ago you know when I learned about this when I was in a neurosurgery resident why because I was a spine surgeon and my chairman David Klein taught me about one of your guys from UCSF about his work on the median nerve you talked about it in a couple podcasts Klein said to me goes you need to square what's going on in bone and what he found in in the median nerve he goes it may be the same thing well it turns out Becker did the nerve is a big part of this regeneration process in his
- Concept
- becker
- Score
- 4 · must · because
- Status
- candidate — not yet promoted to canon
Corpus evidence — top 10 passages
Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).
- 01 · _intake0.812
Becker knew medicine was trying to cut ties with “electricity and vitalism theories” in the 1940-50s. He knew intuitively that biology was wrong to condemn a theory that clearly had had a strong experimental foundation in Gerard and Berger’s work. He thought these findings by Gerard might explain how humans heal wounds and regenerate all their tissues. Tissue regeneration and bone regeneration is what made Dr. Becker famous in the next 20 years. This is how I learned about his work in bone physiology as a spine surgeon.
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/energy-epigenetics-9-quantum-sleep.md
- 02 · _intake0.802
This sounded hard to fathom when you first read it, I’d imagine. Today’s blog is filling in the details of precisely how this happens in everyone of you. Why has no one connected these dots until now? **The reason is in how poorly Becker’s research described his own work in the literature of 50 years ago. ** In his reports they confused the negative potentials found in a salamander’s DC current of injury when he amputated their legs in experiments in his work on limb regeneration, with the negative potentials that actually stimulated bone growth regeneration naturally when the bone was broken.…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/emf-7-quantum-prometheus.md
- 03 · _intake0.796
awesome post, Jack. Will be sharing this info with my surgical patients, and perhaps i will share it with the neurosurgeon that I most commonly refer to out here in CA (Joe Welsh).
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/peri-operative-optimal-surgical-considerations.md
- 04 · _intake0.790
Greetings, my name is Jack Kruse. I am a neurosurgeon and I would like to share some ideas with you. These ideas are very important to me and I have been considering them for quite a while now. Why do I want to share it this way, you may ask? Well, the “**WHY**” is the actual answer to that question! Let me explain.
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/optimized-life-cenegenics-weight-loss-bioidentical-hormone-replacement-growth-hormone.md
- 05 · _intake0.781
The cosmonaut observation made me realize this incongruency. Dr. Becker was an orthopedic surgeon and limb regeneration expert, not a quantum physics expert. He never realized how big this error was for man today. He realized this later in his own life in the 1990’s, because of how badly his bone stimulation work was capitalized by the implant industry in my current specialty, and said so publicly many times, as I later found out.
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/emf-7-quantum-prometheus.md
- 06 · _intake0.778
His work proved that nerves used a semiconductive current. He experimentally showed the Hall effect on salamander nerves when he froze their nerves and showed their was a DC current present all the time. This proved beyond a shadow of a doubt, that the layer below myelin provided a DC current to periosteum to signal bone regeneration or resorption to occur. The experiments were detailed and reproducible in every animal he tested. As an orthopedic surgeon, Becker knew that biochemists in the 1960s were trying to reduce all aspects of life to a mechanical interaction of molecules in a cell. He r…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/energy-epigenetics-9-quantum-sleep.md
- 07 · _intake0.775
For five years I have been fortunate in being able to meet, examine and operate on people of all types. In that time I noticed something was radically changing before my eyes in those patients. At first, I thought it was a quirk finding — a coincidence if you will — but then one particular disease kept popping up in all age groups and in all sexes. It also became increasingly common in all types of cases I was involved with in neurosurgery. Something this ubiquitous and unexpected had to have an explanation, I thought. After looking for practice-wide clues, then expanding the search for commun…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/optimized-life-cenegenics-weight-loss-bioidentical-hormone-replacement-growth-hormone.md
- 08 · yt0.770
[Music] This tape is being produced for the archives committee of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons. It's 6th March 1992. The interviewee is Dr. Carl PBM who is the at the center for brain research and informationational sciences at Radford University. Uh the interviewers are Dr. Robert Keeover of the departments of neurology and psychiatry and Dr. Howard Kaufman of the department of neurosurgery at West Virginia University School of Medicine. Dr. Pram has a disting distinguished background uh going from most recent to uh further back in time. He was the head of the neurosychol…
yt/zJOnxSqze98-karl-pribram-md-interviewed-by-howard-kaufman-md/transcript.txt
- 09 · _intake0.770
When I was resident in neurosurgery this was our mantra. We observed for a short period of time and then we jumped right in. Today, things in neurosurgery are not that way. I think this is big error. We learn best by doing. Learning requires action. If we are to learn from our health estate plan we must build action into it.
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/the-change-rx.md
- 10 · yt0.770
I happen to be fortunate because I did a lot of critical care neurosurgery when I was a resident and that is how I learned about these special pulse oxes cuz it turned out many times we would have people come in who had drowned in cold water and we would code these people for a period of time and one of the things that we noticed is that people did really well after we did supportive care and warmed them up and we gave them methylene blue. That's part of the reason why neurosurgeons are experts in using methylene blue when people have a problem with hypoxia. Who's the other specialty that lear…
yt/wwNutyiyQ2I-interview-with-dr-jack-kruse-04-08-2025/transcript.txt
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