In 1894
“mad scientist,” Nikola Tesla, tested his newest invention, a vibrating platform, on his friend Mark Twain. He
felt vibration might have therapeutic and health benefits. Today we see that Tesla was not
so “mad” after all: every day more medical clinics and sports teams discover the exciting and dramatic benefits
of vibrating platforms.
This “new” modality, termed “Whole Body Vibration”
(WBV), is being used in diverse populations, from the frail elderly to the elite athlete. The list of demonstrated
health benefits include:
- Improved bone mass density (BMD) in
patients suffering from osteoporosis and osteopenia
- Increased
muscle mass not only for athletes, but even for frail elders experiencing muscle atrophy
- Dramatically better proprioception, balance and function for stroke patients and those
suffering from Parkinson’s Disease (PD). As far back as 1880, French neurologist Jean-Martin
Charcot discovered surprising improvement in Parkinson’s patients who had traveled by horse-drawn and railway
carriages. He attributed his unexpected findings to the vibration caused by those methods of
travel, and he developed electrically-powered mechanical means for delivering those therapeutic vibrations to his clinical
patients.
- Enhanced blood flow,
and better lymphatic flow and venous drainage
- Increased
metabolic activity, aiding weight-loss efforts
- Reduction
of pain and muscle spasms
Whole Body Vibration should not be confused with those sources
of dangerous occupational vibration that can sometimes lead to severe disability – like the kind of vibration experienced
by truck drivers, factory workers and construction workers, for example. That type of disruptive vibration
is characterized by constant, extremely high frequencies and amplitudes (how hard a person is vibrated), as well as uneven
and unpredictable spikes in frequency and amplitude. Further,
people exposed to occupational vibration experience these dangerous levels of vibration for hours on end, day-in and day-out.
By contrast, WBV operates at much lower levels of both frequency (from less than 10 Hz to less than
65 Hz – 1 Hertz = 1 cycle/second) and amplitude (often less than 1 mm, but can be as much as 1 cm – the higher
level still far below those limits suggested by OSHA). Additionally, the therapeutic dosage for WBV can
be as little as 3 minutes a day, three times per week, While the dosage can be much higher – especially
for athletes – it is never all day, every day.
As more physicians become aware of Whole
Body Vibration’s health benefits, more practitioners will offer this therapeutic modality. Currently,
the best place to obtain WBV – outside the elite athletic training facility – is in those more enlightened physical
therapy practices.