ADR-4 Kidney Research
Results of Renocystography
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Research results on the influence of ADR-4 Energy Stimulator on kidney's
functions deteriorated in moderate to grave degree
(min) worsening
(min) improvement
Figure 1
Modification of renal mean transit time in groups of persons using active
ADR-4 Energy Stimulator and inactive dummy (placebo). The minus sign on
Y axis indicates a reduction of the renal mean transit time and improvement
of kidney function.
The research findings confirmed the positive influence of ADR-4 Energy
Stimulator on several kidney functions: diuresis, filtration, excretion,
mean DTPA m99Tc and HIPPURATE I125 transport time.
The research testing in groups of subjects using active ADR-4 Energy
Stimulator and inactive dummy (placebo) shown above was conducted at the
Radiophysical Laboratory, Department of General Radiology of the University
of Medical Sciences in Poznan', Poland.
Glossary of the Figure 1 diagram:
DTPA m99Tc & HIPPURATE I125 - radioactive tracers used in radioisotope
filtration - extraction renocystography.
gorsza nerka (Polish term) - gravely deteriorated kidney.
lepsza nerka (Polish term) - moderately deteriorated kidney.
ADR-4: Research Results
The Renocystographic Assessment of the Effects of the
ADR-4 Energy Stimulator on Kidney Functioning
in Persons with Dysfunctional Kidneys
Szcze;sny Górski[1],
Stanis?aw Wosin'ski[2],
Wojciech Suwa?a[3],
Bogumir Grala[4]
Summary
The aim of the research was to investigate possible changes in the functioning
of impaired kidneys under the application of the magnetic water energy
stimulator ADR-4. Quantitative (32 parameters) filtration-extraction renographic
evaluation of kidney functioning using DTPA Tc 99m and I125 hippurate
was performed, according to our own standard methodology, on persons referred
by hospital departments and clinics, recruited according to current submission
order. The evaluation was done on a double blind principle in two groups
with moderate and considerable kidney function impairment, as assessed
by initial renography: 17 women and 4 men aged 18-84 years, using an active
ADR-4 for one month; and 8 women and 4 men aged 26-60 years, using an
inactive dummy of the same size, colour and weight, for the same period,
in compliance with the producer's instructions. The renography examination
was then repeated. The subsequent statistical analysis (Student's t-test)
compared the results obtained in the two groups during the initial and
final tests, separately for kidneys which the initial test found to be
functioning better or worse. In the case of renographic parameters for
which positive differences were noted in the ADR-4 group and negative
differences in the placebo group, the Wilks lambda test was then additionally
applied.
The results of the statistical evaluation confirmed the beneficial effects
of using the ADR-4 energy stimulator on several kidney functions: diuresis,
filtration, extraction and excretion; the mean DTPA transport time was
also reduced. This positive evaluation is enhanced by the observation
that in the group using the placebo the results were unchanged or poorer
on the second term of measurement, after one month. In conclusion, evidence
was gained of the positive effects of using the ADR-4, over a one-month
period, on kidneys with moderately and significantly impaired functioning.
Introduction
The use of filtration-extraction renocystography in the assessment of
kidney functioning has been an indisputable application of this method
for many years. Our own computerized, quantitative filtration-extraction
renography, elaborated over many years of practical use, allows one to
carry out an initial, yet relatively precise and comprehensive, quantitative
and qualitative, evaluation of the functioning of kidneys and of the lower
urinary tracts. Among other things, the measurement system provides indices
of glomerular and tubular clearance, filtration fraction for both kidneys
separately or together, mean time of renal filtration and extraction transit,
excretion indices at 10, 15 and 30 minutes, respective norms, the residual
volume of urine in the bladder in percentages and in cubic centimeters
and a mean diuresis, calculated in strictly standardize water load, evaluated
with account taken of current blood pressure - altogether 32 quantitative
parameters (Górski 1994). The sensitivity of the renographic procedure
which we apply is approx. 98% (Goris 1985).
It is useful as an initial method, particularly in the examination of
patients with arterial hypertension, with the use of the captopril test
for the detection of renal arterial stenosis, in cases of glomerulitis
and/or pyelitis, in renal and cystic tract calculi, in assessing the degree
of evacuation from the bladder, and in cases of pains of obscure etiology
in the lumbar region.
