Wednesday, October 5, 2022

CHAPTER 7. CASES OF POSSIBLE HEALING AND SELF-HEALING.





CHAPTER 7.
CASES OF POSSIBLE HEALING AND SELF-HEALING.

(from my latest book: "The Cure for Parkinson's. Do We Already Know What It Takes to Checkmate the Disease?").


"Tell a sick person that he has no hope (or let him find out through his
family) and the will to live will be paralysed.
Show him a way out, pull him away from fear and hysteria,
 give him even a little hope and the will to live will be stimulated.
It will become a powerful ally in battle".

Harry A. Hoxsey, who set up cancer clinics in Texas
and other places in the United States during the 1930s and 1940s (until the
30s and 40s of the 20th century (until they were banned and closed).



The question that interests me in the first place is not whether the cases are true or not. What interests me more is the possibility that they were, to break through our negative "beliefs" about a disease that we consider incurable.

As we have seen in the previous chapter, on the borders of the Parkinsonian "bubble" and beyond, it is possible to find doctors, neurologists and other neuroscientists who make extraordinary claims that bring us hope.

"The future is not in the genes".
Tim Spector, geneticist and Head of Genetics at King's College.



1. A wonderful mistake of ours: the case of a woman called "Fatima".


This story, told by the famous Spanish neurologist Dr. Rafael González Maldonado in his book "The strange case of Dr. Parkinson" (pp. 198-199), shocked my father and me so much that it became part of our conversations from then on (1999):


"In my first year of residency I saw many patients but none I remember like Fatima. She was fifty-five years old although she looked like an old woman on the verge of extinction. She was, like the vast majority of our patients, a housewife who had only known the limits of a territory that she now found empty, like the sack of her illusions. Once again, a story of depression, sexual apathy, rigid education and, now, faithful widowhood. It would have gone unnoticed in my memory if we had not met, three years later, on a flight to Isla Margarita. It was she who recognised me, and my surprise was enormous when I realised that that old parkinsonian woman was now a healthy and vital woman, with a beautiful maturity on the verge of exploding. I had problems with my hotel booking and she invited me to her home, where I discovered the secret of her healing. Shortly after leaving my hospital, Fatima had met by chance a Venezuelan of her age, a painter and globetrotter who had a small estate on Isla Margarita; they shared literary interests and that was the excuse for long conversations at dinners that followed one after the other; he revived in her an old vitality and even returned to writing stories as when she was a child. Fatima forgot her western doctors, her friends in Spain and accompanied him. Today they plant vegetables, fruit trees and fragrant flowers in their gardens, and sunbathe on the wet grass. They take a siesta on a bed suspended between trees and make love, between sobs and laughter, in different and perfumed settings. Their dinners are prolonged between candles, good cigarettes and the odd joint, and the long gatherings only give way at dawn. Fatima no longer has Parkinson's (or it's as if she didn't)".

Although it is a fiction written on the basis of several real clinical cases, we took it for a long time as real (and it only turned out to be a lucky mistake, a confusion of great importance for us, because it inspired us a lot). It motivated us in a way we could not even suspect. Slowly, too slowly, that reading began to change our view of Parkinson's. My father used to refer to it as the "Parkinson's book". My father used to refer to it often. Had it not been in this book that we valued so highly from a respected and admired neurologist, we would have taken it as a joke at the time, such was our ignorance and so many were our prejudices. Even so, the surprise was enormous, disconcerting. We could not quite believe it. We thought that, in any case, it would be something unique, exceptional. Later, as the years went by, we accumulated more experiences and information, and we heard about similar cases. So the suspicion grew that something very important was missing. Our limited, conventional view of Parkinson's was insufficient.


2. The strange case of John Gillies.

In May 2008, an Australian Parkinson's sufferer named John Gillies was suffering from severe episodes of "freezing" in his ability to move. He had been diagnosed for four years. He was treated with antibiotics because his gastroenterologist, Dr. Thomas Borody, Director of the Centre for Digestive Diseases in Australia, suspected that his severe constipation might be due to an infection in his colon ("Clostridium difficile"). After treatment, the patient felt that his parkinsonian symptoms had disappeared. Two neurologists examined him and found no trace of the disease.

