Transfection

Transfection is a term that denotes the "infection" of a cell by some outside-the-cell substance as a result of electroporation. Electroporation denotes an abnormal temporary porous state of the cell wall due to high electrical potentials across it. Actually neither of these terms perfectly fit the low electrical potential high absorption effect that happens from DC or low frequency blood electrification, but since they are close, and there are no others, then we will use them. It is easier to say these terms than high-absorption-effect. The useful graph below shows that transfection from electroporation is frequency dependant, and that the most affecting frequency is 1 hertz (1 cycle per second).

You can say you are experiencing transfection when you feel "toxic" from doing blood electrification after ingesting medicine, or smoking, or drinking coffee, or drinking an alcoholic drink, or smoking a joint. Actually sometimes you will just feel an amplified effect from the stuff you took, and not really toxic. Either way it is probably hard on your blood cells and so the device should only be used if you haven't ingested any harsh substance for half a day previous.

Unfortunately, the effectiveness of blood electrification against microbes pretty much parallels this transfection graph. The lower frequencies affect them negatively more than the higher frequencies.

Transfection graph

Transfection vs Frequency + Waveshape Graph