FREQUENCY THERAPY GLOSSARY

 

The world of frequency therapy and electromedicine has its own fascinating technical vocabulary. To make the best use of the mechanisms of action, studies, and protocols on our platform, a solid basic understanding of the most important terms is essential.

In this glossary, you’ll find the key terms explained clearly from A to Z—ranging from the biological fundamentals at the cellular level to the technical terminology of modern plasma generators and protocol databases.


Amplitude

The maximum displacement of an oscillation from its rest position. In the practice of frequency therapy, amplitude—put simply—describes the signal strength or intensity with which a specific frequency is transmitted into the body or the plasma field.

ATP Production (Adenosine Triphosphate)

ATP is the universal energy carrier in the mitochondria of our cells. Certain frequency applications, particularly in the microcurrent range, have been scientifically proven to significantly increase ATP synthesis and thus accelerate cellular regeneration and healing.

Biofeedback

A diagnostic procedure in which a frequency device measures the body’s physical reactions to applied frequencies (e.g., changes in heart rate variability or skin resistance). This allows for the individual identification of pathogenic stressors or physical resonances.

Bioresonance

A biophysical method based on the principle that every cell, every organ, and every pathogen has a specific vibrational pattern. By inverting pathological vibrations or amplifying physiological signals, the body’s self-regulatory mechanisms are stimulated.

Bioterrain (cellular environment)

A term from biological medicine (coined by Claude Bernard) that describes the nature of the extracellular matrix. Frequencies are most effective in a healthy bioterrain (balanced acid-base status, good hydration), since electrical signals are conducted optimally in aqueous, mineralized environments.

CAFL (Consolidated Annotated Frequency List)

One of the most important and historically established databases for Rife frequencies. It consolidates the experiences and records of numerous researchers and users worldwide and serves as the basis for many modern therapy systems.

Duty Cycle

Indicates the ratio of the pulse duration to the period duration of a square wave. A duty cycle of 50% means that the wave is active (“On”) half the time and inactive (“Off”) the other half. This value affects how much energy is transferred to the body.

Electromagnetic Field (EMF)

A physical field generated by electrically charged particles. In frequency therapy, controlled, low-intensity EMFs (such as those used in PEMF devices) are employed to positively stimulate cellular processes.

Electrosmog (E-smog)

Artificially generated, often unstructured electromagnetic fields (e.g., from Wi-Fi, cell phone networks, or high-voltage power lines) that can disrupt biological systems. In contrast to frequency therapy used for therapeutic purposes, these are disharmonious vibrations that can weaken the cell membrane potential.

Hertz (Hz)

The international unit of frequency in physics. One hertz corresponds to one oscillation (period) per second. Frequency protocols specify precise hertz values to induce specific resonances in tissue or pathogens.

Herxheimer reaction

Also known as the Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction. A brief initial worsening of symptoms caused by the rapid breakdown of pathogens (e.g., bacteria or fungi) and the associated temporary release of toxins into the bloodstream during therapy.

Contact Therapy (Contact Mode)

The direct transmission of frequencies into the body via physical conductors, such as TENS pads, hand cylinders, or foot electrodes. This method is often used for localized applications and, unlike plasma systems, operates with directly flowing microcurrents.

Magnetic Pulsers (PEMF)

Pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (PEMF). Devices that emit high-intensity but extremely short magnetic pulses. These pulses penetrate deep tissue and bone, inducing tiny currents there and promoting regeneration.

Microcurrent

The therapeutic use of electrical currents in the microampere range (millionths of an ampere). These currents are so weak that they are barely perceptible, but they correspond to the physiological currents of the human body and support wound healing and anti-inflammatory effects.

MOR (Mortal Oscillatory Rate)

The “mortal oscillatory rate.” A term coined by Royal Raymond Rife to describe the exact resonance frequency at which the structure of a specific microorganism (virus, bacterium) is destabilized and ultimately destroyed without damaging the surrounding healthy tissue.

Multi-Wave Oscillator (MWO)

A device developed by Georges Lakhovsky that emits a broad spectrum of harmonic frequencies simultaneously. The basic idea is that each weakened cell draws from this “bath” of vibrations exactly the frequency it needs to regenerate its own oscillatory circuit.

NCFL (Non-Consolidated Frequency List)

In addition to the CAFL, these are more experimental, unconfirmed, or newer frequency lists that have been compiled by users worldwide and often serve as the basis for new, custom protocols.

