| Medical
myths explained: Why health researchers mistakenly think one disease
causes another Health researchers are making
all sorts of discoveries about the correlations between various
diseases. They're finding out that gum disease is correlated
with heart disease. The problem is, they're jumping to the conclusion
that there is a direct causal relationship between these two
things. They're saying gum disease causes heart disease. They're
saying diabetes causes heart disease, and now they are even saying
diabetes causes Alzheimer's disease. Why are they jumping to
these odd conclusions? How do they think one disease causes another
disease?
The real answer, as you'll discover here, is that one disease
doesn't actually cause another disease; they both just have the
same common cause -- a cause which goes unacknowledged or undiscovered
by conventional medical science.
For example, the reason diabetes is correlated with heart disease
is not because one causes the other, it's because there is a
common underlying cause for both diseases, and that underlying
cause is poor nutrition. More specifically, the consumption of
foods and beverages that actually deplete the body of its essential
nutrients, and the lack of foods and beverages that provide good
nutrition -- the vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, amino acids,
fiber and all the other elements that the human body needs in
order to be healthy and free of chronic disease.
Today, the conventional medical community is looking at these
disease correlations, such as the correlation between diabetes
and heart disease, and using that as a justification to more
aggressively treat the symptoms of one of those diseases. They're
saying, "Well, since diabetes causes heart disease, which
can lead to other complications, then we have to treat diabetes
very, very aggressively," which to them means pushing more
pharmaceuticals. The "urgency" to treat these conditions
by claiming they can cause other conditions is really just another
way to push more drugs onto patients.
Understand, the core claim here by conventional medicine is
that the symptoms of one disease cause another disease. They
say, for example, that high blood sugar from diabetes is a contributing
factor for Alzheimer's disease. And thus, the thinking goes,
it is crucial to "manage" the symptoms of diabetes
(high blood sugar) with drugs in other to prevent Alzheimer's.
The logic almost sounds reasonable, but they're actually jumping
to the wrong conclusion.
Multiple symptoms usually have common causes
What they're failing to do here is notice that there is a common
underlying cause of both diseases, and that underlying cause
cannot be corrected with prescription drugs. In this case,
in talking about type-2 diabetes and Alzheimer's disease, what
the patient usually has is a severe imbalance in blood sugar
metabolism caused by three main factors: 1) Massive over-consumption
of refined sugars and refined grains, 2) Lack of physical exercise,
and 3) Lack of key nutrients such as trace minerals, B vitamins,
essential fatty acids and others.
Notice that none of these contributing factors are "a lack
of pharmaceuticals?" What the patient really needs is a
complete nutritional overhaul, which means they need to avoid
all the ingredients in foods and beverages that promote disease,
and take steps to get superfoods and high-density nutrition into
their bodies. They need to eat more fresh foods, more raw fruits
and vegetables. They need to eat less meat or eliminate saturated
animal fats from their diet altogether, including dairy products.
(Dairy products, in my view, are not healthy for long-term consumption
by human beings.)
At the same time, those people need to get nutritional supplements
into their bodies. They need things like sea vegetables, spirulina,
chlorella (www.IntegratedHealth.com), goji berries and whole
food concentrates like blueberry powder or multi-fruit superfood
powders. They need things like raw chocolate (www.NavitasNaturals.com)
or super foods like chia seeds (www.GoodCauseWellness.com) or
ancient grains like quinoa. These are the kinds of things that
people need to put into their bodies in order to reverse the
underlying causes of all of these diseases.
Nutritional deficiencies diagnosed as physical defects
It is absolutely amazing how frequently nutritional deficiencies
are diagnosed as physical diseases or disorders. Let me give
you an example. There's a common heart disorder called mitral
valve prolapse. This is the diagnosis you're given when you
have a heart valve that doesn't maintain the correct shape.
They'll tell you it's a congenital defect. They'll say it's
something you were born with and, unless the valve is repaired
through surgery, your heart will never beat correctly and you'll
have heart problems for the rest of your life. What they won't
tell you is that this is almost exclusively a nutritional problem.
The heart valve isn't misshapen due to a congenital defect;
it is misshapen because the heart is a giant muscle that's
sagging out of shape due to a lack of nutritional support.
When you don't have B vitamins and the proper amount of magnesium,
zinc and calcium in your body, guess what happens to all the
muscles in your body? They all start to sag. The muscles lose
their proper shape. This includes the muscles in your heart,
biceps, hamstrings, and chest. When the heart valve is misshapen,
even in a minor way, things can start to go wrong in your circulatory
system. If you were to take nutritional supplements, or get nutrition
through whole food concentrates, then your heart would begin
to literally "shape up." It would become more firm
and the posture of your heart would rapidly improve, thereby
eliminating the symptoms that were previously called "mitral
valve prolapse."
The answer to mitral valve prolapse is almost always nutrition,
but you won't hear that from surgeons. First of all, they don't
know this information. Second of all, if they were to send people
home with vitamins, how would they stay in business performing
surgical procedures that generate tens of thousands of dollars
in revenues? There's no money in telling people how to prevent
these diseases. There's only money in promoting drugs, surgical
procedures and fictitious diseases.
The medical industry sensationalizes diseases because they're
profitable
There's a direct correlation between the marketing and popularity
of a so-called disease condition and the size of profits generated
by that disease for the pharmaceutical industry and conventional
medicine in general. The reason you hear about attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) all the time is not because it's
a legitimate physiological disorder (it isn't). The reason you
hear about it is because it's very profitable to treat. There
are lots of drugs to sell to children for this disease or condition.
Similarly, the reason you have heard so much propaganda about
hormone-replacement therapy over the past 20 years is not because
women actually need synthetic hormones, the reason is the incredible
profitability of HRT drugs. You hear about these diseases because
they are generating money for the companies that manufacture
the so-called solutions to these conditions. Those solutions
are simply prescription drugs and surgical procedures that don't
solve the underlying problem in the first place. All they do
is mask the symptoms of disease.
The real reason why disease symptoms appears together
Every time I see another headline about how research scientists
have discovered another correlation among various chronic diseases,
I just have to sort of laugh about it. Of course, diabetes
and heart disease are going to emerge together. Of course,
gum disease and heart disease go hand-in-hand, because they
all have the same underlying causes.
A deficiency in a single nutrient can lead to numerous diseases
that all get diagnosed and treated as if they had separate causes.
Take vitamin D, for example. A lack of vitamin D renders the
body unable to absorb calcium. Without adequate calcium, the
heart has trouble functioning correctly, and the nervous system
may also suffer. A person deficient in vitamin D may experience
heart disease, prostate cancer, breast cancer, osteoporosis,
pancreatic cancer, gum disease, schizophrenia and many other
conditions all stemming from a lack of this single nutrient.
Scientists then come along and discover numerous correlations
among these diseases. They actually seem astounded, too, because
they have no concept of the true underlying causes of disease.
The real causes, of course, are all the same: lack of nutrition,
inability to eliminate metabolic waste products, exposure to
toxic chemicals, excessive stress and a lack of circulation and
energy. These core causes can express themselves in a myriad
of different ways, and conventional medicine has made a habit
of attaching a different disease name to each of these expressions.
But underneath all the complicated medical jargon, there are
really only a few fundamental causes of disease, and by correcting
those, all the various measurable symptoms disappear on their
own as the body comes back into a state of balance. |
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