The aim of the present research was to test for possible changes in
the functioning of kidneys, evaluated using this method, during treatment
with the magnetic energy stimulator invented by one of the authors (S.
Wosin'ski).
The ADR-4 is an energy stimulator registered with the Polish Patents
Office under the number P320179[5].
This stimulator takes the form of a polygonal disc. At the base of the
disc is a ceramic element, on top of which are placed magnetic elements
of various intensity and specific dimensions, which provide the requisite
spatial configuration of a stable, heterogeneous magnetic field. The task
of the ADR-4 is to improve the sanitary properties of both pure water
and water contained in various aliments. We know that water can, for a
certain time, possess altered properties, e.g. surface tension, relative
permittivity, electric conductivity, and NMR, NQR, UV and IR spectra,
under the influence of certain activity, such as electromagnetic fields.
These altered properties in water have a certain effect on living organisms,
from bacteria to man. Research is currently in progress into the effects
of the ADR-4 on the speed in which free radicals are scavenged from aqueous
solutions[6].
Materials and Research Methods
The ADR-4 stimulators were obtained from the producer[7].
The renographic tests were carried out using the computerized renocystograph
RENOMIC II[8], constructed
by a team led by one of the authors (S.G.). The research was made on two
randomly-chosen groups of patients, referred by hospital departments and
clinics, in which initial tests showed moderately or seriously impaired
functioning of one or both kidneys, as assessed according to our own renographic
classification. After eliminating subjects who did not present themselves
for the second series of tests and those whose results were invalid for
technical reasons, there remained 33 individuals. Of these, 21 (17 women
and 4 men, aged from 18 to 84, av. 43, S.D. 15.4 years) subsequently used
an active ADR-4 over a period of one month, in accordance with the producer's
instructions, and the remaining 12 subjects (8 women and 4 men, aged from
26 to 60, av. 48, SD 10 years) used an inactive dummy weighing and looking
the same as the active ADR-4. Neither the patients nor the personnel carrying
out the research, including the person describing the tests, knew which
kind of disc had been used until the second series of tests had been completed
and described. The technical factors which excluded certain results were
the following: the failure to provide urine for the second test, a mean
blood pressure below 95 mm, a difference of 5º C or more in the ambient
temperature between the two test terms, the discontinuing or commencement
during the testing period of new nephroleptic medicines or of strong general
medicines, e.g. antibiotics, and the appearance of acute additional pathologies,
e.g. renal colic with blockage of the kidney.
Methodology of the Statistical Analysis
Applied for all the noted indices of the work of the kidneys was a statistical
evaluation based on the Student's t-test for the paired variables method.
This involves, for each index, subtracting from the value noted for test
II the result of test I (carried out before the disc was applied). Next,
the value of the mean difference and the evaluation of its standard error
were indicated for each index in both groups. The quotient of the mean
difference obtained through the evaluation of its standard error has the
Student's t-distribution with the number of independent variables equal
to n - 1, where n is the number of individuals observed in a group. The
results are presented in table 1.
A separate explanation is required for the method of inference applied.
For the majority of indices (with the exception of T max and of systolic
and diastolic blood pressure, the values of which, both high and low,
are negative), one can take as favorable a rise in their value. If, therefore,
the ADR-4 stimulators fail to act in a positive manner on the functioning
of the kidneys, the mean difference between measurements II and I should
be negative (deterioration) or close to zero (no change).
The (unilateral) null hypothesis should thus read as follows:
Ho: the mean difference of a given index is less than or equal to zero.
The alternative hypothesis, meanwhile,
H1: the mean difference of a given index is greater than zero.
If, therefore, the value of the unilateral Student's test will exceed
the critical value by an appropriate amount, we will reject the null hypothesis
of the lack of any effect on the part of the ADR-4 on the given index
of the work of the kidneys.
For indices whose improvement occurs with a fall in their value, the
null hypothesis will be rejected if the result of the unilateral test
is negative and, simultaneously, greater, in terms of absolute value,
than the critical value.
It should be emphasized that the most commonly published tables of critical
values of a Student's test serve to verify bilateral hypotheses; hence,
in reading from them critical values for the verification of unilateral
hypotheses, one must allow for a significance level twice as great as
that which we apply. The critical values necessary for the evaluation
of the test are given below the tables of results.
