References / What we don't measure against

We don't set slew-rate thresholds by condition

Unconfirmed
You'll find tables that assign a minimum slew rate to each use: one figure for bone, less for soft tissue, less again for pain or general wellness. Our certification criteria do use slew-rate tiers, but we label them our own engineering grades, not evidence-based cutoffs by condition.

Why we leave it out

The literature doesn't split slew thresholds by condition. Only a bone-healing figure traces to a real experiment, and even that is a single small-animal study, not a clinical standard. The soft-tissue, pain, and wellness floors that circulate have no peer-reviewed basis, and at least one is actually lower than the value that study found useful. So we keep our tiers and we're clear they're in-house grading, not medical guidance.
A single field pulse over time, with its rise and fall edges labeledA trapezoidal pulse showing the field rising from baseline to peak, holding, then falling back. The 10 percent and 90 percent levels mark the rise time and fall time; the width at 50 percent of peak is the pulse width; the steepness of the rising edge is the slew rate.90%10%Slew rateRise timeFall timePulse width (at 50%)Time →© 2026 Gauss Labs
One pulse over time. The field climbs from rest to its peak, holds, then falls back. How fast that rising edge climbs is the slew rate, and a steeper edge drives a stronger stimulus. The rise time and fall time are measured between the 10% and 90% levels; the pulse width is measured at half the peak.