3. A formidable woman, Annetta Freeman.

The case of this brave and determined Californian woman came to us late for my father. Although I knew about it, I dismissed it as an anecdotal case, of no importance to us. Only after my father's death, and after several years of reading and many less prejudices, was I able to understand the value of her testimony, which survives only thanks to Steven Fowkes and the interviews of the 1990s.

4. The extraordinary work of Robert Rodgers.

Robert Rodgers is one of the pillars of the English-speaking Parkinsonian community. Although in the next chapter we will show some of the much he has contributed to Parkinson's patients and families, it seems necessary to mention his work "Pioneers of Recovery". He has books, such as the interview with John Coleman, and hundreds of radio programmes, some of them with people who claim to have recovered from Parkinson's disease.

5. The cases discussed by Phillipson (2013) and Smart (2016).

The case mentioned by Oliver T. Phillipson in his 2013 article is of particular value because it involves an eleven-year follow-up. (See chapter 22, section 3). What no single supplement could do alone, he achieved with a combination of them together with his antiparkinsonian medication.

Neuroscientist Karishma Smart and colleagues published in 2016. A 78-year-old man, with 16 years of diagnosed disease, reportedly experienced remission of his Parkinson's disease. Diagnosed by a neurologist, he responded well to levodopa and underwent a positive SPECT DaT scan as confirmation of the Parkinson's diagnosis, which appears to rule out diagnostic error. The practice of daily deep prayer/meditation over years would be the most characteristic and possible cause. Pagnoni in 2007 reported that regular meditation can counteract damage to the striatum and dopaminergic depletion.

6. Parkinsonisms that can be cured.

Parkinsonisms (secondary or caused by a known cause) can and usually can be cured.

There are certain nutrient deficiencies that can produce parkinsonian symptoms: tremor (magnesium), fatigue (vitamin C), loss of smell (zinc), etc. It is therefore not surprising that certain parkinsonisms have disappeared with the use of vitamins such as vitamin C (Nobile 2013, Quiroga 2014) or B12 (Priolisi 1959, Soysal 2018).

Immunotherapy to treat melanoma, although the symptoms returned after the therapy ended (Shprecher 2014).

Vascular Parkinsonism (Lobo 2013).



7. Can oriental medicines "cure" Parkinson's?

Recently, I have been able to learn about and understand cases of possible cures thanks to Indian Ayurvedic medicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine.



1) Observational clinical study with Ayurvedic medicine (Pathel 2018).

Pathel mentions cases who, after several months of treatment in two phases (purifying and symptomatic), moved from stage 3 to stage 1 on the Hoehn and Yahr scale. Measurements with the UPDRS scale were also significant. 16 patients reduced their symptoms from stage 3 to 1.5. Another 10 patients reduced their symptoms from 3 to 1.


2) Case report (Binth 2018).

A 58-year-old patient, diagnosed with Parkinson's 15 years earlier. He was taking 700 mg levodopa per day. After comprehensive Ayurvedic treatment (massages, oils, etc.) and given the improvement experienced, he was able to reduce the dose of levodopa to 100 mg per day. The improvement in his daily life was measured with various scales. Between 30 and 50% with the Schwab and England (activities of daily living).

3) 10 cases treated with Chinese medicine.

10 patients were reportedly cured of idiopathic Parkinson's disease in not very advanced stages with the use of the Chinese herbal formula.

Wang Weifang, published in the "Journal of Brain and Neurology" ten cases of possible (and controversial) cures over the last three decades, using Xifengzhizhan pills and Xifenzhizhan capsules.

These results were presented at the 7th International Conference on Brain Disorders and Therapeutics 2020, which took place in Prague, Czech Republic.

The main components of Xifengzhichan Pills are: Shudi, cornel meat, medlar, chrysanthemum, Ligustrum lucidum, Gastrodia elata, uncaria, polygonatum, asparagus, etc. The main components of Xifengzhizhan capsules are: white peony root, ejiao, turtle shell, cistanche deserticola, natural ground, radix scrophulariae, radix bidentata, etc.

