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🔍 Discover Your Inner Wellness!
The Wellness and Fitness Tracker is a smart body conductivity analyzer that provides a noninvasive, quick, and comprehensive assessment of your functional health. Utilizing advanced Japanese Ryodoraku technology, it measures the cell conductivity of 12 vital organs in just 2 minutes, offering tailored health insights. With the ability to monitor up to 100 profiles, this device is perfect for families looking to stay informed about their health.






| Best Sellers Rank | #406,535 in Health & Household ( See Top 100 in Health & Household ) #468 in Acupuncture Products |
| Customer Reviews | 3.0 out of 5 stars 17 Reviews |
D**A
not working
it should analyze 12 points, but stops after first one. also after buying the product, they say we have to buy virus protection for 456$ and its only for one year, and then to buy again every year. impossible !!!
D**.
No alternative to this device on the US market
I have been using RaDoTech for a while now after getting my order. I have a strong interest in personal health, and follow the functional medicine news and trends on a regular basis. I can say with confidence that there is no alternative to this device on the US market. The technology that’s used here is based on the principles of Ryodoraku acupuncture. The device measures the organs’ energy potential by sending a charge along the meridians associated with those organs. The results can give you an idea of “who’s the hardest worker at the moment”. Whether it’s kidneys, bladder or large intestine, if the organ is showing low potential, something is going on there, and corrections can be made in order to support the system. The device is very sturdy and has survived some serious falls. Technical support is available if needed, I had a good experience with them. The battery life is amazingly long. I don’t think I had to charge it yet, and it’s showing over 90%. Not sure how they do it, but it lasts. RaDoTech is very user friendly. It’s paired with a free app that gives you visual step by step instructions, and helps understand the readings produced by the device. The app gives you an opportunity to log results in multiple profiles, which is convenient for use in the entire family.
B**E
Garbage
Totally fake doesn't work or even link up. Don't buy
R**D
Quality Instrument
Since every human body is different, products like this are going to be a little different for everyone. I believe that because although it's gotten some not so great reviews, and it has a good sturdy build and operates as it should.
B**K
Interestign
This is a very interesting device. I really have no way of knowing if it's accurate. I wish I had some way to test any of the results. It is fairly easy to use, the app isn't bad. I didn't like that the box wasn't sealed in any way, and instead of instructions, it just contains a piece of paper that was cut to size with a link on it. For the cost, I definitely expected more. The included spray bottle doesn't really fit anywhere in the box, and was sort of just smooshed in with the usb cable. For the cost, this really doesn't seem worth it. It could work amazingly well and be very accurate, or it could just as easily be an expensive scam. There isn't an easy way to tell.
M**R
Interesting
This review is for the following item: RaDoTech - Personal Health Tracker, Internal Organs Activity Tracker, Smart Body Analyzer with Easy-to-Read Reports on Android and iOS Devices, Helps Understand Readings of Wearable Devices I have used this device a few times now and I still don't know how accurate it is. It is telling me I am sluggish in some of my organs, but then when I read on the app, it seems that might be because I am tired. I am not a doctor so I have no idea what is important to know, what is doing nothing more than scaring us, or what is just randomness. But it is interesting. I am going to continue to use this and then take it in to my Endocrinologist and see what she has to say. It is very simple to set up. Though you do have to take off your watch and any jewelry that you have on before using the device. Now I do have to say that one time I forgot to take off my earrings and didn't notice that it was giving me anything really different in the reading than it had in the past. So I don't know how important that is, but I will continue on trying to remember to remove all before hand. It does come with the charging cable and a small spritzing bottle. You need to spray the area of your body where it shows you before you use the wand on yourself. There is no pain, no sound, no tingle, no vibration, nothing happens other than the app tells you what is the next area of your body to touch with the device. When you have finished all the touch points, you will then see your results. It is easy to use, but I can't tell you how accurate it is.
