Trimprob

The TRIMprob (Tissue Resonance InterferoMeter Probe) is a portable system for non-invasive diagnosis of biological diseases invented by Italian physicist Clarbruno Vedruccio.

[1][2] It consists of a computer-controlled radio frequency interferometer detecting differences in electromagnetic properties in cancerous tissue.

At that time Vedruccio suffered from a severe attack of gastritis, and as he was approaching a probe for the detection of high frequencies radio waves, he noticed a drop in the signal corresponding to 930-940 MHz.

He immediately realized that his state of health had an influence on the probe that by chance was tuned on that specific range of radio frequencies.

[9] In a successive patent of 1999 the device is more precisely characterized and presented as an "Electromagnetic analyzer of anisotropy in chemical organized systems" [10] and thus as a means of powerful preventive diagnostics in the medical field.