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EXCELLENT article by Dr. Ali by Tim 29 d R & N Printer-Friendly

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EXCELLENT article by Dr. Ali

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22:01 Apr 20 2003 (29 d) R & N Recommended Message!

 

 

AN UNDERSTANDING OF ENERGETIC-MOLECULAR MEDICINE:

Nutritional Medicine, Environmental Medicine, Medicine of Self-

Regulation, and Medicine of Fitness

 

by Majid Ali, M.D.

 

EM medicine is founded on events that occur in molecules (and cells

and tissues) before they are injured and changed, and not on the

study of how dead and decaying cells and tissues look under the

microscope after they have been damaged by a disease.

EM medicine has four faces: nutritional medicine, environmental

medicine, medicine of self-regulation, and medicine of fitness.

Rudolph Vichow, the father of modern pathology, published Cellular

Pathology in 1858 and liberated us from the restrictive tenets of

gross pathology of medieval and ancient times. Cellular pathology, of

course, gives us windows to injured tissues and cells after the fact.

Now, knowledge of energetic-molecular dynamics of health and disease

allows us to move beyond where Virchow could take us with his

microscope.

While acute illness is likely to remain a preserve of safe surgery

and potent drugs, chronic illness is rapidly becoming a province of

EM medicine. Drug medicine may well fall to nutritional and

environmental medicines, and " limbic " fitness may soon prevail over

current technology-oriented regimens. In fact, self-regulation may

soon move from the field of mysticism to the domain of science.

Indeed, we are moving toward the moment when the physician becomes a

tutor and the patient a pupil.

All diseases are caused by accelerated oxidant stress. This may

strike many as improbable, perhaps even as a nonsensical

simplification of complex issues, but I have sound reasons for

proposing this unifying theory of disease causation. Spontaneity of

Oxidation is the Root Cause of All Diseases. Increased oxidant stress

on human biology is caused by factors in our internal and external

environments. Chronic disease results from impairment in antioxidant

defenses related to poor nutrition or excessive oxidant stress

brought about by allergy, chemical sensitivity, environmental toxins,

lifestyle stress and poor physical fitness. susceptibility to

recurring viral, bacterial and fungal infections, and parasitic

infestation of the bowel develops when an individual's antioxidant

and, at later stages, immune defenses are damaged by one or more of

the above elements. Drugs are not an acceptable answer to these

problems. antibiotics, while essential for life-threatening

infections, seriously damage bowel ecosystems and impair human

defenses in many different ways.

How is health defined in drug medicine? It isn't. The subject of

what health is and what it may not be is scrupulously avoided in our

medical schools, hospitals and physician offices. We glibly dismiss

any reference t it by mumbling something unintelligible about

physical, mental and emotional aspects.

But what are the physical attributes of health? How do we define

mental health? What is emotional wholesomeness? I have attended tens

of thousands of medical lectures since I entered King Edward Medical

College, Lahore, Pakistan in 1958. I do not recall ever hearing

anyone answer these questions with any sincerity of purpose. Why? I

myself never once reflected on this question in the over 25 years

that I worked as a disease doctor of drug medicine. I faced this

problem only when my interest shifted from disease to health. I

rendered my definition of what health is and what it isn't in the

companion volume The Butterfly and Life Span Nutrition. Here, I

briefly define health again.

 

Health is being spiritual without any need to analyze what

spirituality might be.

Health is waking up in the morning with a deep sense of gratitude.

Gratitude not for any accomplishment of the day before or for

accumulations of yesteryears, but for simply being. An ENT surgeon

from Greece recently attended my lecture at the meeting of the

American Academy of Otolaryngic Allergy and expressed

frustration, " But this is utterly new to my Greek thought. " If the

concept of gratitude for simply being is foreign to us, we simply

need to learn about it.

Health is waking up with a sense of energy, going through a day's

work with that sense of energy and returning to bed at night with it.

Health is as much energy before meals as it is after it.

Health is the ability to treasure personal time in silence with

family or friends or alone.

Health is two or three effortless, odorless bowel movements a day

without mucus and cramps.

