Pets PEMF

Pets PEMF for Dogs & Cats

Why I recommend them

Petspemf is one of the few "natural" recovery tools I recommend that comes with an actual research trail behind it instead of just testimonials. The team is headed by Dr. Igor Jerman, and the company grew out of Omnipemf — which had already been building PEMF devices for human use since 2016 — before they turned their attention to pets in 2021. This isn't a startup that discovered PEMF last year and slapped a pet logo on a generic device.

PEMF (Pulsed Electromagnetic Field) therapy itself isn't new or unproven, either. It's been FDA-cleared since 1979 for veterinary use, starting with non-union fractures in racehorses, and a 2025 randomized, placebo-controlled trial found dogs with osteoarthritis showed measurable improvement in gait symmetry after six weeks of PEMF treatment. That's a real, independently published clinical trial — not brand marketing.

What makes them different

The PEMF space is full of gimmicky mats with vague claims. Petspemf stands apart on a few fronts:

  • Research-first, not marketing-first. Their protocols cite over 30 peer-reviewed studies, and their site links directly to the primary research instead of just saying "studies show."
  • Purpose-built programs, not one generic setting. Pain Relief, Accelerated Healing, Stress Relief, and Integrated Healing each use different, published frequency and intensity combinations rather than a single one-size-fits-all setting.
  • Genuinely easy to use. App-controlled, gesture-activated, waterproof, and rechargeable — built for a pet parent to actually use consistently, not just clinic staff.
  • Used by working professionals, not just marketed to consumers. Veterinary rehab specialists like Dr. Tom Walsh of PrimePet Rehab and canine bodyworker Tania Costa of Canine Wellness Centre use Petspemf devices in their own practices.

How they fit into the ReWilding model

Modern indoor life doesn't just cut pets off from natural light and natural food — it cuts them off from the Earth's natural electromagnetic field, too. Concrete, insulation, and time spent indoors on synthetic flooring all reduce an animal's exposure to the geomagnetic frequencies their bodies evolved alongside. Petspemf's own safety materials note their devices work at intensities comparable to the Earth's own natural field — this isn't introducing something foreign to the body, it's restoring an input that used to be constant and is now mostly missing from daily life.

For clients dealing with mobility issues, post-injury recovery, or a body that just needs support getting unstuck, this is a tool I point to specifically because it's restorative rather than suppressive — it's not masking a symptom, it's supporting the body's own repair processes.

Products I personally recommend

  • Petspemf Pad — the full-body mat, best for daily wellness, relaxation, and general recovery support.
  • PetLoop PRO — a targeted, wearable loop for focused joint support (hips, knees, shoulders) when you don't need full-body coverage.
  • RollnRest — an orthopedic PEMF bed built for aging pets who need continuous, passive support simply by resting on it.

Cautions — who they're not right for

Petspemf is direct about this on their own safety page, and I want to pass it along exactly as they state it:

  • Do not use on pets who are pregnant, have epilepsy, are actively bleeding, have implanted metal, or have a pacemaker. These are hard contraindications, not just fine print.
  • Don't use while your pet is in motion, especially during the first two months of regular use — this is meant to be a lying-down, settled therapy.
  • Supervise closely, always. Petspemf devices haven't been tested on animals under formal scientific supervision the way a clinical laser would be, so this is a home-use wellness tool, not a substitute for veterinary treatment of an active condition.
  • Stop immediately if your pet has an unexpected reaction, and loop in your vet before restarting.

FAQ

Is this the same as the laser therapy my vet uses? No — different technology. Laser therapy uses light; PEMF uses a pulsed magnetic field. Some rehab vets, like Dr. Tom Walsh, actually use both together as complementary tools.

What conditions is PEMF FDA-cleared for? Post-operative pain and edema, osteoarthritis, and plantar fasciitis, in addition to its original 1979 clearance for non-union fractures.

How long does a session take? Most programs run around 30 minutes, though this varies by product and the specific program selected (Pain Relief, Accelerated Healing, Stress Relief, or Integrated Healing).

Is this safe for senior dogs? Yes — it's non-invasive, drug-free, and used specifically by rehab professionals for aging and recovering dogs. The RollnRest bed was designed with exactly this use case in mind.

How soon will I see results? This works at a cellular level, so results tend to be gradual rather than immediate — consistency of use matters more than any single session.

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