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Can Powdered Chicken Feet Regenerate Neurons?

Inventor: Harry Robertson
Year: 1981
Device: Revital
Folder: revital
Original: Open article
Confidence
0.60
Practicability
0.50
Evidence
0.40
Fringe Score
0.70
Risk
0.20
TRL
3

Goal

To promote regeneration and healing of nerve, muscle, bone, and skin tissue, especially after severe burns, spinal cord injury, and periodontal disease.

Problem

Inability of the body to regrow nerves and muscle tissue, severe burn wounds, infections, and periodontal tissue loss.

Concept Summary

Revital is a powdered, dehydrated chicken-feet preparation rich in amino acids and folic acid. When applied to an open wound the low-temperature dehydration creates an electrical change that briefly bridges nerve gaps, while the amino acids supply the building blocks for DNA/RNA synthesis, stimulating cell proliferation and tissue regeneration. The same preparation can be ingested as a supplement.

Detailed Description

Chicken feet are collected as a waste product and dehydrated at low temperature to remove water while preserving proteins. The resulting powder is packed into an open wound; the wound's moisture reacts with the powder, causing chemical and ionic bonding with amino acids and generating a brief electrical field that bridges nerve gaps. Repeated applications are said to allow new nerve formation according to the patient's DNA, with no immunological rejection because the preparation breaks down in situ. The powder can also be taken orally, providing folic acid and other nutrients that support DNA synthesis and healing. Reported uses include treatment of third-degree burns, spinal cord injuries, animal wounds, and periodontal disease.

Principles

  • Electrical bridging of nerve gaps
  • Amino-acid nutrition for cell proliferation
  • Folic-acid mediated DNA synthesis
  • Dehydration-preserved protein stability

Scientific Domains

Regenerative Medicine Biochemistry Physiology

Materials

  • Chicken feet
  • Dehydrated powdered chicken feet
  • Amino acids
  • Folic acid

Mechanisms of Action

  • Electrical change creates temporary nerve bridge
  • Amino acids supply substrates for DNA/RNA synthesis
  • Folic acid supports nucleotide formation
  • Anti-infection effect via rapid sterilization of wound

Applications

  • Severe burn treatment
  • Spinal cord injury regeneration
  • Periodontal disease therapy
  • Animal wound healing

Claimed Performance

Complete regeneration of nerve and muscle tissue, pain relief within minutes, no scarring in third-degree burns, infection sterilization within 1-2 days, hair regrowth, bone regrowth, and reduction of periodontal pockets.

Experimental Evidence

Anecdotal reports of rapid pain relief and wound healing in humans (a boy with severe burns) and animals (rabbits with burns, dogs with traumatic injuries, cats with gangrenous limbs). Claims of nerve and muscle regrowth, hair regrowth, and infection control are described, but no quantitative data or peer-reviewed studies are provided.

Replication Status

No independent replication reported; evidence consists of anecdotal case reports and the inventor's own observations.

Limitations

  • Lack of controlled clinical trials
  • Evidence is primarily anecdotal
  • Unclear biochemical mechanism
  • Potential for contamination if powder is not sterile

Red Flags

  • Extraordinary regeneration claims without peer-reviewed data
  • FDA stopped further development
  • Potential for unsubstantiated medical marketing

Keywords

chicken feet revital nerve regeneration burn treatment amino acid powder folic acid regenerative medicine

Related Technologies

Protein powders Amino acid supplements Wound dressings Regenerative scaffolds

📷 Images

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