Armin Q. Alcuran ND,CNC

Armin Q. Alcuran ND,CNC To Empower & Re-educate people in Financial,Physical, Emotional, Mental as well as Spiritual Aspect of Each Person

Mas mabilis na matuto ang tao sa nakikita kaysa nadidinig lang...
22/03/2018

Mas mabilis na matuto ang tao sa nakikita kaysa nadidinig lang...

USE ITIT IS FREE INDEED
22/03/2018

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IT IS FREE INDEED

22/03/2018

EARTH HOUR

On the 24th of March at 8:30 PM - 9:30 PM in each country's local time, every citizen of the world is enjoined to participate in Earth Hour.

The Church Of Christ (Iglesia Ni Cristo) Administration led by the Executive Minister, Brother Eduardo V. Manalo admonishes the brethren to participate in this worthwhile activity.

Earth Hour is a worldwide event organized by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) which seeks to allot an hour to switch off non-essential lights and demonstrate a commitment to fighting climate change.

Like and Share! Tag your friends too!
https://www.facebook.com/IglesiaNiCristoNewsandUpdates/

Broken Heart SyndromeProfound emotional sadness doesn't just weigh heavy on your mind. It significantly impacts your bod...
10/03/2018

Broken Heart Syndrome

Profound emotional sadness doesn't just weigh heavy on your mind. It significantly impacts your body. The depths of despair can lower your immune system, increase blood pressure and heart rate - and cause significant muscle weakness, just to name a few. Stress from grief can flood the body with hormones, specifically Cortisol, which causes that heavy-achy-feeling you get in your chest area.

The heartache that comes with depression can increase the likelihood of a heart attack. In fact, a recent study (link is external) showed that a person with a depressive disorder and a heart condition were 5 times more likely to die than a person with depression alone or a heart condition alone. The actual medical term for this deeply emotional mind/body experience is called Stress Cardiomyopathy. You might know the colloquial term better: A broken heart. What you might not know is that women (link is external)are ten times more likely to suffer from Broken Heart Syndrome than men.

I've had a broken heart several times in my life. Not only did my depressive symptoms worsen during these very sad moments, I also noticed a heaviness in my chest and an irregular heartbeat. Sometimes it fluttered, while other times it felt as if it stopped or skipped a beat. A thorough medical work-up showed that I had an arrhythymia. (link is external) Now on a beta blocker (link is external), I no longer experience the depth of my depression in my heart.

Experience is a great teacher. What I learned from those bouts of grief was that I needed to listen to what my body was telling me and to look at emotional issues more quickly than I had done in the past.

Tips for Broken Heart Syndrome

If you have heartache and you're in despair consider these tips:

Don't hold in your emotional pain. Studies show that expressing emotions greatly reduces the body's stress response.
Don't put a time limit on your grief. And don't let others set one for you either.
Make sure you tend to your physical needs. Softness, warmth and touch can be healing.
Don't ignore chronic aches or pains. Check in with your physician.

Eat well, making sure you choose healthy foods to keep you nourished during difficult times.

Keep a routine sleep schedule. If you require medication to help you with sleeping, modulating your moods or for cardiac management, don't feel ashamed. You're going through a significantly stressful time.

A broken heart leaves many people feeling stunned and stuck. Move. Get out of bed. Take a shower. Go for a walk. Feel the sun on your face.

If you feel fragile, limit your exposure to emotionally driven events. That doesn't mean to cocoon yourself away from people. Decide what social connections will give you support, and which ones may be too taxing.

Don't forget your spiritual side. Prayer, even meditation, can bring comfort to a broken heart.

Consider seeking a mental health professional if you need help healing from your broken heart.

