.  Am trying to research carefully and methodically, to approach 
this process with the greatest of logic, common sense, and objective 
consideration.  One thing I have learned, is to have enough sense to ask 
questions when the subject matter is over my head.  So, thank you to each 
person who has been kind enough to share.


If the left side of my body has zero resistance to electrical stimulation, 
would there be any health risk in using AC or DC on the right side?   (The 
zero resistance situation was discovered through nerve conduction tests by a 
Neurologist.)  

<<<Sorry, I can't believe it.>>


> <<No one will give you email advice if you have conduction or current 
> problems; Youu'll have to experiment on yourself.  But the TENS and other 
> devices are compared electrically on the jaguar site.  If you avoid making 
> a current through the heart you can otherwise still do blood 
> electrification.  Just use one arm only and position the electrodes over a 
> pair of veins (effective, not choice). Or use leg arteries near your ankles 
> if you can (better)>>
> 
> <<If you check out the jaguar page on the herpes zapper, you'll see that 
> even with a (9V battery you'd use a resistor>>
> 
> 
> 
> 
>