A standard immune blood panel tells you counts. How many white blood cells. What percentage are neutrophils. Whether your IgG is in range. It tells you inventory. What it doesn't tell you is what's regulating that inventory — the upstream neural and endocrine signals that are deciding, right now, how aggressively your immune cells respond to a threat.
That's the gap Bio-Well appears to sit in. Not replacing the lab panel — but seeing something different from it. Something functional and upstream. Something about the regulation, not just the result.
In Part One we looked at the headline finding: a canonical correlation of R=0.847 between GDV parameters and phagocytic immune function, with GDV explaining 71.7% of the variance in how effectively neutrophils were neutralizing bacteria. Here, we go into the specific findings — which markers mattered, and what they map to.
The Markers That Mattered Most
The researchers used canonical analysis — a statistical technique that finds the relationship between two sets of variables simultaneously, rather than comparing each pair in isolation. The GDV parameters formed one set. The phagocytosis markers formed the other. The question was: which GDV readings moved together with which immune markers?
Fourth Chakra Energy — Strongest Correlation
Phagocytic activity against E. coli (R=0.616)
In traditional models, the fourth chakra maps to the thymus gland, vagus nerve, and cardiac plexus. Modern immunology has established all three as core regulators of immune function — the thymus produces T-cells, the vagus nerve drives the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway, and cardiac nerve plexus activity modulates immune signaling. The data pointed here first.
Seventh Chakra Energy
Second strongest predictor of phagocytic activity
Maps to the pineal gland and upper brain. The pineal connection to immunity operates through melatonin — a well-documented immunomodulator. Published research (Markus et al., 2007) has established what the researchers call the "immune-pineal axis." Seventh chakra energy appearing high on this list isn't mystical — it's consistent with known neuroendocrine biology.
Sixth Chakra Energy
Highest factor loading in overall canonical root (R=0.682)
Maps to the pituitary and pineal glands, hypothalamus, thalamus. The hypothalamic-pituitary axis is the master regulator of the endocrine system — and by extension, a key driver of immune modulation. This marker having the highest factor loading in the canonical root analysis is a finding that would make sense to any endocrinologist.
Fifth Chakra Asymmetry
Predicted bactericidal capacity — in both gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria
Maps to the thyroid and parathyroid glands, vagus nerve, and inferior cervical ganglion. Thyroid hormones (triiodothyronine in particular) and the vagus nerve both have documented effects on phagocytosis. The asymmetry reading — imbalance between left and right expression of this zone — appeared as a downregulator of bactericidal capacity in both bacterial strains tested.
A Surprising Detail: Gram-Positive vs Gram-Negative Bacteria
One of the more nuanced findings is that the GDV correlations looked different depending on the type of bacteria being tested. For E. coli (gram-negative), the correlations were stronger and involved more GDV markers. For Staphylococcus aureus (gram-positive), the correlations were weaker overall and in some cases moved in opposite directions.
This isn't a flaw in the data — it's biologically coherent. The sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems regulate phagocytosis of gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria through different pathways. Research published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases (Straub et al., 2005) established exactly this: ablation of the sympathetic nervous system decreases gram-negative bacterial clearance and increases gram-positive dissemination.
The Implication
The Bio-Well scan isn't capturing a single "immune number." It appears to be picking up the differential regulation of different immune pathways — which means the nuance in the scan may reflect real nuance in the body's immune state. Different zone readings may matter for different kinds of immune challenge.
What This Means in Practice
For practitioners using Bio-Well clinically, this study adds a new interpretive layer. Chakra energy readings — particularly zones 4, 6, and 7 — appear to carry functional information about immune regulation at the level of neutrophil activity. Asymmetry in zone 5 may indicate imbalance in thyroid/vagal regulation of bactericidal capacity.
This doesn't mean Bio-Well replaces a white blood cell count. It means that what shows up on the scan as "energy depletion" or "asymmetry" in these zones has a plausible, research-supported biological correlate — not just a conceptual one.
For individual users, it reframes what tracking your Bio-Well readings over time actually means. Changes in these zone energies — in response to sleep, stress, supplementation, or devices like Bio-Cor — may be reflecting real shifts in immune regulation, not just in "energy."
Research reference: Babelyuk VY et al. Causal relationships between the parameters of gas discharge visualization and phagocytosis. Journal of Education, Health and Sport. 2021;11(6):268-276. Educational purposes only. Not medical advice.





Partager:
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Reading Your Energy Field as an Immune Marker