When making inference, a maximum significance level of 0.10 has been
adopted. If the value of the Student test exceeds the critical value read
with this significance level, then we reject the null hypothesis of a
lack of any effect on the part of the ADR-4 on the particular renal index,
in which case the rejection risk of the null hypothesis does not exceed
10% (i.e. 0.1). For a considerable number of indices, the rejection of
the null hypothesis of the lack of effect of the ADR-4 was possible at
an even lower significance level; this has been expressed in the table.
In order to effect a simultaneous evaluation of the positive rise in
the value of some of the indices in the ADR group against a fall in their
value in the placebo group, the Wilks lambda test was additionally applied.
The results have been included in table 2, following the transformation
of the statistics of the Wilks lambda test into F. Fisher statistics.
Results and Discussion
The results are presented in tables 1-3 and on the graphs.
For indices such as volume of urine excreted, total excretion and diuresis,
substantially favorable changes were noted in the ADR group and substantially
unfavorable changes in the placebo group. Moreover, in the case of the
placebo there occurred a substantial reduction in residual volume, and
a substantial change in the participation of both worse and better kidneys
in filtration (the participation of the worse kidney rose substantially
- to 50 %).
There was also a substantial improvement in the due excretion of DTPA
in the ADR group for the better kidney, constituting a measure of the
due capture (N) of the tracer; in the placebo group, meanwhile, there
was a substantial decrease in the excretion of DTPA for the better kidney
(both due - N - and actual - R - excretion). There was also an improvement
in some of the indices of the excretion of hippurate in the ADR group.
All the indices of the outflow of both DTPA and hippurate, for the worse
and the better kidneys in the ADR group, showed a substantial improvement
after 10 and 15 minutes.
Meanwhile, the time T max, representing the measure of the mean transit
time of the tracer through the kidney, lessened substantially in the case
of DTPA in the ADR group (which is favorable), and grew in the placebo
group (which is unfavorable). One may thus advance the general conclusion
that the results in the two groups logically complement one another (in
the placebo group the substance of the null and alternative hypotheses
should be exchanged with one another, since where the ADR fails to act
and an illness is present the indices may worsen or at best remain unchanged).
In order to avoid any suspicions that, although the subjects were assigned
to the two groups in a random manner, significant differences could have
appeared between the groups, a Student's test was carried out to compare
the mean values of the indices for both groups. Substantial differences
(in the case of bilateral hypotheses) were noted for the following indices
(table 2):
- residual volume in term 1 (ADR > placebo),
- contribution of the worse kidney to extraction in term I (ADR <
placebo),
- contribution of the better kidney to extraction in term I (ADR >
placebo),
- contribution of the worse kidney to filtration in term II (ADR <
placebo),
- contribution of the better kidney to filtration in term II (ADR >
placebo),
- contribution of the worse kidney to extraction in term II (ADR <
placebo),
- contribution of the better kidney to extraction in term II (ADR >
placebo),
- excretion of DTPA by the better kidney in term II (ADR > placebo),
both due (N) and actual (R),
- excretion of HIP by the better kidney in term II (ADR > placebo),
both N and R.
However, the substantial differences revealed signify that the state
of the subjects from the ADR group was - in terms of these indices - significantly
worse than in the placebo group. In spite of this, an improvement occurred
in a range of indices in the ADR group, and in the placebo group - a deterioration.
Also tested was the asymmetry in the functioning of the kidneys (tab.
3). For the indices measured for both kidneys, the differences between
the better and the worse kidney were indicated and subjected to statistical
analysis using a Student's test for the paired variables method. Striking
here is the lack of a substantial difference for the excretion index of
DTPA and for the index T max for DTPA and - in part - hippurate. For the
remaining indices, significant differences were noted (higher values for
the better kidney, except in the case of the index of filtration, where
the reverse was shown).
The observed changes in blood pressure can be deemed incidental: after
age is accounted for, the differences fall within the norms. The R/R age
norms are taken from the Ciba-Geigy tables (Diem 1972).