Health is living, dynamic and vigorous bowel, blood and cellular

ecosystems.

Health is an intact and functioning gateway of life, cell membranes

that mark the boundaries of life within the cell and that which

exists outside it in the blood. Cell membrane separates internal

order of a cell from external disorder. It is a living, breathing,

spongy and porous sheet that regulates the two-way energetic-

molecular traffic between cells and the soup of life that bathes them.

The last two elements of my definition of health may seem tedious

to some readers. Here, I wish to make a crucial point:

 

The essence of energetic-molecular medicine is to seek a genuine

understanding of the dynamics of cell membrane, and to reverse

chronic disease and promote health with natural, non-drug therapies

that revive injured bowel, blood and cellular ecosystems.

 

It is not uncommon for me to see drug doctors insult holistic

physicians because they use " unscientific " methods. The truth is that

it is a more scientific to base our restorative therapies for chronic

disease on a genuine understanding of bowel, blood and cellular

ecosystems than mere symptom suppression with drugs that blockade

normal physiologic processes. Drug therapies for chronic disease as

necessary as they might be for symptom suppression do not constitute

restorative approaches.

 

WHAT HEALTH IS NOT

 

And now what health is not. Health is not mere absence of disease.

Health has nothing to do with the frivolous notions of RDA and

balanced diets of our nutrition experts. Health is not the euphoria

of eating nor is it the denial of dieting. health is not

preoccupation with recycling past miseries nor is it pre-cycling

feared, future misery. Health is not living with regrets nor is it

obsession with control in life.

I return to the question that I raised before submitting my

definition of health: Why do disease doctors of drug medicine shun

the subject of health? The answer is really quite simple: None of the

issues of health I define above can be addressed with drugs.

 

ONE MISSION

 

A physician has but one mission:

to alleviate suffering by reversing disease and promoting health.

 

It is a sad comment on contemporary medicine in the U.S. that is

neither committed to reversing disease nor to promoting health.

Disease can be reversed only by addressing the initial energetic-

molecular events that separate a state of health from a state of

absence of health, the in between state of absence of health. Drugs

can neither reverse disease nor promote health not withstanding their

essential role in saving lives in acute, life-threatening conditions

and in symptom suppression in chronic disease.

The twin goals of reversing disease and promoting health require

nutritional, environmental, self-regulatory and fitness therapies.

Who is a better judge of whether a therapy works or not, a physician

or a patient? Since antiquity, physicians have vigorously excluded

the patient from judging whether the therapy used was effective or

not. Even to date, the dogma of disease doctors of drug medicine

flatly denies that the patient's subjective sense about the clinical

efficacy, or lack of it, has any true role in research in drug

therapies. In higher orbits of power where drug medicine sets its

policies and procedures, patient's subjective evaluations are

dismissed as soft data. the few physicians who do bring this subject

up are regarded condescendingly not outright ridiculed.

In acute illness, indeed, the experienced patient is in a better

position to be judge. The patient's judgment is often clouded by

intense suffering, impaired intellectual function, and fear of death.

But does that hold for chronic illness? The best of physicians can

only bring to his patient only his knowledge and experience. One

thing he can never do is become a patient. No amount of empathy,

training, or encounters with suffering of other patients can allow

the physician to feel the pain of his patient. No sensory perceptions

no matter how sharply honed can allow a physician to know the

suffering of his patient. We still have not invented any " pain-o-

meter " that can precisely measure the degree of pain. How does an

orthopedic surgeon quantify a patient's pain? He can graph out the

muscle spasm with an electromyography equipment. But can he measure

the magnitude of suffering inflicted by a persistent spasm of the

neck muscles? How can a physician truly judge the level of fatigue of

his patient as he leaves his bed? Or his sense of dismay as therapies

fail, and promises do not hold up?

On a more mundane level, how can a physician judge better than the

patient what dose of an herb gives him better sleep? Or what

frequency of allergy injections give him the best relief? Or how

often he needs extra support of oral or injectable nutrients to

prevent the relapse of chronic fatigue?

In chronic illness, the patient is in a far better position to

assess the outcome of a given therapy than the physician. Smart

doctors sharp with their statistics may have trouble with this

viewpoint; wise physicians will not.

