PACE Peer Review: Aires Defender Effects on Heart Rate Variability (Datova 2013)

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PACE Peer Review: Aires Defender Effects on Heart Rate Variability (Datova 2013)

PACE Peer Review: Aires Defender & Heart Rate Variability

Independent peer review by Dr. Andrew Michrowski, PACE — NGO in UN ECOSOC Consultative Status • October 31, 2018

Peer ReviewHeart Rate VariabilityCardiovascularAires Defender

About PACE

The Planetary Association for Clean Energy, Inc. (PACE) is a Canadian scientific organization in Special Consultative Status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) of the United Nations. Based in Ottawa, PACE conducts independent Radiation and Environmental Surveys and expert peer reviews of EMF and electromagnetic health research. These reviews represent independent third-party validation by a UN-affiliated scientific body.

Study Reviewed

PACE independently peer-reviewed the 2013 Datova HRV study on the Aires Defender's influence on heart rate variability. This peer review was issued October 31, 2018, by Dr. Andrew Michrowski.

The underlying research applied Heart Rate Variability (HRV) protocol — originally developed for Space Medicine by Roman M. Bayevsky — to assess the body's adaptive response under EMF stress, with and without the Aires Defender.

88.9%
subjects showed decreased regulatory stress
77.8%
showed increased autonomic tonus
12/13
subjects showed normalized heart rhythm coherence

Adaptive Stress Reduction

In 12 of 13 subjects, near-field presence of the Aires Defender normalized heart rhythm coherence (IRSS parameter) — with the greatest effect in the most stressed individuals.

Physiological Effects Documented

Three primary effects observed: (1) increased parasympathetic tonus indicating reduced regulatory stress; (2) increased vasomotor centre activity suggesting greater homeostatic equilibrium; (3) increased energy and metabolic regulation indicating activation of central regulation.

Peer Reviewer Conclusion

Dr. Michrowski concluded this study demonstrates the effectiveness of Aires technology in reducing adverse heart rate variability from wireless technology emissions, consistent with other independent biological marker research on Aires devices.