Possibilities of bioresonance therapy in the treatment of gout
AUTHORS : Khachumova K.G. | Karpov S.N.
RELEVANT UNIVERSITIES : Russian State Medical University, Department of Internal Medicine Propedeutics, Moscow, Russia
YEAR : 2010
Gout is a chronic disease associated with impaired uric acid metabolism, clinically occurring with recurrent arthritis, the formation of gouty nodes (tophus)
and damage to internal organs [1, 2]. The prevalence of gout is 0.1%, the ratio of men to women is 9: 1 [1]. Epidemiological data indicate a continuous true increase
in the incidence of gout in recent decades, not due to improved diagnosis and intake of diuretics [3]. Thus, a number of studies have shown that the incidence of
gout over the past 10–20 years has more than doubled [4, 5]. There is also evidence of a decrease in the age of onset of gout.