As the physician and the patient become more enlightened, the

clinical outcome evaluated by the patient will displace the frivolous

models of double-blin, cross-over drug research that infatuate

disease doctors at present.

 

TWO CORE PROBLEMS OF MEDICINE

 

There are two core problems of medicine today:

 

First, we try to solve 21st-century environmental and nutritional

problems with 19th-century ideas of diseases and drugs.

 

Second, we have raised generations of physicians who know much about

disease but little, if anything, about health. Indeed, the

contemporary medical journals are singularly silent on issues of what

health is, and how it can be fostered. The prevailing dogma of drug

medicine is utterly committed to keeping the sick incarcerated in the

sickness mold.

 

The issue is not whether or not non-drug therapies work for chronic

ecologic, immune and degenerative disorders. They work. Thousands of

physicians have known that for decades. The challenge today is not to

disprove their efficacy; rather, it is to improve the success rate of

such natural therapies with continued innovations, and to document

their efficacy with careful empirical observations.

Instead, the prevailing dogma of drug medicine is committed to

eliminating all non-drug therapies in the United States. Postgraduate

continuing education of American physicians is solidly controlled by

drug companies. During the last 25 years of my work at Holy Name

Hospital in Teaneck, New Jersey, I have attended more than a thousand

formal lectures, mostly by visiting outside speakers (paid for by

drug companies). Except for times when I was asked to substitute for

a speaker who could not speak, and spoke about matters of health,

nutrition and environment, I do not recall a single speaker who

discussed non-drug therapies. (Why would any drug company spend its

money teaching physicians how not to use drugs?)

My friend, Choua, calls the prevailing dogma of drug medicine N2D2

medicine, a medicine in which all concerns, all efforts and all

thinking are directed to naming a disease and then searching for the

right name of a drug. Choua uses the following equation to make this

point:

 

N2D2 Medicine =Name of Disease X Name of Drug

 

The central problem with N2D2 medicine is obvious: Mere names of

diseases do not give us any insights into the energetic-molecular

events that cause the symptoms and create the physical signs by which

we diagnose them. In fact, these disease names hide much from us. The

concept of the drug of choice indoctrinates us to seek chemical

solutions for symptom suppression. The sick pay, an exorbitant price

for our infatuation with N2D2 medicine, that essentially down plays

the importance of nutrition, environment, stress and fitness. Drug

medicine forever keeps the patient focused on disease rather than

directing him to health.

 

THE TYRANNY OF N2D2 MEDICINE

 

And that is not the only problem. Generation upon generation of

physicians believe that the care of the sick without drugs or

scalpels is quackery. They are prejudiced against nutritional and

environmental therapies of which, by their admission, they know

little or nothing about. The very small minority of physicians who

recognize this dilemma and seek non-drug therapies are mercilessly

persecuted by the drug doctors who sit on hospital medical and state

licensing boards.

 

THREE SCIENCES

 

Science is the search for truth. Science is observation of physical

phenomenon. Science is self-correcting.

 

At an elementary level, one can look at science in three ways:

 

Science of observation

 

Science of empiricism

 

Science of controlled and reproducible experiments

 

SCIENCE OF SIMPLE OBSERVATION

 

The first science of simple observation is the purest of all

sciences. It is the science of simple observation. It has no ulterior

motive or hidden agenda except to state what has been observed. Each

month my issues of Nature and Science carry articles written by

physiologists, botanists, zoologists, biologists and paleontologists

who describing their observations about the oxidative stress on

various life forms, alive or long deceased. Sometimes their

observations extend the known knowledge and at other times, they

challenge percepts of old knowledge. When such observations do not

fit into the established body of scientific knowledge, they are not

rejected simply because any high priests of establishment declare

them invalid. The crucial point is this: Their observations stand on

their own merits.

 

SCIENCE OF EMPIRICAL OBSERVATION

 

The second science of empiricism requires that we accept that which

works. Apples fell down from trees long before Newton ever conceived

his ideas of gravitational pull. People empirically knew that apples

fall down and not fly up when they are ripe. Newton questioned why

apples fall down and not move sideways or fly up, and that simple

question led him to propound his laws of gravity.