Xifengzhichan Pills, 9 grams each time, three times a day; Xifengzhichan Capsules, 6 capsules each time, three times a day. Oral administration.

In other studies, it is referred to as "Xifeng Dingchan Pill" (XFDCP). For example, in:

Zhang (2013). Evaluation on the efficacy and safety of Chinese herbal medication Xifeng Dingchan Pill in treating Parkinson's disease: study protocol of a multicenter, open-label, randomized active-controlled trial.

Testing its efficacy alone and with Madopar.


8. Some neurologists and B vitamins.

Some cases of Coimbra and vitamin B2.

In the study published in 2002 by Dr. Cicero Coimbra, neurologist and professor of Neurology, several patients who took doses of vitamin B2 for 6 months, would have recovered 100% of their capacities. Brazilian television showed recordings of some of these patients who had already recovered.

Some cases of Costantini and vitamin B1.

In the studies published by the Italian neurologist Antonio Costantini in 2011 and 2015, as well as in the videos published on various websites, before and during the treatment, a spectacular improvement can be observed in many patients.

The spectacular videos of the first Perlmutter.

Although the substance was glutathione intravenously (slowly as with the serum bags), the fact is that the patients were subjected to a protocol of vitamins of the B group: 50 mg of B1, B2, B3, etc.

When Hauser and Perlmutter did their 2009 study, the results were disappointing. Perhaps because the patients did not receive these vitamins, which are so effective in treating Parkinson's and so important for glutathione synthesis and mitochondrial function.

We must remember that Sechi and his team achieved in 1996 a significant improvement in patients treated with intravenous glutathione. Their study inspired the work of Dr. Perlmutter. 

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

New book in English: The Cure for Parkinson's. Do We Already Know What It Takes to Checkmate the Disease?

 

The Cure for Parkinnson's. 

Do We Already Know What It Takes to Checkmate the Disease?

 


On Amazon.com 

 

Jesús Márquez Rivera was born and lives in La Línea de la Concepción, a Spanish city bordering Gibraltar. He studied Philosophy and Letters, specializing in Contemporary History in Granada (Spain), between 1990 and 1995. Then he has done radio and digital journalism on issues related to health, longevity and Parkinson's above all.

After 28 years attentive to the world of Parkinson's, first as a caregiver for his father (1994-2012) and then as a researcher and disseminator of "transformative" information through the project "Parkinson's here and now" in Spanish and English (2012-2022), Jesús Márquez Rivera has dared to write a book with a title as unexpected as it is surprising: "The Cure for Parkinson's. Do We Already Know What It Takes to Checkmate the Disease?".

Years ago it would have seemed crazy or a deception such a proposal. In all these years there has been the necessary change in the author to dare to face this exciting and honest challenge: he sincerely believes that it is possible to defeat Parkinson's, opening the mind to Nature and the East. And looking closely at these 50-60 years of recent history of Parkinson's (the era of Levodopa). Ancient and recent treasures, from Karobath in 1971 to Monti in 2019...


NOTE. I'm still looking for a patron (mecenas) or editor who will allow me to have the time/quiet/means to devote myself completely to this. I keep in mind several more books, brochures, videos, podcasts... I just need enough money.
And most importantly: topics ideas and intuitions to find and rediscover the essentials: denervation and vitamin B12, locus coruleus and magnesium, high doses of vitamin D3 recommended by neurologists and other doctors, etc. Contact: jesusmarquezrivera at yahoo dot es

Wednesday, March 23, 2022

The end of Parkinson's as we know it today. From the Levodopa era to the transformative information era.




1. History and Time.

As a vocational and professional historian, I have contemplated the world of Parkinson's for many years. The changes over time in the way the disease is viewed, the possible treatments and everything that makes up the world of Parkinson's (multinationals, neurologists, associations, foundations, governments, investors, journals, etc.), provide us with much valuable information.

Comparisons are essential for change. They are only unpleasant when the intentions behind them are unpleasant.

