Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Multiple Sclerosis

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

http://www.doctoryourself.com/calcdef.html

 

Jane was 24, and had always been in good overall health. She was lactose

intolerant, or at least sensitive enough to dairy products that she didn't eat

them. She had a two year old running around and had just had her second baby.

And she was terrified.

 

" I was told I have MS., " she said. Imagine hearing that, at her age, with two

babies no less.

" I've been having numbness in some of my fingers. My muscles will twitch and I

get these weird feelings in my face. My GP told me that it might just be

calcium deficiency, since I don't eat dairy products and have formed and nursed

two children. So he gave me a calcium supplement to take. "

" And? " I asked.

" It didn't seem to help, so he sent me to a neurologist. The neurologist heard

the symptoms and then and there said that I have multiple sclerosis. "

I could see her eyes reddening and some tears forming.

" What am I going to do? What will happen to my kids? Can you do anything for

me? " she said.

Now there's three good questions. I wasn't sure about any of them, but like a

good one-trick pony, I began with what I always say.

" It can't hurt to take a look and see, " I said. " Now what about that calcium

supplement? How much are you taking? "

" About 1,000 milligrams a day, " she answered. " I have the bottle with me. "

That amount is close to the RDA, and actually exceeds it if you allow for some

calcium in her foods. It was time to open my paisley bag, so to speak, and try

to overturn Murphy's Law. I read the entire label.

" OK, how many of these tablets do you take each day? " I asked.

" Three, " Jane said.

" Well, to begin with, the label says that it takes six tablets to make1,200

milligrams. You are getting 600 milligrams. "

" Mmm, " she said.

" On top of that, you'd think that each tablet therefore supplies 200 milligrams

of calcium but it doesn't. This is a calcium chelate, which is a good form to

take all right, but in this instance they weighed the entire compound, not just

the calcium it gives you. That's sort of like weighing the corn, the water and

the can. We want just the net weight. It is called the weight of elemental

calcium in this case. That's only about a quarter of the label claim. "

" Isn't that misleading people? " she wondered.

" Perhaps, but the consumer always has to read all the label, especially the

side part with the smaller numbers. This section, right here, " I said, pointing

it out on the bottle.

" You can't just go by the front label. It's the same with anything you buy: a

car, a service contract, Twinkies; you have to read the fine print. "

" So I need more, " she said.

" Maybe, yes. And there is little harm, if any, in trying more. Nobody dies of

calcium overdose. "

" What about stones: gallstones, kidney stones, like that? " she asked.

" Gallstones are cholesterol stones and have nothing to do with calcium. Kidney

stones are caused by a deficiency of calcium, not an excess. Most nutrition

texts still get that one wrong, but they'll come around eventually. Excess

calcium is simply not absorbed. And you are certainly not getting an excess. "

" How much was I getting? " she said.

" Let's see: each tablet provided about 50 milligrams of actual elemental

calcium, and you were taking three. A hundred and fifty milligrams; not nearly

enough to make a difference. You'd probably want to try a whole lot more, and

this will sound kind of silly. With these tablets, we're talking at least

twenty. "

" A day? " she exclaimed. " Twenty calcium tablets a day?

" Well, yes. That would give you about 1,000 milligrams, plus what you might

pick up in your diet from green leafy vegetables, beans, tofu, sardine bones,

whatever. That's not even a megadose. Several thousand milligrams of calcium

have been given, and very safely too, in some studies. The biggest side effect

of three thousand milligrams a day appears to be less colon cancer. "

" Less colon cancer? That's not much of a problem, " she said.

" You will also want to divide the dose. Your body absorbs calcium passively,

and can't take in much at any one time. Take it all through the day, as often

as humanly possible. Its a nuisance, I know, but you'll get more for your

money. "

So off she went, with equal parts hope and skepticism.

A little over two weeks later I heard from Jane again.

" They're gone! " she said. " My symptoms are gone! " What a happy voice on the

phone that was, let me tell you. " The neurologist was wrong: it wasn't MS. at

all! "

I silently thought to myself, what a moron that " specialist " was, who had to be

so fast with the big diagnosis. Even if a patient clearly did have MS. you'd

want to break the news a hell of a lot more gently than he did. But he never

did any tests. The GP was smarter: he at least considered the less spectacular,

less traumatic, and more likely possibility that her diet had something to do

with it. His only mistake was not having sufficient nutrition experience to

know how to tailor the dose to deliver the calcium Jane's body was really

demanding.

Americans generally do what their doctor tells them without many questions. I

suggest they question their doctor extensively, and not necessarily do what he

says. Then consult a quack for a really different second opinion.

And if someone truly does have multiple sclerosis? The answer is, and it is a

remarkably good answer, follow the MS protocol of Frederick Robert Klenner, MD

as described in Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C, edited by Lendon Smith,

MD. Far from just considering vitamin C, this book urges and lists a

comprehensive therapeutic program using a large variety of nutrients in large

quantity.

Why a large variety of nutrients? Because there is no such thing as

monotherapy with nutrition. " One drug, one disease " is a failed legend of the

drug doctor. People often ask me, " What is this vitamin good for? " My answer

is, " Everything. " They give me " the look, " but it's true nevertheless. All

vitamins are important. Which wheel on your car can you do without? Which wing

on an airplane can you afford to leave behind?