Folks in Pakistan have known for centuries that curries do not spoil

so readily if they are prepared with tumeric. They accepted this as a

valid empirical observation. Recent studies show that curcumin, the

major yellow pigment in turmeric, is a powerful antioxidant and anti-

inflammatory agent. So now we know how tumeric keeps curry dishes

fresh for many hours.

The East India Company sent four ships to India in its first

expedition in 1600. General Mames Lancaster provided lemon juice in

his ship that remained free of scurvy whereas the other three ships

were badly affected by this disorder. This empirical observation was

made long before vitamin C was discovered.

The ancients knew some remedies worked. Practical men demonstrated

astute powers of empirical observations long before the modern

concepts of science were articulated. They recorded the effects of

many effective remedies after careful, repeated empirical

observations. The Chinese and Indian Ayurvedic herbal medicines

evolved over centuries. To this day, many of their herbal therapies

are used worldwide for billions of people. I use many of them every

working day in my office and validate their science of empiricism.

 

SCIENCE OF CONTROLLED AND REPRODUCIBLE EXPERIMENTS

 

Great Promise lies in what I call energetic-molecular (EM) medicine.

EM medicine is based on a true understanding of the energetic-

molecular events that separate a state of health from a state of

disease.

The explosive growth in physical sciences that we have witnessed

during the last 150 years has occurred largely due to controlled and

reproducible experiments. An understanding of the laws of physics led

to an understanding of energy and of properties of matter. Advances

in analytical methods led to determination of chemical composition of

natural substances, and that paved the way for synthetic chemistry.

Knowledge of biology and chemistry expanded into enzymes and genes.

The field of molecular biology, as its infancy only a couple of

decades ago mushroomed into an al encompassing discipline.

The story on the side of science in medicine, however, is quite

different. Science is vastly misunderstood in medicine.

 

TRAGEDY OF SCIENCE IN MEDICINE

 

Medicine is artful application of the knowledge of biology to he

care of the sick.

Human biology, I wrote in intravenous Nutrient Protocols in

Molecular Medicine, is an ever changing kaleidoscope of molecular

mosaics. Health and disease, at molecular an electron transfer

levels, can be defined as the states created by the impact upon an

individual's genetic make-up of molecules in his internal and

external environments. Health, in this light, can be seen as

molecular dynamics that preserve the structural and functional

integrity of cells, tissues and organs. Disease, by contrast, can be

defined as molecular events that cause cellular tissue and injury.

In biology, I wrote in The Butterfly and Life Span Nutrition, if we

change something in one way, we change everything in some way.

Different biologic burdens affect different people differently.

Diseases change the function and structure of different tissues

differently. Therapies affect different people differently. This must

be accepted as the core philosophy of medicine.

The tragedy of drug medicine in the U.S. is this: Only that

knowledge of biology that serves the drug industry finds its way into

our physician offices, clinics and hospitals. there is little, if

any, support for that knowledge of biology that can help us preserve

health without drugs. In medical schools, there is considerable

emphasis on basic sciences, but, as we all know, young doctors

abandon all interest in basic sciences as soon as they have access to

prescription pads.

Science of medicine vehemently rejects the first two sciences: the

science of observation and the science of empiricism. We physicians

mindlessly prescribe drugs that we know are toxic and, in many cases,

simply do not work. We vigorously call quackery all use of natural

therapies that we know nothing about, and stubbornly refuse to allow

their use even though they have proven to be effective and safe by

centuries of observation and empirical validation.

The science of medicine defines science in medicine only as the

knowledge of drugs that can be proven by its blessed double-blind,

cross-over model of drug research. It clings to this limited, and

entirely unsatisfactory, view of science even as it sees every day

the havoc wreaked by its drugs, after they were proven to be safe and

effective by its double-blin, cross-over drug studies. I return to

this tragedy of science in drug medicine in the chapter Science Has

Not Failed Medicine, Medicine Has Failed Science.

