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FAQ

What is an interference field according to neural therapy?

14.08.2022

Sites that chronically act as stress factors—inconspicuous and not causing any particular complaint themselves, yet affecting entirely different parts of the body—are identified as an ‘‘interference field.’’ 

An interference field permanently irritates the body's functions and weakens our natural defenses. For this reason, even smaller stimuli can cause clinical complaints disproportionate to the trigger.

The interference fields we would typically cite within the scope of neural therapy are the tonsils, the sinuses, the teeth and jaw region, surgical sites, vaccination sites, the prostate, the gynecological region, any type of scar, and diseased organs themselves can also act as an interference field.

Interference fields activate two stress axes in the body:

  • An axis that acts quickly, through the nervous system
  • An axis that acts more slowly, through the hormonal system

Due to the persistent activation of the sympathetic system, the body can no longer heal and becomes ill. Symptoms then appear at a naturally weak point in the body. For example, this may manifest as a dead tooth, asthma, hypertension, or knee or shoulder pain. 

The aim of injecting the interference fields identified through the neural therapy approach with procaine is to halt the negative stimuli spreading outward from this source, to break the vicious cycle, and ultimately to first reduce and then eliminate these stimuli entirely.

The neural therapist injects a local anesthetic into and around the interference field/interference source in order to act on it effectively, thereby aiming to halt the harmful stimuli.