The results of the evaluation of the positive rise in the value of some
of the indices in the ADR group against a fall in their value in the placebo
group, effected using the Wilks lambda test (Grala, 1975), have been included
in table 2, following the transformation of the statistics of the Wilks
lambda test into F. Fisher statistics. On the graph, they correspond to
the positive columns for the ADR group and the negative columns for the
placebo group.
Substantial differences were noted for the following indices:
- total volume,
- diuresis,
- residual volume,
- DTPA excretion for the better kidney (N and R),
- DTPA outflow for the worse kidney (R only),
- T max for DTPA for the better kidney.
Conclusions
1. The results obtained confirm the positive effects of the application
of the ADR-4 on the functioning of kidneys impaired to a moderate or considerable
degree.
2. The above conclusion is enhanced by the fact that in the group of
individuals using the inactive dummy the indices either remained unchanged
or underwent a significant deterioration, as well as by the fact that
the initial results in the ADR group indicated a significantly worse functioning
of the kidneys than in the placebo group.
One should point out that increasing the number of subjects observed
in the two groups could provide more clear-cut results. A longer period
of application of the ADR-4 could probably also bring more pronounced
results. In order to verify this assumption, research is currently under
way into the same persons - after a year of using the ADR-4.
Literature
Diem K, Lentner C.: Tables scientifiques, VII edition, Ciba-Geigy,
Basel, 1972, p. 564
Goris M.L.: Sensitivity and specifity of common scintigraphic procedures.
Year Book Medical Publishers, Chicago, 1985, 48
Górski Sz.: Computerized renocystography for quantitative filtration
- extraction. Nucl. Med. Comm. 1994, 15:182-187
Grala B. 'wietlicka - Grala J., Wojtaszek J.: Analiza krzywych reakcji
ilo-ciowych w badaniach hemodynamicznych. Listy Biometryczne. 1975,
46, I - 22
[1] Radiophysical
Laboratory of the Institute of Radiology of the Faculty of Medicine in
Poznan'
[2] ADR SYSTEM Gdan'sk
[3] Kidney Disease
Clinic of the Group of Specialist Clinics in Poznan'
[4] Centre for Information
on Scientific, Technical and Economic Matters and Patents of the Institute
of Natural Fibres in Poznan'
[5] The ADR-4 stimulator
was awarded the Gold Medal with special distinction at the 47th
World Exhibition of Innovation, Inventions and New Technologies BRUSSELS
EUREKA 1998, the Grand Prix at the International Exhibition of Inventors
INPEX 2001 in Pittsburgh PE, USA, and the Gold Medal at the WORLD GENIUS
CONVENTION 2001 in Tokyo
[6]Scavenging of
free radicals from DTPH by antioxidants such as eg, Roibos and Green tea
water drinking infusions. EPR Laboratory of the Institute of Physics of
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan' (work in progress)
[7] ADR System, ul.
Szymanowskiego 6, Gdan'sk
[8] RENOMIC II was
awarded the Gold Medal at the BRUSSELS EUREKA 2000 exhibition
THERMOGRAPHIC EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTS OF THE ADR-4 ENERGY STIMULATOR
ON BLOOD SUPPLY IN THE HANDS OF PERSONS WITH GENERALIZED BLOOD SUPPLY
DISORDERS[1]
[1] This work was presented at the 13th Scientific Conference of Military
Health Service Pediatrists, held in September 1999 in Zakopane and published
in Lekarz Woskowy (Army Medical Journal), Supplement II 1999, pp. 146
- 153.
Szcze;sny Górski, Stanis'aw Wosin'ski, Renata Hause (from the
Radiophysiology Laboratory of the Department of General Radiology of the
Faculty of Medicine in Poznan'; Head of Laboratory: S. Górski D.Sc.)
