13-02-2015, 17:08
The only theories I've seen so far is that the magnetic flux effects the iron in the blood, or that it ionises the glands causing growth.
But iron does not remain magnetised like steel does, so for the first to be true, you'd have to do it 24/7.
You could possibly (but probably not) create eddy currents in the iron with the magnets, but its really not going to be a strong current, and if it worked then you might as well just try some form of electro shock therapy instead.
And then the ionisation theory, you don't want to ionise cells, ionising cells is why people get cancer after exposure to nuclear radiation.
If your breasts swelled from ionisation, you'd need a mastectomy.
But iron does not remain magnetised like steel does, so for the first to be true, you'd have to do it 24/7.
You could possibly (but probably not) create eddy currents in the iron with the magnets, but its really not going to be a strong current, and if it worked then you might as well just try some form of electro shock therapy instead.
And then the ionisation theory, you don't want to ionise cells, ionising cells is why people get cancer after exposure to nuclear radiation.
If your breasts swelled from ionisation, you'd need a mastectomy.