There are many dogs , cats and horses suffering from health problems worldwide.
Be it problems with the musculoskeletal system, allergies and food intolerances or chronic diseases.
Sometimes, as an animal owner, you are at a loss when you can’t get any further with conventional therapy methods.
Like acupuncture or homeopathy, bioresonance belongs to the field of complementary medicine and is intended to be a useful supplement to conventional medicine.
It works with the body’s own wavelength of the four-legged friend, is used without medication and is painless to use.
Of course, not all health problems can be resolved with bioresonance. It is best to talk to a veterinarian or animal naturopath.
With our therapist finder you can find the nearest practice that can offer you BICOM® bioresonance.
Treatment with the BICOM® device is painless and stress-free. Especially sensitive animals feel very comfortable and it often happens that they completely relax and come to rest during the therapy.
Bioresonance has no harmful side effects and is used without medication.
Occasionally, initial aggravations, in what is known as the body’s initial reaction, can occur. However, these fade away after a short time.
Hypothyroidism in pets can be confusing and stressful for families. This guide explains how holistic veterinary medicine, and specifically BICOM therapy, may be used as a complementary approach to support overall wellbeing alongside your vet’s care. We’ll also clarify what “stressful information” means in bioenergetic diagnostics, so you can make informed, responsible choices.
Quick note on honesty and safety: Bioresonance is not an approved diagnostic or medical treatment; leading authorities do not recognise it for disease diagnosis or cure. It should not replace your veterinarian’s examination, testing, or prescribed medication. We present it here as complementary therapy only. bioresonance.vet
Hypothyroidism typically refers to a low-producing thyroid. In dogs (and less commonly cats), it may show up as low energy, weight changes, skin or coat issues, or feeling cold. Your primary vet confirms the condition through clinical examination and blood tests. Medications prescribed by your vet remain the standard of care.
Holistic care can sit alongside that plan, focusing on comfort, stress reduction, and overall balance. That’s where BICOM therapy, used in holistic veterinary medicine, enters the conversation as a supportive, non-invasive option.
Holistic veterinary medicine aims to view the animal as a whole body, behaviour, environment, and lifestyle. Within that context, BICOM therapy is presented by many clinics as a gentle, cause-oriented, non-invasive tool to explore patterns of imbalance and to harmonise bioenergetic signals. It is framed as supportive care, not a substitute for veterinary diagnosis or thyroid medication.
Transparency matters: the bioresonance.vet site itself publishes cautionary articles stating that bioresonance is not scientifically validated as a medical treatment and isn’t an approved diagnostic tool. This aligns with our commitment not to mislead readers.
BICOM® bioresonance is described as a holistic, frequency-based system. Practitioners say it detects and works with a pet’s unique frequency patterns to encourage balance. In veterinary settings, it’s marketed as non-invasive and gentle for dogs, cats, and even horses.
From a wellness standpoint, owners often seek sessions because the experience is calm, contact-based, and easy for most animals to tolerate. Still, it is complementary, it doesn’t diagnose disease, and it shouldn’t delay conventional thyroid care.
Within BICOM-style bioenergetic diagnostics, practitioners often refer to “stressful information”. In simple terms, this means signals believed to correlate with burdens that may disturb balance, think allergens, environmental exposures, or microbial signatures. Addressing those signals is approached in a stepwise order so the pet isn’t overwhelmed.
First, open “elimination” pathways and remove therapy blockages.
Next, address extracellular burdens (for example, allergens, chemicals, fungi, some bacteria).
Finally, address intracellular burdens (for example, viruses, intracellular bacteria, heavy metals).
This “outside-to-inside” logic aims to reduce reactivity and ease the system into deeper work.
In practice, several stressors can appear together. Examples that are often screened for include gluten/gliadin plus yeasts; dairy proteins plus parasites; and clusters that may include histamine reactivity. These combinations are tested and treated individually until they no longer “resonate” on the device, meaning the signal isn’t detected by the chosen method.
Takeaway for pet parents: this doesn’t replace lab tests or allergy diagnosis. It’s a bioenergetic lens some holistic practitioners use to guide supportive care. Always coordinate with your vet.