Summary
A thermographic evaluation of blood supply at rest conditions and of
thermoregulatory vasomotor activity was performed on 17 women and 1 man
with moderate and serious symmetrical Raynaud's syndrome in hands and
fingers and with moderate and serious symmetrical blood supply disorders
at rest conditions in feet and toes, as well as with anamnesis suggesting
Raynaud-type vasomotor neurosis. The tests were performed according to
our own standard methods. Following initial tests, 7 women and the 1 man
applied the ADR-4 energy stimulator, in accordance with the producer's
instructions. 8 women applied an inactive dummy ADR-4. Both groups were
chosen at random and the patients did not know whether they were using
the active or the inactive form of the appliance. Thermographic evaluation
was subsequently repeated in both groups at 1, 3, 7, 14 and 21 days from
the commencement of the application of the ADR-4 and the placebo. The
following parameters were recorded: maximum and minimum temperatures of
fingers and hands on both the palm side and on the back of the hand; the
amplitude of the difference between the extreme temperatures in the fingers
and mean rate at which the minimum temperature was regained in the fingers
of both hands within a period of 10 minutes after standard cooling (expressed
as a percentage of the initial temperature). The results showed rises
in the values of the thermographic indices being assessed in patients
applying the active ADR-4, particularly marked after 14 and 21 days of
use. The most clear-cut differences occurred in the minimum temperatures
of the fingers and in the chill test. Such effects were not recorded in
patients applying the inactive dummy. The results incline one to esteem
that the ADR-4 stimulator has a beneficial effect on peripheral blood
supply in persons with blood supply disorders.
Key words: thermography, blood supply, women, hands and fingers, magnetic
fields, Raynaud's syndrome, chill test
The use of thermography in the quantitative evaluation of peripheral
blood supply has been an indisputable application of this technique for
many years. Our own methods for applying thermography, elaborated over
many years of practical use, enable this evaluation to be carried out
in a standardized, quantified manner, in rest and thermoregulatory vasomotor
conditions[i][ii]
Among its applications has been the evaluation of peripheral blood supply
in vibration syndrome[iii],
the evaluation of blood supply in free skin grafts[iv],
in neurological disorders [v]
[vi] [vii],
in the evaluation of how blood supply in children from sports classes
- swimming and athletics - adapted to intensive physical activity[viii].
The present research evaluated changes in blood supply in the hands
and fingers under the application of a magnetic energy stimulator invented
by one of the authors. The ADR-4 is an energy stimulator registered with
the Polish Patents Office under the number P320179. This stimulator consists
of a magnetic ceramic disc placed in a special casing. At the base of
the disc is a ceramic element, on top of which are placed magnetic elements
of various field intensity and specific dimensions, which provide the
requisite spatial configuration of a stable, heterogeneous magnetic field.
The task of the ADR-4 is to improve the sanitary properties of both pure
water and water contained in various aliments. The action of the ADR-4
leads to modifications in the cluster structure of water. We know that
in normal conditions water is not an amorphous substance. It forms pseudocrystalline
structures, the configuration of which is dependent upon the history of
the conditions in which it was located, and it is able to maintain altered
properties over a certain time, e.g. surface tension, relative permittivity,
electric conductivity, and NMR, NQR, UV and IR spectra (relevant research
work is in progress in the Wydzia- Fizyki UAM w Poznaniu [1]).
These altered properties in water have a clear influence on living organisms,
from bacteria to man. Among the effects produced by the ADR-4 are a change
in the fermentation rate of yoghurt (work in progress in the Instytut
Rozwoju Mleczarstwa Akademii Rolniczo-Technicznej w Olsztynie [2]),
and a change in the aluminum and lead content in hair (work carried out
by Trace Elements Inc. in Dallas, USA).
The ADR-4 stimulator was awarded the Gold Medal with special distinction
at the 47th World Exhibition of Innovation, Invention and New
Technology BRUSSELS EUREKA '98.
Materials and Methods
The tests were carried out on 16 persons, aged 20-62 years. They were
performed with the help of the AGA 680 Medical thermograph interfaced
with a PC, using a program created by Jan B'aszczyn'ski, from
the firm JBL of Cracow. Our own methods were applied ¹. The temperature
was thermostatically set at a range of 19-21º C. The series of tests
covered initial measurements, then repeated measurements at 1, 3, 7, 14
and 21 days from the commencement of the standard application of the ADR-4
stimulator, in accordance with the producer's instructions.
The subjects were each given, at random, either an active ADR-4 or an
inactive dummy, with the same comments concerning the aim of the research,
i.e. that it sought to establish whether the application of the device
produces any effects. In order to avoid any autosuggestion, the subjects
were not informed of the existence of two forms of the appliance - an
active and an inactive form.
