The Russian designation in the product name likely serves primarily as a marketing term. While Russia has legitimate expertise in quantum magnetometry, the commercial QRMA devices sold online—predominantly manufactured in China—may have limited connection to actual Russian research beyond borrowed terminology.

In recent years, Russian researchers have continued to develop and improve the QRMA technology. New software and hardware have been developed, allowing for more accurate and detailed analysis of the biofield.

"The device was a 'Quantum Resonance Magnetic Analyzer,' which takes the weight, height, age and general information about the individual, and then estimates possible medical conditions."

| Feature | Russian Model Advantage | |---------|--------------------------| | | 1.8 – 8.2 GHz (optimized for human biofield) | | Database origin | Russian National Medical University & Space Medicine Institute | | Analysis duration | 60–90 seconds per scan | | Report parameters | Organs, meridians, chakras, allergens, vitamins, minerals, heavy metals | | Languages supported | English, Russian, German, Spanish, Chinese |

These devices are —completely different from handheld QRMA devices. According to the official description:

Some marketing materials even attempt to link this technology to established scientific concepts like quantum mechanics, MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging), and NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance)—although, as we shall see, these connections are highly misleading.

The device operates on the theory of , which suggests that every cell, organ, and tissue in the human body emits a unique electromagnetic frequency.

The Quantum Resonance Magnetic Analyzer: Russian Tech, Myth, and Reality

Typically, these devices connect to a computer via USB and come with a handheld probe. Users hold the probe against their palm while software generates detailed health reports within minutes, often covering dozens of body systems.

As the patient’s cells resonate in response, they emit a feedback signal. The QRMA’s Russian-designed chipset analyzes the amplitude, frequency, and phase shift of this returning signal.

"a Hi-tech innovation project, which is related to medical, bio-informatics, electronic engineering, etc. It is based on quantum medical, and scientifically analyzes the human cell's weak magnetic field collected by advanced electronic device."

The devices' claimed ability to detect "quantum resonance" from cells has no basis in established physics or medicine. While quantum mechanics is a genuine field describing subatomic particle behavior, QRMA technology does not employ actual quantum computing or validated quantum sensing principles.