Wikipedia talk:Articles for deletion/Vibration analgesia and back pain

Lundeberg's works on vibration or vibratory analgesia are extensive and they spread across a time period of at least 20 years beginning in the 80th. I have quoted only one of of them, as this one is the most telling one on the subject

Lundeberg T. Vibratory stimulation for the alleviation of pain. E g diagram fig 6 vibration application points '''E, F and G application points in particular. Note please that my gadget uses a harmonic mix up of frequences not 100 Hz exactly, which adds to the higher efficiecy of the gadget. The flat brushless vibration units I have developed - which is what you rightly see as a new feature - are 10 to 12 cm apart from each other on both sides of the backbone, as Ludeberg calls it paravertebral. This is on the page 8 of this article published 1984 by Elsevier, an established Medical Publisher and I have duly quoted this in references. Vibratory analgesia is a proven treatment method and my article tries - perhaps clumsily - to give information on a method that is an important alternative to eg TENS - which is propertly covered by WIKIPEDIA, unlike vibration analgesia.

I can go on with other sources supporting what is written in my article on vibration analgesia in back pain. This topic is covered by renomated and reputable researchers - not mine, e g: Vibration reduces thermal pain in adjacent dermatomes. where the vibration effects are demonstrated - for the difference from the back and spine, paravertebral areas in the above mentined Lundeberg's work, on the volar forearm. This is in agreement with my own observations - having little if no importance and notablility but I dare to mention them - in the area of low back arch, but the dermatomes affected by analgesia may be as far from each other as cervical ones and lumbar ones - which is certainly a new observation, so Mr Haworth would be right calling my article SPAM in this regard too, hope I do not sound too disruptive here.

'''[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6208773 Lundeberg T. A comparative study of  the pain alleviating effect of   vibratory stimulation, transcutaneous   electrical nerve stimulation,   electroacupuncture and placebo. Am J  Chin Med. 1984 Summer;12(1-4):72-9]  In this article Lundeberg clearly prove''' vibratory/vibration analgesia to be as effective in myalgic pain as (again at 100 Hz, the frequency used by my gadget - sorry for talking about it - I have it round my waist now sitting at my bedside PC) TENS.