ARTHRITIS
-- Searching for THE TRUTH -- Searching for THE CURE |
Chapter 1
I am constantly humbled by the fact
that there is so much that we do not know. Physicists, who thought
that they had a pretty good handle on the size of the universe,
recently found that they were only off by a factor of ten. With
this discovery of a much larger universe there has been a flurry
of activity -- and with it a renaissance of thought as scientists
scurry to re-think old theories and formulate new ones about our
world.
It might be easy to deride them but
these physicists should be applauded. They are brave indeed to offer
up theories that are built upon so many abstract mathematical formulas
and so little in the way of direct observation. They live with the
fact that their ideas will only have a limited lifetime, some embarrassingly
short. Nonetheless they stake out their position and go about proving
it in the face of the usual opposition from their peers. This is
the way they move our knowledge forward.
Whether the universe consists of 10
billion or 100 billion galaxies probably wont have much impact
on our lives. On the other hand what you learn in this book will
have a profound effect, especially if you suffer from any kind of
arthritis.
I recently read a newspaper article
that suggested men tend to be more goal oriented while women had
a greater appreciation for the process involved in attained a goal.
Obviously we all have a bit of both and thats a good thing.
Both will be needed to piece together the underlying source of your
arthritis. You will find that questions will lead to answers, but
at the same time even more questions. Let the process begin!
When Joe E. initially attended the
clinic he was 24 years old. He was afflicted with what had been
diagnosed as a combination of rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing
spondylitis. The problems in his joints had started when he was
14. By the following year the joint pains were very severe and complicated
with chronic rhinitis (runny nose) as well as bouts of depression.
Joe was unable to walk and had to be
carried into the doctor's office. He looked extremely ill and emaciated.
His feet were so swollen that he was forced to wear slippers several
sizes larger than his real foot size. He had problems with allergic
reactions to the drugs that he was prescribed for his arthritis.
The doctor discovered that Joes
arthritis was closely linked to a variety of food and airborne allergens.
Within a few months of starting treatment Joe was back at work and
living independently. He has remained very well and has developed
a successful career in the world of graphic art. Anyone meeting
him in the past few years would never guess the agonies that he
endured from age 14 to 24, as now he is entirely well in every respect.
The physician that treated Joe was
Dr. John Mansfield. Joe was far from an isolated case. Dr. Mansfield
has successfully treated over 2,000 cases of arthritis by sorting
out individual sensitivities to chemicals, foods and airborne allergens.
Lauriane Riley was only two when she
was diagnosed with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Onset occurred
shortly after she developed a fever and a rash. She lost her appetite
and showed signs of chronic fatigue. Pain and stiffness developed
in her knees which made her reluctant to walk. Her sedimentation
rate was abnormally high and she was suffering from anemia. She
was treated with small doses of oral antibiotic and within three
weeks all of those symptoms had disappeared. Six months later, not
a single sign of arthritis remained.
A year after treatment Lauriane did
not have a trace of stiffness in her legs or any reluctance to do
all of the normal things -- running, playing -- that healthy children
do. She eats well, has grown normally, and has lots of energy. She
is completely recovered.
The physician that treated Lauriane
was Thomas McPherson Brown, M.D. He was a board certified rheumatologist
with over 25 years of experience in treating all forms of rheumatoid
disease with tetracycline antibiotics.
The patient was female, aged 43 years.
Her mother suffered from rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes. Her
rheumatoid disease began some 5 months before being seen with pain
in the balls of her feet. The toes were painful on flexion and the
ankles painful on any movement. Two years prior she experienced
pains across the lower abdomen and lumbar spine, which persisted.
In the last three months pains and swelling had spread to the fingers,
thumbs, wrists, shoulders and neck, which was stiff. She suffered
from night sweats. There was marked morning stiffness and the rheumatoid
factor was positive.