 

FOUR PREDICTIONS

 

I am an optimist. I believe all this will change. Four predictions,

it seems to me, can be safely made about the future of medicine for

the enlightened:

 

First,

 

ecologic, immune, degenerative and stress-related disorders will be

the dominant chronic disorders of the 21st century.

 

Second,

 

these disorders will force the disease doctors of drug medicine to

learn and use non-drug therapies for chronic immune and degenerative

disorders. Patients as well as physicians will clearly see that

problems caused by chemicals cannot be solved with yet more chemicals

(drugs).

 

Third,

 

the emerging energetic-molecular medicine will become

a " participatory " medicine, a medicine in which the patient will

actively guide the physician in energetic molecular restorative work

rather than simply accepting symptom-suppressing drugs.

 

Fourth,

 

self-regulation, and the hope and spirituality that always spring

from it, will become an essential part of the mainstream management

philosophy for all chronic disorders.

 

I do not believe that everyone in medicine will readily see or agree

with my reasons for making these predictions. Some people will always

be content with sheer symptom suppression in disease. There will

always be doctors willing to provide them with the necessary

prescriptions.

These four predictions do not arise from some far-fetched notions of

utopia. Rather, these conclusions seem inescapable to me as I reflect

on the growing pandemic of hyperactivity and attention deficit

disorders in children; chronic, disabling fatigue among previously

active young adults; hormonal dysfunctions among young women; mood,

memory and mentation disorders caused by multiple drug therapies

among the elderly; and an ever widening spectrum of eco-disorders

among people of all ages. No miracles of synthetic chemistry can

reverse these problems. A growing number of people are becoming

enlightened about these core health issues.

 

Five Medicines

 

Medicine began as a sideline of the men of spirits of antiquity. It

slowly changed into medicine of gross organs, a profession in which

therapies were used to approach problems of health as seen with

examination of decaying and dead tissues. In the 18th century, the

invention of the microscope ushered in the third medicine of

histopathology, the microscope now defined diseases. The microscope

also evaluated the efficacy of therapies used to treat those diseases.

Advances in synthetic chemistry brought forth the fourth medicine of

chemistry, a medicine of enzymes, receptors, mediators, cell membrane

channels and genes. The medicine of chemistry saves many lives. It is

clearly at its best when it cares for those near death, the tail-end

medicine as I call it. It also endlessly prolongs the process of

dying for many. This fourth medicine fares poorly when it comes to

preserving health and preventing disease, the front-end medicine in

my order of things.

We now look at the emerging possibility of the fifth energetic-

molecular (EM) medicine, a medicine based on physics of health rather

than on chemistry of disease. Medicine based on physics of health is

the true preventive medicine, focusing on the initial energetic

molecular events that separate a state of health from a state of

absence of health. This book is about this fifth medicine.

 

SIX ASSUMPTIONS

 

The concept of RDA is not a valid concept. Indeed, I have often

wondered how could this frivolous idea have lasted for so long. It

makes six dangerous assumptions:

 

First,

 

it assumes that nutrients are of clinical value only for prevention

of a few deficiency diseases. This assumption is largely based on

statistics obtained with animal experiments. How can the prevention

of deficiency states in rats be equated with optimal metabolic

requirements for health preservation for humans?

 

Second,

 

it assumes that statistics obtained with animal experiments conducted

for brief periods of a few months or a few years can be valid for

human beings for the whole life span. How can rats fed this or that

nutrient for weeks or months from the basis for recommendations for

humans for decades?

 

Third,

 

it assumes that statistics obtained with studies employing processed

and unnatural food items can yield valid guidelines for good health.

The natural order of things requires us to eat what grows where we

live, and what land provides at that time. How can rats fed highly

unnatural and purified foods be accepted as suitable models for

humans?

 

Fourth,

 

it assumes that statistics obtained with studies conducted under

highly controlled environment can produce data that are relevant to

people living under highly polluted and toxic conditions. How can

rats in sanitized laboratory environment be deemed appropriate

surrogates for humans living in totally different ecosystems?

