Part 1 of 2 — Havas (Trent University): Aires Defender Infinity Improves Cardiovascular Response During RFR Exposure — 52-Year-Old EHS Subject (2015)

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Part 1 of 2 — Havas (Trent University): Aires Defender Infinity Improves Cardiovascular Response During RFR Exposure — 52-Year-Old EHS Subject (2015)

Part 1 of 2 — Havas (Trent University): Aires Defender Infinity Improves Cardiovascular Response During RFR Exposure

Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Case Study • Dr. Magda Havas, Trent University, Canada • August 18, 2015 • Subject: 52-year-old female with electrohypersensitivity

Trent University (Canada)Dr. Magda HavasDouble-Blind Placebo-ControlledMaxPulse FDA Class IICardiovascularLive Blood AnalysisEHS Subject2.4 GHzPart 1 of 2

Two-Study Series by Dr. Magda Havas

① This Study (Aug 18, 2015)

52-year-old female with self-reported electrohypersensitivity. Double-blind, placebo-controlled. Cardiovascular improvements and live blood (rouleaux) improvements confirmed with shield vs. placebo.

② Part 2 (Aug 20, 2015)

46-year-old healthy female. Adds GDV Bio-Well energy field measurements (Dr. Korotkov technology). Cardiovascular improvements replicated; body energy balance and chakra alignment also improved.

Researcher: Dr. Magda Havas, B.Sc., Ph.D. • Research of Subtle Energy (ROSE), Environmental & Resource Studies, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada • mhavas@trentu.ca
Report title: “Case Study: Effect of Radio Frequency Radiation (RFR) and the Aires Defender Infinity on Endogenous Electromagnetic Energy of a 52-year old Female”
Report date: August 29, 2015 • Research conducted: August 18, 2015
Design: Double-blind, placebo-controlled (active Defender Infinity vs. placebo shield, subject blindfolded)
10
cardiovascular parameters improved with shield vs. baseline
DPI +76%
15.9 (sub-optimal) → 28 (near-normal) with shield; dropped back to 16.3 with placebo
AE: 34→65
Arterial elasticity from low-normal to high-normal with shield
Placebo
Confirmed: improvements did not occur with placebo shield

Study Design

Research was conducted in an electromagnetically clean environment (thick concrete walls, disconnected nearby Wi-Fi routers, GS filters installed, no visible cell towers). Background RFR was very low; when the 2.4 GHz cordless phone base station was activated, levels rose to approximately 120 mW/m² at the subject’s chair — below Health Canada Safety Code 6 (4,400 mW/m²) but well above Russian (100 mW/m²), Salzburg/BioInitiative (1 mW/m²), and Building Biology (0.0001 mW/m²) guidelines.

The subject wore the shield or a placebo shield around the neck in a pouch. She was blinded to which treatment was active and did not know the source of RFR exposure. Measurements were taken with an FDA Class II medical device (MaxPulse for cardiovascular), an FDA 510K HRV device (Nerve Express for orthostatic HRV), live blood microscopy, and standard blood pressure monitoring.

Confirmed: Shield Did Not Change the RF Environment

The Defender Infinity did not alter the amount of RFR in the environment, nor did it affect ELF electric or magnetic fields, dirty electricity, or body current. This is explicitly consistent with the manufacturer’s claims. The protective mechanism operates on endogenous EM fields — the body’s own electromagnetic response — not the external environment.

MaxPulse (FDA Class II): Cardiovascular Improvements with Shield, Reversed with Placebo

The subject’s cardiovascular parameters improved in 10 ways with the shield during RFR exposure vs. reference. Key metrics:
DPI (overall cardiovascular health): 15.9 (sub-optimal) → 28 (near-normal) with shield → 16.3 (sub-optimal) with placebo
EC (eccentric constriction, vessel power from left ventricle): severe drop with placebo shield (2.39) indicating severe reduction in vessel constriction ability
AE (arterial elasticity): 34.4 (low-normal) → 65 (high-normal) with shield → 71 (optimal) with placebo (possible carry-over effect)
RBV (remaining blood volume in vessels): minor changes
The placebo-controlled design confirms these are not random variations — the shield drove the improvements.

Live Blood Analysis: Rouleaux Formation Reduced with Shield

Approximately one hour after the subject arrived, live blood analysis showed serious rouleaux formation (red blood cell aggregation resembling stacked coins, associated with altered membrane electrical charges). During treatment with the shield plus RFR exposure, rouleaux formation cleared up considerably. It became slightly worse again with the placebo shield and RFR. The researchers concluded the artifact was unlikely and that the improvement was attributable to the shield.

HRV and Subject Profile

The subject had exhausted adrenals (high chronotropic reaction >0.7) and poor fitness score (11:6), consistent with chronic degenerative inflammation. The HRV orthostatic test showed Tension Index (TI) approached normal during RFR with shield, then increased again with the placebo shield. The subject’s prescription blood pressure medication may have dampened the HRV response.

Conclusion (Author)

Dr. Havas concluded: “The claim that the Aires Defender Infinity ‘protects’ against RFR is confirmed based on cardiovascular parameters obtained via MaxPulse, by live blood analysis for rouleaux formation, and by the subjective response of test subject.” The subject reported her symptoms had improved since using the Defender Infinity, and returned when she forgot to wear it.

About Dr. Magda Havas

Dr. Magda Havas is a professor at Trent University (Peterborough, Ontario, Canada) in Environmental and Resource Studies. She is one of Canada’s leading independent researchers on the biological effects of electromagnetic fields and radiofrequency radiation, known for her work on electrohypersensitivity and HRV provocation studies. This 2015 research was commissioned by American Aires Inc. as independent third-party testing.