True Indeed
09/03/2018

True Indeed

The Uncommon Type of Heart Attack That Kills Healthy, Young WomenSymptoms of an uncommon type of heart attack known as s...
09/03/2018

The Uncommon Type of Heart Attack That Kills Healthy, Young Women

Symptoms of an uncommon type of heart attack known as spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) are easily overlooked, as few SCAD patients have any history of or risk factors for heart disease

SCAD is a leading cause of heart attacks in healthy women under 55; the average age of SCAD patients is 42. Eighty percent of SCAD patients are women; 20 percent have recently given birth

SCAD occurs when the layers of your blood vessel wall tear apart from each other, trapping blood between the layers. As the blood collects between the layers, your blood vessel gets choked off, triggering a heart attack

Most SCAD patients are healthy. Risk factors for the condition include underlying blood vessel conditions such as fibromuscular dysplasia, extreme exercise and severe emotional stress
Common signs and symptoms of a SCAD-induced heart attack, and current treatment recommendations are included
By Dr. Mercola

As noted in recent news, the symptoms of an uncommon type of heart attack known as spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD)1 is dangerously easy to overlook, as few SCAD patients have any history of or risk factors for heart disease. SCAD is a leading cause of heart attacks in healthy women under 55; the average age of SCAD patients is 42.

ABC News recounts the stories of two women whose sudden heart attacks were triggered by SCAD.2 Five weeks after giving birth to a healthy baby girl, Maryn Cox suddenly developed troubling symptoms. "It felt like pressure, possibly gas; acid reflux, I wasn't sure what it was. One of my arms went numb, I started getting nauseous; cold sweats,” she says. The symptoms, while common, turned out to be SCAD, a condition few have ever heard of.

While SCAD is a cause of heart attack, it’s different from a heart attack caused by coronary artery disease. Essentially, SCAD occurs when the layers of your blood vessel wall tear apart from each other, trapping blood between the layers. As the blood pools and collects between the layers, your blood vessel gets choked off, killing heart muscle tissue downstream from the blockage, thereby triggering a heart attack.

Signs and Symptoms of SCAD

Commonly reported signs and symptoms of SCAD include the following. If you experience these symptoms, call for immediate emergency medical assistance (in the U.S., call 911). It’s important to realize that many who develop SCAD are otherwise quite healthy and most do not have risk factors for heart disease. For this reason, it’s important to seek medical attention if you experience symptoms of SCAD, in order to avoid a lethal heart attack.

Indeed, the No. 1 symptom of a heart attack is sudden death, and the same applies to SCAD. In essence, by the time recognizable symptoms of a heart attack occur, you’re well on your way toward death, so early intervention is crucial.

Lightheadedness

Sweating

Radiating pain in your neck, back or jaw

Shortness of breath

Pain, tightness, pressure or discomfort in your chest (some women report feeling like their bra is suddenly too tight, even though they know it’s not)

Stomach pain

Fatigue

Pain radiating down one or both arms

For whatever reason, SCAD tends to be more common in women — especially younger women, and following pregnancy — although it’s a relatively rare condition overall. While the cause for SCAD is unknown, medical experts have theorized the gender difference may have something to do with hormonal variations. Common risk factors for SCAD include:

Being female (80 percent of SCAD patients are women)
Recently giving birth (20 percent of SCAD patients have recently given birth)
Underlying blood vessel conditions such as fibromuscular dysplasia (a condition that causes abnormal cell growth in the arteries)
Extreme physical exercise
Severe emotional stress
Best Treatment for SCAD Is Allowing Body to Heal Naturally
Because the underlying cause of SCAD is still unknown, the best course of treatment has been equally uncertain. However, according to a recent scientific statement by Mayo Clinic researchers, SCAD sufferers tend to benefit the most from “conservative treatment, letting the body heal on its own.”3

Dr. Sharonne Hayes, the Mayo Clinic cardiologist who since 2010 has dedicated herself to the study of SCAD (see videos above), says, “It may seem counterintuitive, but we discovered that treating SCAD the same way we treat heart attacks due to atherosclerosis can cause further tearing and damage to the vessel. [T]he initial proper diagnosis is critical in guiding the care."

