Adaptometry

Adaptometry is a method for measuring a person’s adaptation to certain conditions (loads, stimuli, etc.).

Adaptation is the adaptation of the structure and functions of an organism or its parts to environmental conditions. It is carried out through a series of interrelated physiological, biochemical and behavioral reactions. Depending on which link in the chain of adaptation is disrupted, one speaks of one or another type of adaptation - physiological, behavioral, mental, and so on.

The method of adaptation analysis makes it possible to identify mechanisms of specific and nonspecific regulation of biological reactions, which is the basis both for their use and for studying the mechanisms of the body’s resistance to the influence of external and internal environmental factors. A person’s ability to actively adapt to changing external and internal conditions of life and activity determines one of the essential signs of health - the relative stability of his condition.

The set of adaptation methods includes studies of the main mechanisms: biological climatic lifting, integral indicators of health reserve, adaptation of intravenous infusion therapy, genetic methods and others. The use of these techniques can have a positive effect and has many advantages over other methods of increasing the overall resistance of the body.