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Tue, 11 Feb 2003 14:40:00 -0500

HSI Research Team

Head Case

 

HEAD CASE

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

February 11, 2003

 

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Dear Reader,

 

Imagine knowing, without question, that you're ill, but your

doctor tells you " it's all in your head. " Your muscles and

joints ache throughout your body, you have trouble sleeping,

which leads to chronic fatigue, physical weakness, and

ultimately to a sense of hopelessness. For many years, this

was the dilemma of those with fibromyalgia (FMS) - a disease

that even today remains difficult for many physicians to

diagnose.

 

Thanks to a wide range of research over the past decade,

those who suffer from FMS have been given new hope as well as

more effective treatment options. And now, a new study may

revolutionize how the disorder is diagnosed, bringing with it

a sense of vindication to any FMS patient whose doctor ever

implied that their debilitating health problems were

imagined.

 

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Proving the pain

-----------------------------

 

Ironically, the key to this new FMS diagnosis technique

actually IS in the head - or, more specifically, the brain.

In an interview with Ivanhoe Newswire released this week,

rheumatologist Daniel Clauw, M.D., of the University of

Michigan, tells how he studied the blood flow in the brains

of FMS patients, compared with the brain blood flow of

healthy subjects.

 

Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), Dr. Clauw observed

that the area of the brain that registers pain showed an

increase of blood flow when FMS patients were given a low-

pressure stimulus. The identical stimulus showed no change in

the brains of control group subjects. But when a more intense

stimulus was administered to the control group, the blood

flow increased in the same way as it had when the FMS group

received the low-pressure stimulus. Dr. Clauw says his

research finally offers visual proof that FMS patients

experience hypersensitivity in the pain processing areas of

their brains.

 

This possible breakthrough in the diagnosis of FMS is much-

needed and long overdue. In the interview, Dr. Clauw notes

that it's typical for FMS patients to be examined by a number

of different doctors before the accurate diagnosis of

fibromyalgia is made. Nevertheless, Dr. Clauw points out that

his research may not lead to a widespread use of his MRI

technique - and doesn't necessarily need to. Now that he's

demonstrated that FMS patients are experiencing genuine pain,

he feels it's enough for doctors to simply listen to their

patients. As he puts it, " When they tell you they're tender,

they're tender. "

 

-----------------------------

Borrowing from motherhood

-----------------------------

 

After a fibromyalgia diagnosis is made, the question of

treatment is almost as problematic as recognizing the

disorder. How do you treat aching and burning sensations that

may vary in location and intensity from day to day?

Inevitably, many attempts to manage the disease have only

masked the symptoms with prescription drugs and Nonsteroidal

Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDS).

 

At HSI we've written many times about the special challenges

of treating fibromyalgia. In an e-Alert we sent you last

spring ( " The Last Sighting " 4/16/02), we told you about an

FMS treatment called relaxin. This naturally occurring

hormone is best known for its role during pregnancy. Since

the 1930s, scientists have been aware of how relaxin softens

the tissues of the birth canal, promotes cell proliferation

to help the uterus grow, and allows ligaments and other

connective tissues to elongate. Relaxin transforms the

pregnant woman's body to accommodate its changing needs.

 

After realizing that women typically experience relief from

fibromyalgia and other pain disorders during pregnancy,

scientists hypothesized that the relaxin hormone may be

responsible, since its production quadruples during

pregnancy. To test the theory, they began using it to treat

patients suffering from FMS.

 

Patients treated with relaxin experienced significant and, in

many cases, immediate relief. Further studies have shown that

it also offers remarkable benefits in fighting age-related

diseases, like osteoporosis, and effectively reduces many of

the physical signs of aging, like dry skin and hair - with no

side effects. And since the relaxin hormone is present in

both sexes, research shows it can help men address pain and

aging disorders, as well.

 

Sky BioHealth Solutions, Inc. have developed an oral form of

relaxin called Vitalaxin, which can be purchased through Dr.

Jonathan Wright's Tahoma Clinic Dispensary, available online

at tahoma-clinic.com.

 

-----------------------------

More options

-----------------------------

 

Another treatment for FMS combines Amazon rainforest herbs

into a formula that has been shown to overcome the

degenerative effects of both fibromyalgia and lupus. I sent

you an e-Alert ( " Lupus Sufferer Feels 'Like a Million Bucks' "

6/19/01) with information about this formula called Myco+,

which is reported to have no side effects and doesn't

interfere with other mainstream treatments for either Lupus

or FMS. You can find out more about Myco+, at the web site

for Raintree Nutrition: rain-tree.com.

 

And finally, in the HSI Members Alert this past December we

told you about a study reported in the British Medical

Journal that showed how more than half the FMS patients in a

group of 66 reduced their symptoms and experienced less

discomfort after a 3-month aerobic exercise program, using a

treadmill or stationary bike for one hour, twice a week.

 

In the U.S. alone there are some 8 million people who suffer

from fibromyalgia. Most of them are women, and most of them

will experience their symptoms later in life. But unlike FMS

patients that have gone before them, those being diagnosed

today have a number of effective treatments to choose from,

as well as the knowledge that their disorder has come a long

way in finally achieving the proper respect of the medical

establishment.

 

**************************************************************

 

....and another thing

 

It's been awhile since I've come across any breaking news

regarding the European Union Directive on Dietary

Supplements, which I told you about last September ( " World

Domination - Parts I & II " 9/16, 9/17/02).

 

Recently, however, I saw an item about a report in the

Financial Times of London, stating that the European

Commission has proposed a new regulation to forbid supplement

and food manufacturers from making claims that their products

will improve health.

 

A spokesman for CIAA, an organization that represents food

and drink companies throughout Europe, complained that the

proposed regulation is unfair, stating that companies should

be able to make such claims, " if there is scientific evidence

and proof. "

 

This is a good indication of just how thoroughly restrictive

the European Union plans to be with their regulation of

vitamins, herbs and other dietary supplements.

 

Can you imagine if the EU were to apply this arbitrary and

heavy-handed regulatory style to other areas of commerce?

We'd see directives forbidding manufacturers from claiming

that waffle makers make waffles or that cars can transport

you from place to place.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

 

Sources:

" Validating Fibromyalgia: Behind the Pain -- Full-Length

Doctor's Interview " Ivanhoe Broadcast News, 2/10/03

" Brain Tests Confirm Fibromyalgia Patients Feel Pain " Ivanhoe

Broadcast News, 2/6/03

" Validating Fibromyalgia Part 1: Behind the Pain " Ivanhoe

Newswire, 2/3/03

" Validating Fibromyalgia Part 2: More Than Growing Pains "

Ivanhoe Newswire, 2/3/03

" EU to Ban Food Claims " Honor Mahony, Euobserver, 1/31/03

 

Copyright ©1997-2003 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C.

The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without

written permission.

 

**************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request, please

click here http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.html

 

**************************************************************

**************************************************************

If you'd like to participate in the HSI Forum, search past

e-Alerts and products or you're an HSI member and would like

to search past articles, visit http://www.hsibaltimore.com

 

**************************************************************

To learn more about HSI, call (508) 368-7494 or visit

http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/HSI/WHSIC313/home.cfm.

 

**************************************************************

 

 

Gettingwell- / Vitamins, Herbs, Aminos, etc.

 

To , e-mail to: Gettingwell-

Or, go to our group site: Gettingwell

 

 

 

 

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