The Mayo Clinic consensus statement is a significant step forward, providing health care providers with information about how to diagnose and treat SCAD. Importantly, their findings reveal that, in most patients who were not treated with a stent, the dissection in the blood vessel healed on its own within weeks or months.

In some patients, healing began within mere days. The statement also recommends a tailored cardiac rehabilitation program for patients, and stresses the importance of addressing mental health, as anxiety and depression tend to be quite common in SCAD patients.

Many Women Mistake Heart Attack Symptoms With Anxiety or Stress
In related research,4,5 researchers found women are less likely to report chest pain when having a heart attack. According to the authors, compared to men, “women were more likely to perceive symptoms as stress/anxiety (20.9 percent versus 11.8 percent) but less likely to attribute symptoms to muscle pain (15.4 percent versus 21.2 percent).” They were also more likely to use terms such as “pressure,” “tightness” or “discomfort” in the chest rather than referring to it as chest pain.

They also found that a significantly greater number of women reported their doctor did not think their symptoms were heart-related. Overall, 53 percent of female heart attack patients reported this, compared to just 37 percent of men.

Nearly 30 percent of women had actually sought medical help prior to being hospitalized with a heart attack, compared to just 22 percent of men. What these findings suggest is that both women and their doctors tend to misdiagnose or dismiss symptoms of heart attack, placing them at increased risk of death than men. As noted by the authors:

“The presentation of [acute myocardial infarction] symptoms was similar for young women and men, with chest pain as the predominant symptom for both sexes. Women presented with a greater number of additional non-chest pain symptoms regardless of the presence of chest pain, and both women and their health care providers were less likely to attribute their prodromal symptoms to heart disease in comparison with men.”

Top 6 Factors That Predict Your Heart Attack Risk
If you want to reduce your risk of a heart attack, you should absolutely pay attention to your diet and exercise habits. These, along with four other habits, are said to make young women more or less "heart attack-proof," according to research published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.6 Women who adhered to all six guidelines lowered their heart disease risk by 92 percent. Based on these findings, the researchers estimated that more than 70 percent of heart attacks could be prevented by implementing the following:

1. A healthy diet discussed in my two most recent books “Effortless Healing” and “Fat for Fuel”

2. Normalizing your body weight (your waist-to-hip ratio being a more reliable risk predictor than body mass index, as it reflects your visceral fat deposits)

3. Getting at least 2.5 hours of exercise each week and moving regularly throughout the day

4. Restricting your TV watching to seven or fewer hours per week

5. Not smoking

6. Limiting alcohol intake to one drink or less per day

These results echo those of a 2014 study,7 which concluded that the following five healthy lifestyle strategies could prevent nearly 80 percent of first-time heart attacks in men. As noted by the authors, “It is not surprising that healthy lifestyle choices would lead to a reduction in heart attacks … What is surprising is how drastically the risk dropped due to these factors."

A healthy diet
Being physically active (walking/bicycling ≥ 40 minutes/day and exercising ≥ one hour/week)
Maintaining a healthy waist circumference (waist circumference < 37.4 inches or 95 centimeters)
Moderate alcohol consumption (10 to 30 grams/day)
No smoking
Tests to Evaluate Your Heart Disease Risk
While SCAD is an exception, most heart attacks are caused by heart disease. Unfortunately, many are still evaluating risk based on the flawed cholesterol hypothesis. In reality, high cholesterol is not a significant risk factor for heart disease or heart attacks at all. As you evaluate your risk of cardiovascular disease, there are specific ratios and blood level values that will tell you much more than your total cholesterol numbers. The following tests will also give you a better assessment of your potential risk for heart attack or coronary artery disease:

• Cholesterol ratios: Your HDL to cholesterol ratio and triglyceride to HDL ratio are strong indicators of your risk. To calculate your HDL/cholesterol ratio, divide your HDL by your total cholesterol and multiply by 100. That percentage should ideally be above 24 percent. For your triglyceride/HDL ratio, divide your triglyceride total by your HDL and multiply by 100. The ideal percentage is below 2 percent.