 

Fifth,

 

it assumes that human tissues are immune to the increasing oxidative

stresses that wreak havoc on our land and marine ecosystems. Every

month medical journals publish papers linking degenerative diseases

with functional micronutrient deficiencies, and every month they

report protective effects of such nutrients. Yet, the practitioners

of drug medicine ignore all that evidence and stubbornly cling to

their drug model of disease.

 

Sixth,

 

it assumes that statistics about nutrient deficiency states can be

blindly applied to issues of health and human life span. How can rat

statistics be relevant to humans?

 

This last assumption of RDA that statistics alone can separate truth

from falsehood in medicine clearly is the most pernicious. Medicine

is artful application of knowledge of biology to he care of the sick.

We have a limited understanding of he healing response in man. There

are simply too many variables in the healing phenomena, and medical

statistics are of very little relevance to an individual patient.

The drug medicine compounds the error when it insists on carrying

the silly assumptions of RDA into long-term use of drugs for chronic

disease. Here, drug use statistics play havoc with the reality.

Ironically, drug medicine goes to all lengths to mask, or outright

deny, statistics about drug toxicity as it exaggerates the statistics

about its long term efficacy.

Since I entered medical school in 1958, I have heard great

pronouncements about the miracles of synthetic drugs. As a medical

student and later as a young physicians, I received them with a

certain pride. After all, those were the achievements of my

profession. We had good reasons to celebrate our successes in

treating acute illnesses. But the caring for the chronically sick is

an altogether different matter. Years have sobered me. I include some

excerpts for comic relief.

 

CURING DISEASE WITH SNIPPETS OF DNA

 

Someday, says Anderson, physicians will simply treat patients by

injecting snippets of DNA and send them home cured.

 

Time Magazine, January 17, 1994, page 48

 

Let's see what the record shows.

We do not have a single drug that reverses degenerative disease.

Drugs, as I write earlier, are agents of blockade of natural

physiologic processes. They are not substances that health is made up

of. (EDTA is one of the few exceptions that can reverse coronary

artery disease, but drug medicine is vehemently opposed to its use).

Nutrients facilitate physiologic processes, but their use in clinical

medicine, as we all know sadly, is considered as quackery.

There have been abounding advances in surgery during my life time.

However, surgical removal of diseased organs, as life-saving as it

may be, clearly does not reverse any degenerative disorder. Surgical

intervention by itself never promotes the essential regenerative

processes that maintain health. There have been great advances in

synthetic chemistry. Antibiotics are designer killer molecules that,

as life-saving as they may be at times, do not reverse any

degenerative diseases. Antiinflammatory agents, as valuable as they

may be for symptom suppression, can never facilitate the healing

response. How can they? Inflammation is the essential phenomenon that

sets the state for repair response. Thus, the drugs that suppresses

inflammation cannot promote the healing response. Steroids suppress

the immune and healing responses.

 

HOPE IN THE WAR AGAINST CANCER

 

It begins as a single cell and grows into a merciless disease that

claims more than half a million Americans a year. But scientists are

steadily unlocking its mysteries, and the fight against it may now

have reached a turning point. New discoveries promise better

therapies and hope in the war against cancer.

Time Magazine, April 25, 1994

 

Time sees much hope in the grand proclamations of the cancer

industry in the United States. I don't. Such assumptions of drug

medicine forever amuse me. Let's see if the New England Journal of

Medicine shares the hopes of Time magazine.

 

WE ARE LOSING WAR AGAINST CANCER

 

We assessed the overall progress against cancer during the years 1950

to 1982. In the United States, these years were associated with

increases in the number of deaths from cancer, in the crude cancer-

related mortality rate, in the age adjusted mortality rate, and in

both the crude and the age-adjusted incidence rates...we are losing

the war against cancer...A shift in research emphasis, from research

on treatment to research on prevention, seems necessary if

substantial progress against cancer is to be forthcoming.

 

New England Journal of Medicine 314:1226; 1986

 

The Journal is right on target. The war on cancer will not be won if

we commit all our resources to destroying our antioxidant and immune

defenses with more and more toxic chemotherapy drugs.

Cancer is reversible, at least in its early stages. But if we were

to seriously pursue this, we will face a serious problem: the most

powerful of all RDA assumptions, the notion of irreversibility. Our

entire cancer industry is built on the assumption that cancer is

irreversible. Much too much money is riding on this notion for it to

be allowed to go down.