She was treated with a combination
of different antibiotics in pulsed doses. During this time her ESR
rose to as high as 80 mms/hour. Her symptoms rapidly disappeared
three days after cessation of treatment when she complained of only
occasional sharp pains in various joints, but there were no physical
signs of rheumatoid disease to be seen. Four months after being
treated the ESR had fallen to 12 mms/hour, blood count showed Hb
15 g/dl. Over the course of the next three months she became completely
symptomless and has remained so for eight months.
Dr. Roger Wyburn-Mason, M.D., Ph.D.
supervised this patients treatment. Over 100 physicians in
the U.S. follow his protocols for treating all rheumatoid disease.
Myra L. was 55 years old and initially
complained of chronic fatigue, insomnia, occasional depression and
fibromyalgia, especially in her lower back, neck and shoulder blade
area. She experienced bloating in her abdomen accompanied by gas
and alternate constipation and diarrhea. She also stated that she
was approximately 15 to 20 pounds overweight, and that as hard as
she might try, she found it impossible to lose weight. Myra had
tried a number of different therapies, both nutritional and otherwise,
all to no avail.
Dr. Rudolph Wiley assisted Myra in
finding her appropriate metabolic type. She matched her eating habits
to her metabolic type and the majority of her symptoms vanished
over the next week. Any remaining pain dissipated over the next
three months. She experienced huge increases in energy while her
weight normalized.
Dr. Wiley credits George Watson, M.D.
with discovering this phenomenon some 25 years prior to his work.
Dr. Wiley, a Ph.D. biochemist, has spent 20 years helping solve
chronic problems like Myras.
By this time you might be asking yourself
why your rheumatologist doesnt know this stuff. A better question
is why dont you know this stuff? Youre the one that
has arthritis.
Chapter 2
As best I can recall, it wasnt
until I was 18 years old before I fully realized that my parents
werent just my parents. They were people. They had aspirations,
concerns and interests beyond my own. Like all individuals they
had their strengths and weaknesses. It really is a tribute to them
that I was insulated from this reality for so long. I just went
merrily along during childhood and adolescence, never even giving
a thought to the mechanics of how they were able to provide for
me. I just knew they would.
I had a very similar awakening when
I first started working behind the scenes with physicians as a practice
management consultant. I found that doctors were fallible just like
us. Even worse they were pressed to their limits spreading time
among patients, family, friends, hobbies and other outside interests.
The idea that physicians had much time to study new treatment techniques
or contemplate why a certain patient wasnt doing so well with
a prescribed therapy quickly vanished. I found that their main source
of new medical information was the occasional 15 minute visit from
a pharmaceutical representative or perhaps a day or two away with
their peers at a semi-annual academy meeting.
There is one other concept that youll
need to get under your belt to realize the true limitations placed
on your physician -- its called standard of care.
Say you have a chronic sinus infection and present the problem to
a local ear, nose and throat doc who subsequently recommends that
you require immediate surgery. Upon getting a second opinion you
find that the ear, nose and throat specialist just down the street
thinks that surgery isnt necessary at all and instead prescribes
a series of antibiotics. Now who are you supposed to believe?
Years ago doctors saw that this type
of inconsistency could lead to a loss of confidence by the public.
They started to create medical boards to develop standards for certain
medical situations so that physicians could be consistent. It seemed
apparent that patients were enormously ignorant of proper medical
procedures and that these medical boards were needed to protect
them from bad doctors. Standard of care would also serve an important
dual purpose by protecting the physician from being sued by their
patient. If a patient had a terrible outcome but the physician followed
the standard of care there was a much smaller chance that the patient
would receive a desired verdict in a lawsuit.
All this sounds prudent until you realize
that all the doctors in any specialty, including rheumatology, were
now forced to walk in lock-step. Any innovation, discovery or improvement
suddenly breaks step with the local standard of care. The physician
who does anything different has suddenly painted a large bullseye
on his back saying sue me -- and shortly there will be lawyers there
to oblige.