• NMR LipoProfile: The size of your low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol is more important than your overall total LDL level. Large particle LDLs are not harmful to your health while the smaller, denser LDL particles may create problems as they squeeze through the lining of your arteries, oxidize and trigger inflammation. An NMR LipoProfile that measures the size of your LDL particles is a better assessment of your risk of heart disease than total cholesterol or total LDL.

• Fasting insulin level. Sugar and carbohydrates increase inflammation. Once eaten, they trigger a release of insulin, promoting the accumulation of fat and creation of triglycerides, making it more difficult for you to lose weight or maintain your normal weight. Excess fat around your midsection is one of the major contributors to heart disease.8

Your fasting insulin level can be determined by a simple, inexpensive blood test. A normal fasting blood insulin level is below 5 microunits per milliliter (mcU/ml) but, ideally, you'll want it below 3 mcU/ml. If your insulin level is higher than 3 to 5, the most effective way to optimize it is to reduce net carbs, replacing them with higher amounts of healthy fats, including saturated fats.

• Fasting blood sugar level. Studies have demonstrated people with higher fasting blood sugar levels have a higher risk of coronary heart disease.9 In fact, when your fasting blood sugar is between 100 and 125 mg/dl, your risk of coronary artery disease is 300 percent higher than having a level below 79 mg/dl.

• Iron level. Iron creates an environment for oxidative stress, so excess iron may increase your inflammation and increase your risk of heart disease. An ideal iron level for adult men and non-menstruating women is between 40 and 60 nanograms per milliliter (ng/ml). You do not want to be below 20 ng/ml or above 80 ng/ml.

Learn to Identify Heart Problems and Implement Heart Healthy Lifestyle Strategies
Any time you experience any kind of chest pain or discomfort, it’s important to take it seriously and contact your doctor. Keep in mind that not everyone experiences chest pain or discomfort during a heart attack. Other signs and symptoms include:

Upper body pain or discomfort in your arms, back, neck, jaw or upper stomach
Shortness of breath
Nausea
Lightheadedness
Cold sweats

You’re far better off getting a diagnosis of heartburn than dying, which is the most common “symptom” of a heart attack. Your chances of survival are greater if you get emergency treatment quickly. Especially if you’re a woman, be extra mindful of troublesome symptoms that might be heart related, as women are misdiagnosed far more often than men. You may even have to insist on a more in-depth evaluation by your doctor if he or she seems immediately dismissive.

Last but not least, remember that heart attack prevention is primarily lifestyle related, as indicated by the studies above. In addition to the strategies mentioned earlier, consider:

Reducing, with the plan of eliminating, grains and sugars in your diet. It is vitally important to eliminate gluten-containing grains and sugars, especially fructose. Also consume a good portion of your food raw.

Replacing harmful vegetable oils and synthetic trans fats with healthy fats, such as olive oil, butter, avocado, organic pastured eggs and coconut oil (remember olive oil should be used cold only; use coconut oil for cooking and baking).

Also make sure you’re getting plenty of high-quality, animal-based omega-3 fats, such as krill oil.

Eating more fermented foods. In addition to optimizing your intestinal microflora, which will boost your overall immunity, it will also introduce beneficial bacteria into your mouth. Poor oral health is another powerful indicator of increased heart disease risk.

Optimizing your vitamin D levels, ideally through appropriate sun exposure as this will allow your body to also create vitamin D sulfate — another factor that may play a crucial role in preventing the formation of arterial plaque.

Ideally, incorporate high-intensity interval exercises into your fitness routine, as this will also optimize your human growth hormone production. One fast and easy way to boost your heart health is to do the Nitric Oxide Dump exercise, discussed and demonstrated in “The Best Exercise for Aging Muscles.” This three-minute exercise releases nitric oxide, which expands your blood vessels, increases blood flow and decreases plaque growth and clotting.

