We’ve all heard of salamanders and other amphibians regrowing limbs, but can humans do the same? Your first instinct might be to say that this is impossible, but there is some anecdotal evidence that children can regrow a finger after an accident – although it’s an area where there is surprisingly little research.
Multiplex Editor-in-Chief Brian Roemmele recently posted on X about fingers regrowing in young children who lost them in accidents and did not receive surgical treatment for them. According to his research, when the wound is kept wet using a salted cover and the stump is not closed, the finger eventually returns, along with its skin, bone, hair and nails and without any scar tissue.
This is apparently down to the very low current electricity provided by the salted cover, which provides a current potential and activates the cells’ memory, spurring them to grow like they would if they were still inside the womb.
Roemmele notes: “This electrical potential is the most misunderstood and understudied part of medical research as there is no massive pharmaceutical company “investment” at universities.”
He is currently looking into how AI can help break this bioelectrical code and other aspects of the human body we don’t yet understand. […]
— Read More: www.naturalnews.com