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Vagus School

416 members • Free

3 contributions to Vagus School
Ultrasound for treating injuries?
Hey everyone! I hope this is the proper place to ask such a question as it is not Vagus-related. Does anyone have experience treating minor injuries with ultrasound? My mother tripped and fell today and hurt her knees and wrist, so I wanted to give these injuries some additional treatment with ultrasound to speed up her recovery and ease her pain. Any suggestions and experiences would be very welcome! Thanks a lot!
1 like • Aug 17
@Heather Belcher Interesting! We didn't really think about that one as it I only think of castor oil as a "beauty" or "cosmetic" ingredient. I will definitely share this valuable tip with my mom! Thanks!
1 like • Aug 24
@Jean-Marie Porchet We applied it afterwards. It could probably work very well as a contact gel, maybe even better as the US waves could theoretically help with absorption of the active ingredients. We wanted to make sure that the waves get transmitted properly with a specific ultrasound gel so that they get deeply into the tissue where it was needed the most. It's definitely something to experiment with in the future!
Liver Stimulation Module RELEASED – This one is gonna be YUUGE! 🚀🔥
This one has been in the works for weeks, and it’s finally here. Liver stimulation is the next big frontier in non-invasive health upgrades, and I’m giving you the whole playbook inside this new module. Why should you care? Your liver is your body’s energy factory, detox center, and metabolic command hub. When it’s happy, your whole system runs better. When it’s sluggish or inflamed, everything suffers. Here’s what you’ll learn inside: • How to use gentle ultrasound to help your liver regenerate 🧬 • The “fibrosis fighter” effect – combat scar tissue without drugs or surgery 💥 • How to boost energy, improve blood sugar, and balance your cholesterol ⚡ • Exact placement and settings for real results 🎯 • Pro tips to speed up benefits and keep them going 🚀 Step-by-step liver stimulation guide: 1. Find your liver window: 2. Target the porta hepatis about 2–4 cm below the right rib cage, near the middle. Use imaging if possible and avoid major blood vessels. 3. Choose your mode: 4. Go slow and steady: Move the transducer slowly, angle toward the liver core, and imagine turning down inflammation while boosting repair. 5. Frequency: 3–5 sessions per week works well. Pro tips for faster wins: • Be consistent – daily or every other day works better than random sessions. • Try mornings before breakfast for extra glucose regulation. • Drink water with lemon to help detox. • Track your ALT/AST and notice changes in energy, digestion, and focus. Safety notes: • Skip high-intensity machines meant for destroying tissue – we want gentle stimulation, not damage. • Work around ribs to avoid reflection. • If you have active liver disease, implants, or serious diabetes complications, talk to your doctor first. What you might notice: • More energy and less fatigue 😴➡️⚡ • Reduced bloating and better digestion 🤰 • Clearer thinking thanks to the liver-brain axis 🧠 • Improved lab markers like blood sugar and liver enzymes 📊 Want the full module with all the details and FAQ? Jump in here: https://www.skool.com/vagus/classroom/896c2c69?md=639bd33e63c24a77b5a3d7875587feb5
1 like • Aug 14
Awesome! Can't wait to unlock level 2 to try this one out!
Overview of Methods of Ultrasound Stimulation of Vital Vagus Centers
Hell all ! Whew! the group is expanding faster than I envisioned ! I want to provide a "Full Scope" view of what you *can* do with the Vagus Nerve Stimulation Tech we have available (Once you get to LVL 2) but - which, if you read this post, will be able to see right here on the wall. 1) Vagus Nerve Cervical Stimulation with Ultrasound: You will be placing the Ultrasound on the left side of the neck - 2-5 Mins is good - Start Low and Work Way Up - Shouldn't Feel Anything from Ultrasound Itself - but effects can be very calming if used before bed, assisting in Sleep, and improving HRV. 2) Spleen Stimulation with Ultrasound: A relatively difficult spot to stimulate, get help if possible. But can definitely be done yourself too. Going to want 5 mins on Medium to High intensity, due to likelihood of imperfect placement, and it's going to be "peering" through rib cage window slits. Excellent for helping your body control inflammation globally. 3) Cerebral Ultrasound - Insular Cortex Stimulation: This targets a region of the brain that deals with your bodies memory of previous inflammatory responses. Thus, stimulation of this region increases brain neuroplasticity, and enables you to "move on" from previous cyclical inflammatory responses. (People associate emotional "pain" with an inflammation response - thus a painful memory (trigger) (trauma even) can produce an identical inflammatory spike throughout the body) - The Insular Cortex is where this happens. Highly supportive of Spleen Stimulation protocol. 4) Other uses have been explored for Lymphatic Drainage, but this is on a case by case basis, and typically utilized best when/if the body has some major lymphatic drainage issue (water retention / lymph swelling in specific parts of the body [such as left side of body near armpits] that may benefit from increased lymphatic drainage activity) - Ultrasound amplifies Lymphatic systems (also glymphatic brain cleaning is activated as well) - and is generally utilized for 5 minutes on Medium to High settings, as is comfortable on the body - and likely for 1-2 weeks until swelling has subsided.
Overview of Methods of Ultrasound Stimulation of Vital Vagus Centers
1 like • Aug 3
I tried ultrasound on my Vagus nerve for the first time yesterday evening immediately before sleep. I used the device on the left side of my neck as shown in the lvl 1 video. 5 mins on low, 5 mins on medium setting as I did not really feel anything, maybe a slight warmth on medium setting. Felt some relaxation afterwards but the mind seemed to be not sleepy at all. Body relaxed, mind awake, so only had light sleep and woke up often. Also, I kind of feel a bit hoarse today. Not sure if I did anything wrong and hit the wrong spot. Will try again tonight and see if I react differently to it. Might only go for the lower setting and a bit earlier before I go to bed to give my body some extra time to process the treatment.
1 like • Aug 4
Thanks, @Sterling Cooley , will do. My sister is definitely the type who needs an elephant's dose to feel anything while I usually just need to stand next to something and get blown away. Individual biology can be so weird sometimes 😂 I think I really hit the Vagus nerve well last night as I could at one point really hear the ultrasound travel into my brain. An hour after I finished the session, I got pretty sleepy and went to bed, just to find it hard to fall asleep again and sleep through the night. The Vagus nerve stimulation seemed to really give me hyperfocus, just like I get when I listen to binaural beats in the alpha range. A bit like a zen state, great for meditation. I'll give it a few more nights before I rather try it as a primer for my morning meditation.
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Patrick Eckert
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11points to level up
@patrick-eckert-7291
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Active 44d ago
Joined Aug 3, 2025
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