Why large quantities of nutrients? Because that's what does the job. You don't

take the amount that you think should work; you take the amount that gets

results. The first rule of building a brick wall is that you have got to have

enough bricks. A sick body has exaggeratedly high needs for many vitamins. You

can either meet that need, or whine about why you didn't.

But why try to cure with nutrition? Well, why not? Must a cure be medical for

it to be any good? There is no medical cure for MS; if there were, you would

have heard about it. I say, if one doctor's black bag is empty it does not

necessarily follow that all other doctors' black bags are. Go where you can get

the outcome you need. The first rule of fishing is to put your hook in the

water, for that is where the fish are.

I've just given you your first semester's education in quackery. People go to

quacks not because they are stupid, but because nothing else worked and

counterculture healing often does. And, despite the huge shadow of monopolistic

medicine, the cartel comprising pharmacy, government, hospitals, insurance and

health education, we still live in a more or less free-market economy. Honest

businesses that don't provide good return to the consumer fail, unless political

influence subsidizes them (which explains the continued existence of the medical

and dietetic professions). This is America, and you have the right to remain

sick.

So when I tell you that Frederick Robert Klenner, MD was curing multiple

sclerosis back in the 1950's and '60's, you would not easily believe me. And

who in their right mind would? A MS patient in a wheelchair, perhaps. Like the

one who was wheeled into my office one day by his private RN.

I shared the details of Dr. Klenner's protocol with them. They went home and

did it. It worked. In little over two weeks, the man was out of his

wheelchair, walking with a walker or cane. It was beautiful to see.

What did they do? Read the Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C and you will

find out precisely what they did. Why did it work? Because Dr. Klenner's

experience in treating MS taught him to understand it as a vitamin deficiency

disease.

Let's consider just one lone nutrient, thiamin, vitamin B-1 and one oddball

disease, beriberi. Beriberi has been a problem for centuries in impoverished

countries. It is a disease of the peripheral nervous system. Beriberi, a

description of nutritional exhaustion, literally means " I can't, I can't. " It

results in pain (neuritis) and paralysis, swelling and anemia, decreased liver

function and wasting away. Note, please, the wide variety of symptoms.

No drug on earth, then or now, can cure it. Then and now, it was known to have

something to do with poor diet. But the question for centuries was, what

exactly causes it?

In 1897, a prison doctor named Eijkman first cured beriberi. Many of his

prisoners had the disease. They were fed a diet of primarily polished (milled

or white) rice, the stuff Americans eat to this day. Eijkman fed the prison

diet to pigeons and observed them to have the same beriberi symptoms. He then

fed the sick pigeons unmilled natural (brown) rice. The birds were cured. He

tried whole brown rice on the prisoners, and they were cured. Completely. No

drug had done that; it took brown rice, and something special in that

unprocessed rice.

In 1911, Casmir Funk, a Polish chemist living in London would discover that

special something in the outer, usually wasted rice hulls. Because it was a

nitrogen compound, he labeled it an amine. Because it was vital to health, it

was a vital amine, or vitamine, or vitamin. (Incidentally, vitamine is the

English and Australian pronunciation to this day.) The name stuck and became

generic, like Kleenex.

Between 1909 and 1916, the Philippines-based American R. R. Williams began

curing beriberi in young children with outstanding success. The rice polishings

he used were thereafter called vitamin B (for beriberi?) and thought to provide

a single essential chemical. Today known to be a team of vitamins, the

B-complex, (along with vitamin C) are all water soluble, indispensable, and

generally not stored by the body.

So it was just about one hundred years ago that thiamin proved to be the cure,

and the only cure, for beriberi. It was the first formal vitamin discovery,

hence thiamin's designation as B-1. One of its parts is a THIAzole ring, and it

is a vitaMIN, hence the name.

Thiamin is activated by thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP) to form a coenzyme needed

in glucose oxidation to either get energy from glucose or to produce storage fat

(lipogenesis). Without thiamin, these do not occur. At all. Hence, the

fatigue and wasting away of beriberi. The mineral magnesium is another

essential cofactor in this process.

Thiamin is not stored in tissues. You need it every moment of every day, and

it plays a crucial role in carbohydrate metabolism, pregnancy, lactation, and

muscular activity. Less well known is that more thiamin is needed in tissues

during fevers.

Continued deficiency of thiamin is very grave. Unchecked, beriberi is fatal.

But a long-standing inadequate, marginal, or minimal thiamin supply may cause

severe neurological effects, most significantly nerve irritation, diminished

reflex response, prickly or deadening sensations, pain, damage to or

degeneration of myelin sheaths the fatty nerve cell insulation material, and

ultimately paralysis. Dr. Klenner, aware that this could well describe multiple

sclerosis, went to work trying megadoses of thiamin. On the principle that it

takes a lot of water to put out a well-established fire, Klenner ignored the US

RDA of one to two milligrams per day and gave MS sufferers one or two thousand

milligrams of thiamin a day. He administered other vitamin megadoses as well.

Patients improved.

That book again? Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C. It is available

without a prescription. The multiple sclerosis protocol takes up about five

pages.

Copyright C 1999 and prior years Andrew W. Saul. From the books QUACK DOCTOR

and PAPERBACK CLINIC, available from Dr. Andrew Saul, Number 8 Van Buren

Street, Holley, New York 14470.

 

 

 

Gettingwell- / Vitamins, Herbs, Aminos, etc.

 

To , e-mail to: Gettingwell-

Or, go to our group site: Gettingwell

 

 

 

 

Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...