The tests produced values for the following thermographic parameters:
the minimum and maximum temperatures in fingers 2-5, in the whole hand
(palm and back), in rest conditions and at 10 minutes after 5 minutes
of standard cooling in water at a temperature of 15º C. Prior to
their immersion in the cooling bath, the hands were immersed for 5 minutes
in water at a temperature of 37º C. The temperature of the water
was regulated with a tolerance of 0.1º C. The hands were immersed
immediately. After bathing the hands were dried delicately and thoroughly
with a paper towel.
Discussion
The results showed no substantial difference in the initial values of
the evaluated parameters between the group using the active ADR-4 and
the group using the inactive placebo.
The temperatures of the fingers prior to cooling showed a rising tendency
both in persons using an active ADR-4 and in persons using the placebo,
from the first to the third day. The temperatures then decreased for both
groups. From the seventh day onwards, the temperatures then rose in the
ADR-4 group, but not in the placebo group. These temperatures express
blood supply in rest conditions. After cooling, the temperatures behaved
in a similar manner in the test group, whereas in the control group the
initial rise was absent. These temperatures reflect the intensity of the
thermoregulatory vasomotor reaction. This may indicate the existence of
a two-phase thermoregulatory reaction under the stimulus of the ADR-4.
The first phase can be linked to the placebo effect, since it also occurred
in the persons using the dummy. Similar rises, albeit considerably less
marked, were observed over the area of the whole hand.
Conclusions
The tests carried out allow the following inferences to be drawn.
1. The entire range of temperatures in the fingers and hands, as well
as the rate at which the minimum temperature in the fingers was regained
after cooling, in persons with moderate and serious, symmetrical, generalized
blood supply disorders, with many years of anamnesis, showed a favorable
change from the seventh day of the use of the ADR-4 stimulator.
2. Analogous changes were not observed in those persons with similar
blood supply disorders who used the inactive dummy.
3. The rises in the thermographic indices were most marked in the fingers,
and the least significant over the whole hand.
4. The rises in the indices were more substantial in the test after
cooling than in the test without cooling.
5. The results incline one to acknowledge the presence of a beneficial
effect from the use of the ADR-4 stimulator on peripheral blood supply.
[1] Department of Physics of Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan' ii
Institute for the Development of Dairy of the Faculty of Farming Technology
in Olsztyn
References
[1] Sz.Górski, W. Fibiger: Termograficzna próba czynno-ciowa
w diagnostyce zmian naczyniowych w zespole wibracyjnym [Thermographic
Functional Test in the Diagnosis of Vascular Disorders in Vibration Syndrome].
Medycyna Pracy 1979, XXX, 3, pp.213-220.
[2] Sz.Górski, J. B-aszczyn'ski, B. Wie;cek: Zintegrowany system
termograficzny i wizyjny do diagnostyki ukrwienia obwodowego i zmian zapalnych,
ze wspomaganiem komputerowym [Integrated Thermographic and Visual System
for the Computer Assisted Diagnosis of Peripheral Blood Supply Disorders
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[3] Sz.Górski: Aspects thermographiques des micro et macro -traumatismes
de la main. II Congres Europeen de la Thermographie, Barcelona, 11-15.09.1978.
Abstract Book, Heralds de Aragon, Zaragoza, 1978, p.154.
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wolnych przeszczepów skóry pe-nej grubosci na podstawie
badan' termograficznych i histochemicznych [Evaluation of the Healing
of Autogenic Free Full Skin Grafts.
Thermographic and Histochemic
[5] J.Koczocik-Przedpelska, Sz.Górski, E.Powierza: Relationship
between sensory nerve conduction and temperature of the hand. Acta Physiol.Pol.,1983,
Vol. 43, fasc.1, pp.21-28.
[6] J.Koczocik-Przedpelska, Sz.Górski: Double Pattern of Relationship
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[7] J.Koczocik-Przedpelska, Sz.Górski: Double Pattern of Relationship
between Skin Temperature, Thermoregulation and Sensory Nerve Conduction.
Electromyography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1990, 30, pp. 435-442.
[8] Sz.Górski, E.Rostkowska: Przydatno-c' termowizji do badan'
naukowych w sporcie [The Benefits of the Application of Thermovision in
Sports Science Research]. Series: Monografie Nr 288, 1991 Wydawnictwo
AWF w Poznaniu 1991, pp. 19-23.
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