In these years we are at a crossroads. We have two main options:

1. We can leave the levadopa era (1970-2022) behind, keeping what is worthwhile and move into another way of looking at the disease and its treatments. We cannot continue without introducing Mucuna (with or without carbidopa); homocysteine reduction with vitamins B2, B6, B9 and B12; the use of sublingual vitamin B12; substances that raise glutathione as well as providing innumerable benefits (alpha lipoic acid, vitamin C, selenium, turmeric, etc.); high doses of vitamin D3 (5000-10000 IU per day) and even calcitriol, etc.


2. Or continue in the loop, in the labyrinth, going round in circles waiting for the treatment that will change everything. I know what I am talking about because my father and I were lost for more than a decade, like mice on a wheel in the maze. The volume of information produced today is a hundred times greater than it was 20 years ago, but the goal is receding. The complexity of research is now impossible to harness and increasingly resembles the Maelstrom, the giant sea whirlpool that drags everything to the bottom.

2. Neurology can take different paths.

We are not talking about alternative issues or issues far removed from science. The studies, proposals and therapies of doctors Hinz, Wahls, Hoffer, Perlmutter, Coimbra, Costantini, Birkmayer, Ahlskog, Fahn (1992), Shults (2002), Suzuki (2013), Espay (2019), etc., remain unheeded.

We are ending the month of March 2022 and what I see reminds me of what I experienced 30 years ago with my father. "Old wine in a new bottle". Or "The same dog with a different collar", is a frequent saying in my mother tongue, Spanish.

3. The Internet, a double-edged sword.

The Internet, search engines, databases, forums, have changed everything. It is true that they are a double-edged sword. Alongside invaluable information there are oceans of rubbish and unimportant information.

We search and search. Thanks to all this volume of information we can go astray or stumble upon vitamin D3, sublingual vitamin B12, a multivitamin of methylated B vitamins, green tea polyphenols, turmeric, Mediterranean diet, mucuna, melatonin, etc.


4. Re-learning to read.

"People don't know how much time and effort it takes to learn to read. It has taken me eighty years to achieve it, and I still can't say whether I have succeeded."
Goethe

Looking back, I remember how many times I "read" books and articles without understanding what their authors were saying. How the years went by and I did not understand what they were shouting at us from those pioneering pages... How many prejudices, ignorance, separated us from the paths that lead to hope based on realities.



5. Not a step back.

I am finishing the translation of "The Cure of Parkinson's" into English, I still can't find a patron or publisher who will allow me to devote myself to research and disseminate full time, etc. Intuition (shortcut to knowledge) tells me that there is still a lot to bring to light, to gather and summarise, to explain in an understandable way what is essential for the majority of patients and their families who do not have the free time or the drive to search and search. Or that their mother tongue does not allow them to access 99% of the information, which is nowadays only available in English.

As I receive more and more messages from readers who are changing their view of Parkinson's in a positive way thanks to the book in Spanish (actually to the fact that I have gathered so many treasures from others in it), I have to come to the conclusion that (almost) nobody cares about the future of sufferers and their families. Except ourselves, of course.

And we are in danger of being almost erased from the internet, from memory, as happened to Annetta Freeman and her exceptional protocol in the 1990s, which brings us to Jay Kimball with his product Liquid Deprenyl Citrate (LDC), imprisoned and banned respectively, etc.

But we must not forget that it would put an end to the current and future profits of the giant "actors" in this drama. Nor can we ignore that the colossal "Parkinson's world" is already seeking its own survival as if it were a living organism.

We must make the best of the Laboratory, of Nature and of the treasures of the East.

If we do not do it ourselves, it is likely to remain undone. When you come to this conviction, everything changes.

Sunday, February 20, 2022

Parkinson's could be otherwise (2): towards cure.


 


Officially, Parkinson's is still incurable in Western medicine.

Cases of possible cure or reversal of symptoms occur in very strong or highly motivated people (Robert Rodgers has collected numerous cases since 2004. His mother had Parkinson's). And in Hindu and Chinese medicine, it is considered a difficult disease to treat, but not incurable.

The same is said about Alzheimer's or Multiple Sclerosis, but there are doctors/neurologists who have called it into question: Seignalet, Bradesen, Newport, Swank, Wahls...