B**R
Obscenely overpriced pseudoscientific device in the tradition of P.T. Barnum
This RaDoTech Holistic Health Tracker claims to tell you the “functional health” of your internal organs based on the electrical resistance between various points on your hands and feet. The app that is required to use the device gives you a percentage value of how well your heart, lungs, intestines, kidneys, and other organs are doing based on these electrical resistance values. The crux of the matter is that there is no evidence that measuring electrical resistance from the hands to the feet could tell you anything about the health of your heart, lungs, kidneys, intestines, etc. I can’t imagine most people would believe this nonsense, but if you do, you should read on. At its heart, the RaDoTech device is a very simple device that measures electrical current between two points. It is an eight-inch-long cylinder made of metal and plastic. Five inches of the cylinder is simply hollow and holds a coiled cable that attaches to an electrode at the tip. In the remaining three inches at the base of the unit is a micro-USB port, a rechargeable battery, and simple electronics that measures the current and communicates via Bluetooth with an Android or iOS based app. The electrode at the tip in conjunction with the metal body creates a complete circuit when held in one hand with the electrode touching another part of your body. The app directs you to take measurements at specific points on your hands and feet. The scanner uses about 3 volts DC to generate a small electrical current through those points, measures it, and sends the value via Bluetooth to your phone or tablet. After completing the process, the software calculates your organs’ “functional status” and displays a drawing of a body with various organs systems in orange, green, or blue, to indicate whether the organ is “at, above, or below normal.” You can also go to a chart where you can click on an organ system to find out additional “information” such as that the left side of your large intestine is at 50% of normal and the right side is at 299% of normal. The software stores each measurement so you can track your values over time. RaDoTech says their “science” is based on the work of a Dr. Yoshio Nakatani in the early 1950’s in Japan who invented his theory of Ryodoraku (English translation “good electrical pathway.”) He used small electric currents at traditional acupuncture points and lines (called meridians) to diagnose and treat “energy imbalances.” RaDoTech does not claim to treat anything (and thereby avoid FDA regulation of their product), but only to give you “information” about your health. I did a search for Ryodoraku on the National Library of Medicine website and could find no randomized studies investigating its efficacy or validity. There were just a handful of anecdotal reports, generally in acupuncture journals. Even if you believe that you can measure internal organ health via the electrical resistance between your hands and your feet, the methodology that RaDoTech uses will give you wildly inconsistent results. How tightly you hold the device and the moisture level of your hand and body parts, for instance, will dramatically change the electrical resistance from measurement to measurement. The price of well over four-hundred dollars is absurd for such a simple electronic device. And despite its high price RaDoTech doesn't even include a manual, just a cheap sheet of paper directing you to their website where they also sell a line of health supplements. This device is obviously marketed to the same population that subscribes to other non-evidence based pseudoscientific medical concepts such as biorhythms, candida hypersensitivity, chelation therapy, phrenology, etc. If you still want it, the RaDoTech Health Tracker is harmless (other than to your wallet) but provides no medically useful information. The only reason I’m giving it two stars instead of one, is that the device does function and communicate with its app as it was designed to, even if the entire concept is completely unbelievable.
T**Y
Don't waste your money.
This item is an RA (Ryodoraku Acupuncture) device. It is designed to measure the electro-conductivity of certain points on the body and utilize those measurements to determine possible ailments. This psuedo-scientific therapy was developed in the 1950s and in my opinion should have stayed there. This device has a single power button and a USB-C charge port. It's easy enough to charge and once you install the required mobile application, it's will at least give you readings ... of something. I have attempted to utilize this device for the about a month now and every day the results are wildly different in my testing providing me zero confidence that there is any direct correlation to what this device is attempting to measure and anything physiological with my body. Overall, I was intrigued by the claims of this device and the associated therapy, but ultimately, after testing it, I do not believe that it holds any value to me and would be something that you'd find at a Clark Stanley trading post. I definitely cannot encourage anybody to spend their hard earned dollars on this technology as I just do not see it as being effective.
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