Question:
What frequencies can I use for Hypertonia, Protective voltage Or poor neuromuscular relaxation?
Answer:
The terms “hypertonia,” “protective voltage,” and “poor neuromuscular relaxation” are not all recognised as standalone disease conditions.
Hypertonia itself is not usually considered a separate disease diagnosis. It is more commonly used as a clinical sign or umbrella term meaning “increased muscle tone.” In formal medical terminology, the underlying pattern is usually described more specifically as either “spasticity” or “rigidity,” depending on the neurological cause.
Spasticity is associated with upper motor neuron disorders such as stroke, cerebral palsy, or multiple sclerosis, so select the most compatible group from this list:
Spastic Cerebral Palsy: 0.02, 0.5, 0.87, 172.5, 207.3, 315.23, 425.62, 691.22, 735.54, 962.07
Stroke: 0.05, 0.35, 2.75, 30.93, 75.81, 187.5, 325.52, 715, 803.51, 905.32
Multiple Sclerosis: 0.09, 10.57, 30.42, 88.34, 109.5, 257.66, 344.2, 346.27, 572, 792.33
While rigidity is more associated with Parkinsonian disorders.
Parkinson Disease: 0.68, 0.9, 2.5, 5.5, 13.93, 93.5, 386.4, 442.35, 447, 450
“Protective voltage” is not a standard medical diagnosis or recognised term in conventional medicine and may instead be a transcription error or a nonstandard phrase used in alternative or musculoskeletal assessments, possibly referring to protective muscle guarding or tension.
“Poor neuromuscular relaxation” is also not a formal disease diagnosis but rather a descriptive finding indicating that muscles are not relaxing normally, which can occur in a variety of neurological, muscular, stress-related, or pain conditions. Overall, only hypertonia is a recognised medical condition/sign, while the other two are descriptive or nonstandard terms rather than diseases in themselves.