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[[image:Testamento2.jpg|ring artefact presented to be a ''Hamer-focus'' on the first page of a book about NGM|300px|thumb]]
 
[[image:Testamento2.jpg|ring artefact presented to be a ''Hamer-focus'' on the first page of a book about NGM|300px|thumb]]
 
[[image:Pscerorg-n1.jpg|ring artefact on the first page of a book about NGM|600px|thumb]]
 
[[image:Pscerorg-n1.jpg|ring artefact on the first page of a book about NGM|600px|thumb]]
The former german physician [[Ryke Geerd Hamer (english)|Ryke Geerd Hamer]] and many followers of [[New Germanic Medicine]] count their diagnosis on a very particular interpretation of computer tomography brain scans of patients. This interpretation is not compatible with modern academic radiology. Hamer himself is not radiologist. In his books and on his webpages, he shows many brain scans but never shows details about the type of scanner used, exact date, or high voltage and exposure time used. He never shows the radiological findings and the reason why the scans were made. For a better understanding: In radiology, usually the left side of brain is shown on the right side, because a physician usually looks a patients into his face, standings before his feet. So he looks from ''downside'' to upside. Hamer presents his scans mirrored: the left side is seen on the left side of the picture.  
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The former german physician [[Ryke Geerd Hamer]] and many followers of [[New Germanic Medicine]] count their diagnosis on a very particular interpretation of computer tomography brain scans of patients. This interpretation is not compatible with modern academic radiology. Hamer himself is not radiologist. In his books and on his webpages, he shows many brain scans but never shows details about the type of scanner used, exact date, or high voltage and exposure time used. He never shows the radiological findings and the reason why the scans were made. For a better understanding: In radiology, usually the left side of brain is shown on the right side, because a physician usually looks a patients into his face, standings before his feet. So he looks from ''downside'' to upside. Hamer presents his scans mirrored: the left side is seen on the left side of the picture.  
    
Hamer believes that a sudden shock-like onset of unforeseen so called ''biological conflict'' leads to a so-called "Dirk-Hamer-Syndrome" (DHS), which immediately (within a fraction of a second) produces a "cancer" in an organ. He postulates that every DHS-related process will take place synchronously in the brain, in the «organic brain» and in the organ. He adds that the forming tumours are allegedly controlled by the part of the brain that is ontogenetically connected with the organ in question. Hamer calls this the «ontogenetic system of tumours». In the brain, the ''biological conflict'' is said to give rise to the development of a so-called «Hamer focus». By this, Hamer means structures seen in CT brain scans which are shaped like a shooting target, or a single, mathematically precise circle. He claims that the locations of the Hamer foci and their degree of severity are correlated with the organs affected, the underlying biological conflict and the phase of the conflict. The non-radiologist Hammer adds also that radiology was not able to detect these Hamer-foci until his inventions in 1981. According to new medicine, the patient’s right- or left-handedness also plays a part.
 
Hamer believes that a sudden shock-like onset of unforeseen so called ''biological conflict'' leads to a so-called "Dirk-Hamer-Syndrome" (DHS), which immediately (within a fraction of a second) produces a "cancer" in an organ. He postulates that every DHS-related process will take place synchronously in the brain, in the «organic brain» and in the organ. He adds that the forming tumours are allegedly controlled by the part of the brain that is ontogenetically connected with the organ in question. Hamer calls this the «ontogenetic system of tumours». In the brain, the ''biological conflict'' is said to give rise to the development of a so-called «Hamer focus». By this, Hamer means structures seen in CT brain scans which are shaped like a shooting target, or a single, mathematically precise circle. He claims that the locations of the Hamer foci and their degree of severity are correlated with the organs affected, the underlying biological conflict and the phase of the conflict. The non-radiologist Hammer adds also that radiology was not able to detect these Hamer-foci until his inventions in 1981. According to new medicine, the patient’s right- or left-handedness also plays a part.
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