Harmonics

Integer multiples of a fundamental frequency. For example, if a generator outputs a 100-Hz square wave, this waveform also generates frequencies at 300 Hz, 500 Hz, and so on, due to physical principles. This phenomenon is specifically utilized in protocols to reach deeper-seated exciters in very high-frequency bands using low fundamental frequencies.

Phase Shift

A setting on frequency generators with two or more outputs. By slightly shifting the timing of two otherwise identical waves relative to each other, so-called scalar waves or complex interference patterns can be generated within the body, which penetrate the tissue even more deeply.

Plasma Generator

A high-voltage device that emits frequencies into the room without physical contact, via a glass tube filled with a noble gas (plasma tube). These systems are considered to have particularly strong penetrating power and most closely replicate Rife’s original frequency devices.

Radionics

A complementary medicine technique for analyzing and balancing subtle energy fields. It is based on the assumption that illnesses arise from disturbances in the body’s electromagnetic blueprint, which can be harmonized over a distance using special devices.

Remote Therapy (Remote Treatment)

A radionic approach that has become popular primarily through the Spooky2 system. In this method, frequencies are not transmitted directly to the body but are directed toward the user via a DNA sample receiver system (e.g., a fingernail in a quantum transmitter) using the principle of quantum entanglement.

Resonance

The physical phenomenon of resonance. When an external frequency matches the natural frequency of an object (or a cell/pathogen), energy absorption is maximized. This is the fundamental principle of targeted frequency therapy.

Rifetech

Modern, specialized hardware and software systems for the precise generation of plasma frequencies. Our protocol database places a strong emphasis, among other things, on the correct implementation of treatment procedures for these advanced generators.

Scalar Waves

Longitudinal waves (also known as Tesla waves) that, unlike conventional transverse electromagnetic waves, do not lose energy as they travel and theoretically propagate at speeds exceeding the speed of light. They play a major role in bioenergetic information transmission.

Spooky2

One of the world’s best-known and most widely used Rife systems. It combines contact therapy, plasma, PEMF, and radionics (remote) through complex software, for which we provide specific and easy-to-follow protocols on our portal.

Sweep (Frequency Sweep)

A function in frequency generators that does not simply play a static frequency, but instead sweeps through a specific frequency range (e.g., from 10,000 Hz to 10,500 Hz). This prevents resistance in pathogens that mutate easily and ensures that the MOR is targeted.

TENS (Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation)

An electromedical stimulation therapy primarily used for pain management. Unlike deep microcurrent therapy, TENS uses stronger electrical pulses to block pain transmission in the nervous system (gate control theory).

Entanglement (Quantum Entanglement)

A physical phenomenon in quantum mechanics in which two particles (e.g., cells in the body and a DNA probe in the device) remain connected across any distance in such a way that changes in the frequency information of one particle instantly affect the other. This is the scientific basis for remote applications.

Waveform

A graphical representation of an electrical signal. In therapy, sine waves (gentle, harmonizing), square waves (high harmonic content, aggressive against pathogens), or sawtooth waves are typically used, depending on the therapeutic goal.

Wobble

A subtle, micro-rhythmic fluctuation around a precise target frequency. Instead of remaining rigidly fixed at, say, exactly 1000 Hz, the frequency oscillates minimally between 998 Hz and 1002 Hz. This compensates for slight deviations in the resonance frequency of mutating pathogens.

Zapper

A simple frequency device popularized by Dr. Hulda Clark that delivers a weak, positive square-wave current (often set to a fixed frequency of 30,000 Hz or 1,000 Hz) into the body to systemically eliminate parasitic burdens and pathogens.

Cell Potential (Transmembrane Potential)

The electrical potential across a cell’s membrane. Healthy body cells have a negative potential of approximately -70 to -90 millivolts. If this potential drops significantly (e.g., due to stress or illness), the cell loses its vitality. Frequency and microcurrent therapies aim to restore this potential.


The Practical Application Behind the Terms:
Understanding these terms is the first step. You’ll find practical guidance in our members-only sections.There, we transform this theoretical foundation into ready-to-use, proven protocols for everyday practice.

Speak the language of your health. A solid vocabulary lays the foundation for safe and successful treatments.

Thomas Joachim & Dr. med. Gertrud Wache