It’s going on five weeks now of using the Ultima Neuro device with strict fidelity to the course defined within the insightful usage brochure. For the first time in some 15 years I am happy to be feeling a significant quantity of genuine sensation back in my toes and feet that isn’t either incessantly painful or maddeningly annoying.The treatment sessions were comfortable and helpful from about a week on in the sequence. I began to sleep better, regain some balance, and the intense attacks could be short-circuited by connecting myself to the electro treatment delivered by the device. The intense attacks have now nearly disappeared altogether, I go for longer spells each day where there are no noticeable symptoms, and I am hopeful that this will continue unabated until I have recovered as well as is possible for a chap who’s tolerated neuropathy since the 90s.There are a lot crap posts here which almost dissuaded me from buying this product, but I can since say that there isn’t much truth to any of them and that I can see through their disparaging propaganda as clearly as bathwater.In particular I take umbrage at the remarks in one post claiming Rebuilder to be the one and only device required for addressing neuropathy. I can say however, given my own experience with both Rebuilder and now Ultima Neuro , that the comments made in said post couldn’t be much further from actual truth.An apothecary I’ve frequented since my mysterious diagnoses with idiopathic polyneuropathy suggested trying a device from American that he’d discovered online. Suffering as I was at the time I thought little of forking over some 1,250 pounds sterling so he could procure a Rebuilder model 2407 for my cure based on his recommendation and our mutual curiosity.I read all of Rebuilder’s adverts and counted myself as a true believer before the products even arrived. It all made so much sense.Once in my possession I faithfully followed Rebuilder’s prescribed treatment for over a year, including a course with electrotherapy sox and another with the foot bath. I purchased and tried most of the Rebuilder accessory gadgets and concoctions during this time as well. The result of this effort was nothing more than occasionally scaled feet and a much lightened wallet. As a matter of fact, if anything, the tingling in my feet was intensified by the 2407.Finally I came to the realization that I’d been fully soaked by Rebuilder. I’d been rendered a lemming by their clever marketing and where the placebo effect created by the marketing seems to work for some customers, I found my neuropathy feeling no better at all for the great expense and effort.As a way of releasing my anger and depression, and also to prove to myself that I was still something more than a total idiot, I decided to tear the 2407 device apart to see what was really inside. Mind you I gave 25 years to a subsidiary of Rolls Royce in avionics and electrical engineering, so there’s not much electrical in a simple TENS machine that can surprise me.So what does an engineer find under the hood of the much ballyhooed Rebuilder device? There was no magical jinni and no neuropathy supercomputer, and not even a special top secret US-patent-protected software program that can determine the vague parameters of your nervous system so the proper nerve –repairing signal can be supplied. No, none of these special characteristics that Rebuilder so resolutely and adamantly promotes were found. Nothing even capable of performing the advertised feats even exists on the circuit board.It was all obvious within a few seconds of pulling the cover off. The ghastly truth was that the 2407 was made of cheap Chinese crap componentry same as any others TENS device you can purchase straightaway from Amazon right this moment for bargain basement prices.But I didn’t stop there. I hooked the device up to a real super computer and every testing device known to the field and again found not a hint of the incredible characteristics the adverts tout with such confidence. They don’t exist.At this point I began to feel serious pangs of separation from the money I’d thoughtlessly plunked down. How much had Rebuilder company taken me for anyhow?To find out, I had a colleague in sourcing spec the componentry and send it to a manufacturing agent in Malaysia. Within a week he was able to find three Asian factories that could produce an exact replica of the 2407’s gut, in a more up-to-date plastic case, for under 15 dollars US per copy if a minimum of 1,000 were ordered.So in answer the rhetorical questions posed by the gentlemen in the Rebuilder “review” here, Rebuilder’s products do indeed cost considerably more than all others for a reason. The reason is greed.Do your own research indeed. I won’t go as far as to say that a Rebuilder device won’t somehow help your neuropathy. It may well, and good for you if it does. But if you’re a sucker like me who is easily parted with his cash, go for a Rebuilder and wait to have a good laugh when your pockets have been fleeced. But if you want to improve your neuropathic condition and do it on the cheap by comparison, you’d be a fool to pass up the Ultima Neuro. It works without the hype and deception and without raping the wallet.Over the last decade the feeling in my feet has degraded to the degree that my toes are generally completely numb except for the joyous times when it feels like my feet caught on fire and I tried to put the fire out with an icepick. The rear portions of my feet feel like random chunks of leather have been glued to them, resulting in various levels of feeling. Add to that an injury that I suffered years ago where I tore connecting tissue and muscle in the sole of my left foot and you can see where this is going. I work on my feet in an industrial situation and I'm a few years away from retiring and my feet are going out on me. I was on anti-inflammatory medication for years for the foot injury, which resulted in my esophagus developing an ulcer and I had to find relief without making things worse. I found relief in acupuncture but my insurance doesn't pay for it so I've been doling out cash for a few years for needles, moxibustion, and TENS treatments and dealing with getting to the acupuncturist on my odd work schedule. Enter the Ultima Neuro.My Ultima Neuro is worth more than it's weight in gold. I've only had mine for a short time but I can not only FEEL the difference my my pain levels, but the sensation of numbness is actually diminishing. In fact, the level of relief was so immediate that I purchased several other products from the Conductive Therapy Shop straight away. Each and every time that I use my Ultima Neuro I'm thankful for the relief AND I'm counting the savings over forking over loot for acupuncture treatments.The quality of the Ultima Neuro is awesome. Before I purchased my unit I contacted the Conductive Therapy Shop to see if the battery was user replaceable (which it is) and the help that I received was a deciding factor in my purchase. Everything that I have purchased from the Conductive Therapy Shop arrives at my door in excellent shape and gets here so fast that it seems like they shipped before I ordered.I literally checked out every single TENS unit that I could find on the internet and some that are touted as being set up specifically for peripheral neuropathy cost a bundle. You could literally buy one Ultima Neuro for each day of the week instead of one of the high priced units. On the other hand, the market for TENS units is loaded with absolute junk. The Ultima Neuro is a quality piece of serious equipment and it's at a price point where you will find yourself feeling like it's a double win for you - relief and savings. Add to that the peace of mind you get from dealing with reputable people and there you have the Ultima Neuro offered by the Conductive Therapy Shop.This is the single best purchase I've made in years. My feet feel great.