Getting plenty of high-quality, restorative sleep.

Practicing regular stress-management techniques.

Imbalances in the digestive system can lead to symptoms elsewhere in the body. Naturopathic doctors are often able to ge...
06/03/2018

Imbalances in the digestive system can lead to symptoms elsewhere in the body. Naturopathic doctors are often able to get to the root cause of GI complaints that have defied conventional diagnosis, utilizing their meticulous evaluation process and advanced clinical nutrition training

What is Glutathione?Glutathione is the most important antioxidant produced by your body and a master detoxifier of every...
06/03/2018

What is Glutathione?
Glutathione is the most important antioxidant produced by your body and a master detoxifier of every cell in your body. It prevents cellular damage caused by free radicals and peroxides. “Glutathione is the most important molecule you need to stay healthy and prevent aging, cancer, heart disease, dementia and more, and necessary to treat everything from autism to Alzheimer’s disease,” says Dr. Mark Hyman, 10-time New York Times bestselling author and Director of the Cleveland Clinic Center for Functional Medicine. Hyman is not alone in his thinking.

Technically, GHS is an antioxidant that consists of three amino acids -- cysteine, glutaminic acid and glycine. Its importance lies in the fact that it exists within the cell wall of almost every single cell in your body and, unlike other anti-oxidants, your body can produce it on its own.

What Does Glutathione Do?
Glutathione is responsible for the following functions, and many more:

Acts as a “helper molecule” for some important enzymes, such as glutathione peroxidase (which protects the body from oxidative damage);
Helps with leukotriene production, which is vital for the regulation of inflammatory reactions;
Assists the liver and gallbladder in detoxifying fats;
Is involved with methylglyoxal detoxification. Methylglyoxal is a toxin that is produced during metabolism;
Helps with protein disulfide bond arrangement, a process that is vital for cellular reproduction of proteins in the body;
Promotes the production and protection of T-cells for immune function;
Helps to assimilate vital nutrients such as vitamins C and E;
Contributes to programmed cancer cell death (apoptosis).
How Does Glutathione Help Prevent and Reverse Cancer?
Studies have identified over 60 diseases that have low glutathione levels as one of their characteristics, including breast cancer. And yet, despite the thousands of studies done on GSH, science still does not know exactly why this is. Research has proven, however, that as a cancer preventative, glutathione can protect healthy cells from free radicals which can cause cancer mutation. One expert explained glutathione as “the place where sulfur and selenium meet up to protect us from cancer.” In addition, there are simply so many vital immune support functions that glutathione plays a part in that the immune system itself simply would not be able to function properly without it.

Many studies have looked specifically at the way that glutathione assists in apoptosis, or programmed cancer cell su***de. Many others have focused on GSH’s ability to prevent drug resistance for traditional chemotherapy treatments, since the ability to help absorb drugs is one of its characteristics. However, some of these latter studies, when looking at glutathione levels both within healthy cells as well as in cancer cells, found that when glutathione levels were elevated within tumor cells, it actually had the effect of protecting those cells. The report of a ground-breaking 2004 study conducted by Beckman Research Institute of the City of Hope stated that:

“With respect to cancer, glutathione metabolism is able to play both protective and pathogenic roles. It is crucial in the removal and detoxification of carcinogens, and alterations in this pathway can have a profound effect on cell survival. However, by conferring resistance to a number of chemotherapeutic drugs, elevated levels of glutathione in tumor cells are able to protect such cells in bone marrow, breast, colon, larynx and lung cancers.”

Many other studies which have looked specifically at glutathione deficiency in healthy cells have concluded that low levels of GSH within these cells make them more vulnerable to cancer. The proliferation of such studies has determined the current scientific trend in favor of GSH being more of a cancer preventer than a cancer instigator.