Some dogs develop autoimmune thyroiditis (often labelled Hashimoto’s in human medicine). In BICOM practice, when a pet already has a vet-diagnosed thyroid condition, the bioenergetic work focuses on mapping and harmonising stressful information that might be contributing to overall discomfort, skin issues, digestion, or energy. It’s not a cure for hypothyroidism; it’s a supportive layer while your vet manages hormones and monitors labs.
Below is a plain-English translation of how many practitioners structure support sessions when hypothyroidism is present. Specific steps and settings are individualised.
Begin with basic harmonising programmes for the first 1–2 sessions.
Focus on opening “elimination” pathways and addressing therapy blockages (for example, scar interference fields, jaw/vertebral restrictions, geopathic stress, or meridian/chakra blocks as defined in their framework).
Keep sessions short for seniors or sensitive animals.
Explore allergic signals, fungi, extracellular bacteria, parasites, and chemicals.
Treat clusters one by one; retest until each component is quiet.
Adjust time and amplification to reduce the chance of initial aggravations.
Explore viral signals, intracellular bacteria, and environmental toxins (for example, heavy metals in their model).
Move into this phase only after extracellular work is stable.
Conclude sessions with global harmonisation and stabilisation using tools such as “5-element” balancing in the BICOM system.
Typical intervals: every 1–2 weeks, adjusted for species and age.
Session pacing matters: the aim is to avoid overtreatment and keep your pet comfortable while complementing the veterinary plan.
Bioresonance vet emphasises BICOM bioresonance as a cause-oriented, holistic treatment concept for animals, offered through practitioner partnerships and events for vets and pet owners. Sessions are non-invasive and meant to support overall wellbeing, not to diagnose or replace medical care.
For vets: Regular online and in-person events exploring BICOM’s approach to animal health.
For pet owners: Articles and guides about bioresonance for cats, dogs, and general wellness topics.
Some clinics that offer BICOM access provide multi-session packages aligned with average course lengths. Packages can be more economical than single bookings, useful if your practitioner recommends a series over several weeks. Please ask directly about current options and what’s included.
Clear policy reminder: the site’s own content reiterates that bioresonance is not an approved diagnostic tool and evidence remains limited, so you should always keep your primary vet at the centre of thyroid care.
To keep care safe and coordinated, consider this sequence:
Start with your vet. Ensure proper diagnosis through examination and thyroid blood panels; discuss medication if indicated.
Share information. If you pursue BICOM sessions, give your practitioner the vet’s diagnosis and medication list.
Set goals. Agree on supportive goals of comfort, coat quality, calm behaviour, or digestive ease, rather than disease claims.
Monitor together. Keep vet rechecks for T4/TSH or other labs as recommended, and tell your vet about any supplements or session frequency.
Adjust mindfully. If your pet shows signs of fatigue, restlessness, or any worsening, check in with your vet promptly.
This keeps the complementary work transparent and aligned with conventional care standards.
Is BICOM therapy safe?
It’s presented as gentle and non-invasive. That said, lack of strong evidence means it should be treated as adjunctive wellness support, not a medical treatment.
Can BICOM diagnose hypothyroidism or replace levothyroxine?
No. It is not an approved diagnostic and should not replace prescribed medications.
Is there scientific consensus?
Major medical authorities do not recognise bioresonance as a valid treatment. Choosing it should not delay veterinary diagnosis or evidence-based therapy.
Bring records: Diagnosis, meds, supplements, and any allergy history help practitioners individualise supportive work.
Expect a series: Many pets attend sessions every 1–2 weeks initially; ask about a package if recommended.
Watch for changes: Track energy, coat, stools, sleep, and mood in a simple log to discuss with your vet and practitioner.
Keep it balanced: Maintain your pet’s medication as prescribed and follow vet recheck schedules.
If you’re exploring complementary support for hypothyroidism in pets and want to understand how BICOM fits into a broader, vet-led plan, our team is happy to help. Reach out with your questions or ask about upcoming vet and pet-owner events.
Pet owners: Contact us with your vet’s diagnosis to discuss a supportive session plan. bioresonance.vet
Vets: Join an event to see how bioenergetic diagnostics and “stressful information” mapping are presented in practice.bioresonance.vet
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