Many neurologists speak of a syndrome and some propose different therapies (Coimbra, Costantini, Birkmayer, Perlmutter). The cause would be multiple (and maybe impossible to know exactly). It must therefore be treated as something that is multifactorial, due to multiple deficiencies (Hinz speaks of 29)...

The Hindus and the Chinese created multi-modal and multi-phase treatments centuries ago. Their products and therapies (massages, acupuncture, movements) treat all possible routes of damage (detoxification, antioxidants, anti-inflammatory, liver protection, good nutrition, etc.).

The cause may persist (high stress sensitivity to stress, genetic aspects, etc.) or not (high stress stage already overcome, poor nutrition, etc.). Outside of current Western medicine, there are no incurable diseases. Difficult to treat/cure, yes, but not impossible. But we already know many antidotes: anti-stress magnesium, epigenetic measures, Mediterranean diet and phytotherapy, etc.

One can follow the orthodox Western path, the Eastern ones, a mixture of both (there are very interesting studies on madopar together with Chinese formulas), or the external ways of highly motivated patients (Freeman, Pepper, Coleman, Shifke). Whatever the choice, and with the supervision of a specialist, I would continue with a new lifestyle: Mediterranean diet or similar, green tea (with ginger and turmeric with a little black peppercorns), lion's mane mushroom, a daily salad, vitamin D3 supplement (together with magnesium and brewer's yeast), omega 3 fish pearls, physical exercise, acupuncture, etc.

AYURVEDA.

See planetayurveda.com. Parkinson's Formulas.

https://www.planetayurveda.com/library/parkinsonism/

- Observational clinical study with Ayurvedic medicine (Pathel 2018):

Pathel mentions cases who, after several months of treatment in two phases (purifying and symptomatic), moved from stage 3 to stage 1 on the Hoehn and Yahr scale. Measurements with the UPDRS scale were also significant. 16 patients reduced their symptoms from stage 3 to 1.5. Another 10 patients went from stage 3 to 1.

TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE.

And this other amazing one for TCM:

http://www.itmonline.org/arts/parkinsons.htm

Some formulas backed by studies, either claiming healing results/significant improvements or anti-parkinson effects of their components: oxidation, inflammation, glutamate, parkinsonizing toxins, etc.

Zichan powder,

Yigansan formula,

Xifengzhizhan pills and capsules,

Zeng-xiao An-shen Zhi-chan 2 or ZAZ2,

Zishenpingchan granules (Ye 2021).

Liuwei dihuang or Liu Wei Di Huang Wan (Tseng 2014, Rehmannia Six Formula).

- 10 cases treated with Chinese medicine:

10 patients reportedly cured of idiopathic Parkinson's in not very advanced stages with use of Chinese herbal formula

Wang Weifang, published in the Journal of Brain and Neurology ten cases of possible (and controversial) cures over the last three decades, using Xifengzhizhan pills and Xifenzhizhan capsules.

These results were presented at the 7th International Conference on Brain Disorders and Therapeutics 2020, which took place in Prague, Czech Republic.

The main components of Xifengzhichan Pills are: Shudi, cornel meat, medlar, chrysanthemum, Ligustrum lucidum, Gastrodia elata, uncaria, polygonatum, asparagus, etc. The main components of Xifengzhizhan capsules are: white peony root, ejiao, turtle shell, cistanche deserticola, natural ground, radix scrophulariae, radix bidentata, etc.

Xifengzhichan Pills, 9 grams each time, three times a day; Xifengzhichan Capsules, 6 capsules each time, three times a day. Oral administration.

In other studies, it is referred to as "Xifeng Dingchan Pill" (XFDCP). For example, in:

Zhang (2013). Evaluation on the efficacy and safety of Chinese herbal medication Xifeng Dingchan Pill in treating Parkinson's disease: study protocol of a multicenter, open-label, randomized active-controlled trial.

Testing its efficacy alone and with Madopar.

---

The guidance of a doctor and, if possible, a doctor trained in both Western and Oriental medicine is always recommended.

Monday, January 10, 2022

Parkinson's could be otherwise.




Did you know that...?


