Famous researchers have long recognized the connection
between vibration, energy, and information.
Albert Einstein and Max Plank in particular classified all
energy transfers as oscillations. With the current findings on endothelial
mechano-transduction, we can come closer to understanding the complex
regulation of vital functions of life by mechanical forces. The undisturbed
course of essential functions such as growth, blood pressure regulation,
inflammatory sequence, and embryogenesis is bound to the absence of externally
transmittable forces and endothelial integrity.
The recognition of various endothelial cell structures as
mechano-sensors is simultaneously important for understanding vital
regulations. The endothelial cell itself, which corresponds to a viscoelastic
“tensegrity model”, is a mechano-sensor that adapts beat to beat to the current
conditions in the blood flow in alignment with the effect of various physical
forces.
Numerous endothelial mechano-sensors are identified, whereby
the conserved structures of PIEZO channels for all organisms - from bacteria to
mammals - have an outstandingly important role in numerous life processes, the
decoding of which is still far from complete.
The present knowledge sheds new light on the importance of
low frequencies. The endothelial cytoskeleton identified now as a low-pass
filter, offers the possibility for mechano-transduction. There is strong
evidence that parts of the energy transmission of low-frequency oscillations
become irregular information at the endothelial level that interferes with the
autochthonous control of the microcirculation. Recent studies confirm the
importance of a balance of the NO metabolism due to a synchronized release at
the right time, in the right place, and with the right quantity. Misinformation,
caused by external forces, must inevitably lead to an increase in oxidative and
oscillatory stress, the main reason for a loss of endothelial integrity with
inflammation diseases like atherosclerosis. This could indicate the long-sought
pathophysiological way in which infrasound and vibration can exert a stressor
effect at the cellular level. Noise-exposed citizens, who live near
infrastructures such as biogas installations, heat pumps, block-type thermal
power stations, and bigger industrial wind turbines (IWT’s), show worldwide
mainly a symptomatology associated with microcirculatory disorder.
Marine ecosystems, but also insects, appear to be
particularly at risk from increasing emissions of very low frequencies. There
is evidence for the increasing incompatibility of ever lower frequencies for
all organisms and therefore for whole biodiversity.
Author(s) Details
Ursula Maria
Bellut-Staeck
Independent Scientist, Berlin, Germany.
Please see the link:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mria/v8/727
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