 

ATTRACTIVENESS OF GLOOM

 

Because life expectancy is constantly going up, and we may well cure

cancer and heart disease in the near future, doesn't all else matter

little if we are increasingly healthy?

Science 255:265; 1992

 

Science is out to dispel gloom. It entitled the editorial from which

the above excerpt is drawn Attractiveness of Gloom. It doesn't much

reason for gloom on the present scene. It has infinite faith in its

capacity for solving all mankind's problems by miracles of synthetic

chemistry.

 

CURING HEART DISEASE! WOW!

 

How does science propose to cure heart disease? With coronary bypass

surgery? With angioplasty? With drugs? On what basis does Science

make its pronouncement? Does Science have any data that supports its

conclusions? If so, why does it hide it from us?

The Science editorial, of course, addresses the issue in a humorous

dialogue with one Mr. Know-it-all. Science has not failed medicine, I

write earlier. Medicine has failed science. The problem of heart

disease, indeed, can be addressed effectively.

Heart disease is a reversible. It is a correctable oxidative-

metabolic disorder, and not a mere plumbing problem as our cardiac

surgeons and " angioplasterers " insist. Science has given us molecules

such as EDTA, vitamin C, taurine, glutathione, N-acetyl cysteine that

can reverse coronary artery disease. But if we were to pursue this

matter seriously, we will face a serious problem: the RDA

assumptions, the notion of irreversibility.

 

DRUGS FOR MORAL JUDGMENT

 

Drugs to improve moral conduct! And why not? We use drugs to solve

all other problems. Why not solve the problem of immorality in

society with drugs? Why single out morality as a domain beyond drugs?

Why not enforce morality on the recalcitrant with " morality-

restoring " drugs? A preposterous idea? Not really. At least Time

magazine doesn't think there is anything wrong with it. Consider the

following:

 

If moral judgment can be broken, surely the next step is to fix

it. 'If the abnormality is in a discrete part of the brain that uses

a specific neurotransmitter, we can develop a drug treatment,'

suggests Dr. Snyder.

Time Magazine, July 11, 1994

 

Long live synthetic chemistry!

 

Long live our drug!

 

SEVEN INSIGHTS

 

During the last several years of my research and clinical work, one

or more events gave me some essential insights into the health-

disease dynamics for me. Seven such insights have dominated my

thinking and clinical management of my patients. Each of these

insight challenges a prevailing viewpoint on the pathologic basis of

disease and the best ways of managing the clinical disorders they

caused. These insights have also influenced my thinking in areas that

at first glance appear unrelated to the disease in question. I now

base all my EM medicine therapies on these seven issues, especially

with regard to immune, metabolic and degenerative disorders. A

discussion of each of the seven insights listed below follows.

 

1. Absence of disease is not always presence of health.

 

2. Spontaneity of oxidation in nature is the essential nature of the

aging process in man and is the root cause of all diseases.

 

3. Healing is a natural state of energy in tissue.

 

4. Genes legislate life; the environment interprets the laws set

forth by genes.

 

5. The bowel and the blood are open ecosystems.

 

6. Mind-over-body healing does not work; healing is not an

intellectual function. Energy-over-mind healing works.

 

7. For chronic diseases, EM medicine will eventually displace the

prevailing drug medicine as the proper approach to caring for the

sick.

 

These seven insights were gifts to me from people who asked me to

care for them in times of illness. Some evolved slowly after spending

long hours listening to my patients describe their suffering and

peering at injured tissues through my microscope in search of some

answers. Still others hit me like lightening. I have vigorously

tested each of them in various clinical settings. All my ways of

caring for the sick are based on them. These illuminations have given

rise to the different EM medicine that I describe in this and

companion volumes.

 

Many of the precepts of EM medicine have been considered and tested

by some of my colleagues in nutritional and environmental medicines.

I hope the clinical therapies that arise from these insights, and the

scientific principles on which they rest, will be considered by

others, and validated, modified or refuted, in the best tradition of

science.

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