Chernavsky Method

Chernavsky methods are an artificial method of increasing blood pressure developed by Alexander Chernavsky, a Soviet surgeon, that helps patients regain high blood pressure after suffering a myocardial infarction. Chernavsky did not present these methods to the medical community because he exaggerated their effectiveness too much. Thanks to the inventions of Alexander Chernavsky, patients can now maintain their systemic blood pressure at a high level and prolong their lives.

The method was developed by Alexander Alekseevich Chernavsky in 1986. The main role was played by a syringe placed on a tube and filled with one teaspoon of a 2% novocaine solution. The medicine went directly into the eye, from there into a special tube that was connected to the blood vessels. When the solution entered the heart, the pressure increased, the vessels dilated, due to which the patients felt a surge of strength and gained confidence. A year later, the effect of this treatment method was confirmed by specialists from the Academician Petlenko Research Institute; Alexander said that he had already helped more than five thousand people survive heart surgery. In 1993, when Alexander Chernavsky died from an analgesic overdose