SELF-HEALING

...numerous people claim to have controlled, healed or reversed the symptoms of their disease (Annetta Freeman, Howard Shifke, John Coleman, Colin Potter, John Pepper...). Robert Rodgers' project since 2004, with his blogs, books and almost 300 radio programmes on Parkinson's and numerous mentions of recovery cases is worthy of being highlighted as unique worldwide.

CASES OF POSSIBLE CURE

...in 2008, the media reported that Australian John Gillies had been cured of four years of Parkinson's disease by antibiotic treatment for severe constipation due to "Clostridium difficile" recommended by the well-known gastroenterologist Thomas Borody. Two neurologists would have confirmed the absence of symptoms (in this case one could argue a possible diagnostic error); but in the following case, there is no such possibility. The patient had been diagnosed as usual, responded well to Sinemet (levodopa/carbidopa) and a SPECT DaT test confirmed the diagnosis. Neuroscientist Karishma Smart and colleagues published in 2016. A 78-year-old man, with 16 years of diagnosed disease, reportedly experienced remission of his Parkinson's disease. The practice of daily deep prayer/meditation would be the most characteristic and possible cause. Pagnoni in 2007 reported that regular meditation can counteract damage to the striatum and dopaminergic depletion. And in a similar vein Pickut in 2013 and Newberg in 2010.

SIGNIFICANT IMPROVEMENT

...some neurologists claim in their studies and writings to have significantly improved the lives of patients: the neurologist and professor of Neurology at the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, Cicero Coimbra in 2002, achieved with high doses of riboflavin (vitamin B2) an improvement of up to 71 % (three patients, up to 100 %); the neurologist Antonio Costantini in 2013, with high doses of thiamine (vitamin B1), an improvement of up to 77 %; the neuroscientist Oliver T. Phillipson, with a healthy person, an improvement of up to 35 % (Albertsky, 2013); the physical exercise in tandem on an exercise bike, with a healthy person, an improvement of up to 35 % (Albertsky, 2013). Phillipson, symptom control and halting progression of a patient in 2013; tandem exercise on a stationary bike with a healthy person, 35 % improvement (Alberts 2011); ketogenic diet for one month, 43 % improvement (VanItallie 2005); etc.

LESS RISK

... Parkinson's disease can be prevented or the risk of developing Parkinson's disease can be reduced: by 87 % with coffee, tobacco and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, NSAIDs (Powers 1988); the highest level of vitamin D reduces the risk by almost 70 % compared to those with the lowest level (Knekt 2010); of vitamin B6 by up to 51 % (Lau 2006); of folic acid or vitamin B9 by 49 % (Religa 2006); of riboflavin or B2 by 51 % (McCormick 1988); regular consumption of certain foods rich in vitamin E by up to 76 % (Golbe 1988), etc.

DELAYING THE DISEASE

...the onset of the disease can be delayed: 17.4 years in women and 8.4 years in men with a Mediterranean type of diet (Metcalfe-Roach 2021); regular coffee consumption, up to 8 years (Benedetti 2000); green tea, up to 7.7 years (Kandinov 2009); etc.


SLOWING DOWN THE PROGRESSION

...can even slow or halt its progression: 1200 IU of vitamin D3 daily slowed it down for one year (Suzuki 2013); intense physical exercise, especially forced exercise (Ahlskog 2011, 2018; Schenkman 2018); etc.


SEVERITY OF SYMPTOMS

...the severity of Parkinson's symptoms is related to deficiencies of certain substances, as well as vitamins and phytonutrients: cholesterol (Huang 2011, 2019); magnesium (Barbiroli 1999); vitamin D (Liu 2014), etc.

CURE OF CERTAIN PARKINSONISMS

...with vitamins such as vitamin C (Nobile 2013, Quiroga 2014) or B12 (Priolisi 1959, Soysal 2018) some types of Parkinsonism have been cured; etc.

Immunotherapy to treat melanoma, although the symptoms returned after the end of therapy (Shprecher 2014).

Vascular Parkinsonism (Lobo 2013).


(It has taken me almost 30 years to learn this information. This should never happen again. Important information should be available to patients and their families in a few books and brochures in all languages.)