There are exceptions, but the majority
of todays doctors have turned over all responsibility for
improving the medicine within their specialty to the boys
in research. The eggs are definitely all in one basket
and were waiting for a miracle answer.
As you read this book youll develop
an understanding of what causes your arthritis and why those waiting
for research to solve their problem are doomed to be disappointed.
Modern researchers may represent our best and brightest minds, but
they are much too far from patients to really understand the problem
they are working on. Dr. Dean Ornish (the now famous cardiologist)
would have never recognized the connection between diet and coronary
disease (which today has widespread acceptance) if he hadnt
literally lived among his patients.
Modern research will provide less toxic
drugs that match todays pharmaceuticals in effectiveness,
but they will always exact a cost to overall health. Much like the
story of the little Dutch boy. He used his finger to plug the leak
in the dam only to find that when he did, another leak would form.
In the case of arthritis, even if a drug stops inflammation today,
new leaks appear tomorrow. They take form as other chronic conditions
including fatigue, depression, anxiety, mental fog, severe allergies,
headaches, disrupted sleep, diabetes, weight gain or loss; gastric,
urinary, thyroid and reproductive problems.
Now youll be able to appreciate
why your rheumatologist doesnt know the connections that you
will discover in this book. So dont be surprised when you
feel better than you have in years that your physician doesnt
share your excitement -- he cant. Medicine and your doctor
are in a deep rut and weve helped put them there.
Chapter 3
Right about now you might be wondering
how rheumatology can break their terrible lockstep to improve the
plight of those actually suffering with arthritis. The answer quite
simply is with the proof. Unfortunately it will take lots of proof
and the right type of proof before budging things in the field of
rheumatology an inch. If there is a discovery or a breakthrough
it must be put to the test. However the manner in which todays
medicine tests something is strongly biased.
The test that medicine values the most
is the double blind crossover placebo controlled study.
Here both the patient and doctor are unaware of who is receiving
the real treatment and who is receiving the placebo. This type of
study requires gathering a group (or sample) of patients that have
the same disease. Usually researchers look for folks who are matched
or generally have the same type of arthritis, with the same severity
and have suffered roughly the same number of years.
The placebo is a fake treatment used
in the place of the real thing. Researchers have found that some
patients will often improve for no reason at all other than the
fact that they think they are receiving treatment. In these studies
half the patients get the appropriate treatment while the others
get the placebo. There is more than a little ethical problem in
asking patients (in the placebo group) to suspend treatment for
an extended period of time when they have severe disease. It is
the hope and intent of the study to prove that the placebo group
will do quantifiably worse than the group receiving treatment. As
you know, worse can mean irreversible joint damage. Many physicians
refuse to submit their patients to the above testing protocols for
these ethical reasons.
The double blind crossover placebo
controlled study is uniquely well suited for testing drugs while
at the same time ill-equipped to test the effectiveness of non-drug
therapies. In most non-drug therapies the treatment is impossible
to hide so the placebo effect cannot be removed from the equation.
Running any kind of extended trial can be prohibitively expensive.
A simple trial involving only 40 or so patients can easily run in
excess of $100,000. Larger follow-up trials at other locations must
be performed by other investigators to validate initial findings.
For reasons that well discuss later, results from different
studies rarely have strong correlation. The consequence is that
even more studies are demanded to demonstrate that a therapy is
effective.
The great majority of drugs used to
fight arthritis have been grandfathered in. A recent drug that showed
great promise for both anti-inflammatory and possibly disease modifying
effects was Tenidap. The drug research was completed and initial
trials looked good but the manufacturer ultimately decided to shelve
the product. The reason was economic. Even though they were already
somewhere in the middle of the approval process, they believed that
the cost of completing the needed trials and bringing the drug to
market would not recoup expenses and a reasonable profit.
Arthritis research is faced with searching
in two different haystacks. Out of necessity they've chosen the
one with money in it. The other stack doesn't have any money but
has the cure. The good news is that you have the ability to search
the other haystack for yourself.
Next
chapter
|