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Cystitis Patients Needn't Cry

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Cystitis Patients Needn't Cry

By: William Wong ND, PhD, Member World Sports Medicine Hall of Fame

_http://www.totalityofbeing.com/FramelessPages/Articles/Cystitis.htm_

(http://www.totalityofbeing.com/FramelessPages/Articles/Cystitis.htm)

 

Up to recent years there was no hope of recovery for the pain and

incapacitation of Interstitial Cystitis (IC). For those not familiar with IC

it’s

almost exclusively a woman’s disease. It starts with a bladder infection

which in

and of itself is dreadfully painful. The infection may become “sub

clinicalâ€

in other words you think it’s gone but it has really just been weakened but

is still hanging around. The infection can travel to the kidneys, it can

burrow deep into the lining of the bladder eating away at the deep tissues. The

low level infection causes inflammation which itself creates fibrosis.

Inflammation is the reason for 95% of all pain.

Where do these bladder infections start, usually in infancy or early

childhood from wiping in the wrong direction. Wrong direction? Men may ask this

and

even some gals don’t know that girls and women are supposed to wipe the back

sides from front to back. Wiping from back to front can bring bacteria from

the anus or the fecal material being wiped and introduce it into the urethra

(urinary tube) where the bugs can crawl up into the bladder and kidneys

producing painful infections. With babies, they have no way to tell mom and dad

that they have a bladder infection so the infection usually grows deep and

stays

getting better and worse on and off for years. By the time these infections

are found they usually have dug deeply into the walls of the bladder

creating damage and scar tissue from the damage.

Another common way of getting a bladder infection is lack of hygiene. Any

woman who gets a bladder infection after sexual intercourse had better take

herself and her lover into the shower before having sex from now on and make

sure both their crotches and back sides are clean and sparkly. The pelvic

contact and grinding during intercourse is a perfect way of pushing bacteria up

a

woman's urethra. Not that men can’t get bladder infections but the bugs have

a

much longer way to travel and they usually get flushed out by the urine

before they get to the bladder. Which brings me to another step in the

prevention

of bladder infections, go take a pee after each bout of intercourse!

But back to IC. Dr. April Hernandez of Atlanta, Georgia recommended a

natural treatment plan for an IC patient in her old hometown of Toronto and

then

followed the results that patient had. In an extensive case history on the

project Dr. Hernandez relates that the patient she followed began having

trouble

after the birth of her second child and had suffered with IC for the 5 years

previous. She had a catheter inserted after giving birth in order to be able

to urinate and due to short staffing in the hospital the urine bag was not

changed frequently and it would often be left in while full causing the urine

to back up into the bladder. In patients whose bags are frequently changed

bacterial infections are a concern.

At first the patient thought the pain in her sides was normal, due to an

inexperienced doc attending her, the signs of a kidney infection were

misdiagnosed as toxic shock. When another physician checked for kidney stones

the

kidney infection was found. The infection ran the length of the urinary tract

and

soon settled into the bladder and after some time the doctor diagnosed IC.

The patients pain was intense and dominated her life to the point where she

and her husband had not engaged in sexual relations in over a year, and this

had drawn the couple apart. She also avoided contact with friends and was

becoming reclusive. Her immune system had been run down by the lingering

infection and seasonal colds took their toll. Exercise with the pain she had

was out

of the question. Dr. Hernandez, familiar with European studies on their

systemic enzyme blends against IC, convinced the patient to use the systemic

enzymes which have been noted in research against the inflammation, tissue

damage

and scar tissue of her IC. .

Within days of beginning the systemic enzyme therapy, the patient had a

reduction in her pain. Lessening more and more as the weeks progressed. The

mucous coating of the urinary bladder became more ‘flexible’, the layers of

mucosa were healing and the patient was capable of holding a greater volume of

urine. This demonstrated that the mucosa had healed to the point of producing

the mucous needed to protect the lining of the organ from the acid of the

urine. The acidic urine could no longer infiltrate into the underlying muscle

and

irritate the sensory nerve endings (the mechanism of pain in IC).

After close to two years on systemic enzyme therapy, Dr. Hernandez reports

the patient is still mostly pain free and fully functional. Her urinary

processes are normal, though the infection of IC remains. The immune system has

strengthened to the point where winter colds are no longer a concern and she

credits the systemic enzymes for saving her marriage.

Interstitial Cystitis patients are given no hope of relief by conventional

therapy. No hope to ease the pain, no hope for normal urinary function, no

hope for a normal “everyday†life. Pain will be their lot until the day

they

die, and before that disappointment will ruin a good bit of their lives.

Systemic enzymes can now provide hope. With over 5 decades of medical use in

Central Europe and Japan and over 200 peer reviewed studies, the mechanism of

action of the proteolytic enzymes as therapeutic agents is well understood.

And,

this mechanism of action fits well with the needs to protect and heal tissue,

reduce inflammation and lyse away at fibrosis as is needed by chronic UTI's

and IC patients.

 

Resources:

Dr. Hernandez can be contacted at dr.april

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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