How Do You Increase Glutathione Levels?
There is little doubt that low glutathione levels lead to disease, so upping your levels can only help with preventing and possibly even healing many conditions. The best way to up your glutathione level is the natural way. The following are some ways to do this:

Reduce stress, environmental toxins, GMOs and processed foods, all of which deplete glutathione levels;
Use antibiotics only when absolutely necessary. Antibiotic use (as well as traditional cancer treatments such as Tamoxifen) can deplete glutathione;

Consume sulfur-containing foods. This includes all cruciferous vegetables, eggs, grass-fed, hormone-free beef livers and garlic. Since glutathione is a sulfur-containing enzyme, sulfur itself can stimulate its production. Garlic and beef liver also contain selenium, an essential part of the glutathione cycle as well;
Consume folate-rich foods. Folate and vitamins B6 and B12 are critical to keep the body producing glutathione and can help with methylation processes that turn off cancer genes and detoxify the body. Folate-rich foods include liver as well as many legumes (such as garbanzo beans, pinto beans, black-eyed peas and lentils), spinach, asparagus, avocado, and broccoli;
Add flax to your diet. Flax is high in magnesium, necessary for the production of glutathione;

Eat seaweed from a reliable source. A recent Malaysian study compared guso seaweed, common in Pacific waters, with Tamoxifen. The seaweed increased glutathione levels by 78 % (while reducing tumor size by 97 percent). Tamoxifen, on the other hand, reduced glutathione levels by 60%;
Consider chlorella, which can improve cellular GSH levels while also detoxifying those cells;
Do regular coffee enemas. Not only are coffee enemas A MUST for those who are on a healthy breast journey, they also flood the body with kahweol and cafestol, two phytochemicals which activate glutathione production.


References:

[1] http://drhyman.com/blog/2010/05/12/what-is-glutathione-and-how-do-i-get-more-of-it/

[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WZGJYnH8WxA

[3] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3162377/

[4] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8001743

[5] http://drsircus.com/medicine/cancer/cancer-sulfur-garlic-glutathione /p>

[6] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22545423

[7] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15386533

[8] http://www.hindawi.com/journals/omcl/2013/972913/

[9]http://jjbs.hu.edu.jo/files/v4n3/Paper_number1_modified-Final.pdf

[10] http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/1097-0142(19930801)72:3%3C783::AID-CNCR2820720325%3E3.0.CO;2-U/abstract

[11] http://breastcancerconqueror.com/recipe_post_type/gluten-free-flax-muffins/

[12] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23441613

[13] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18701223

[14] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11168457

[15] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11168457

Cardiologist: Millions of People Taking Statin Drugs Will Continue to Have Far Greater Chance of Harm than Benefithttp:/...
22/02/2018

Cardiologist: Millions of People Taking Statin Drugs Will Continue to Have Far Greater Chance of Harm than Benefit
http://healthimpactnews.com/2018/cardiologist-millions-of-people-taking-statin-drugs-will-continue-to-have-far-greater-chance-of-harm-than-benefit/

by Paul Fassa
Health Impact News

Two recent articles published in the UK mainstream hard copy and online newspaper Express revealed there’s something wrong with cholesterol-lowering statin drug prescription policies, quoting several doctors who claim statins cause more harm than benefit.

Dr. Rita Redberg, a cardiologist professor at the San Francisco Medical Center, states:

“Unfortunately, until all data is available and discussed with patients, millions of people taking these [statin] drugs will continue to have far greater chance of harm than benefit.” (Source.)

Dr. Rita Redberg’s name might be familiar to our readers, because she appeared in an Australian two-part TV news documentary that has often been featured in several Health Impact News articles. Both parts were connected thematically and produced by Dr. Maryanne Demasi, Ph.D.

And it was Dr. Demasi’s British Medical Journal (BMJ) article and study review that the Express article was reporting rather favorably with quotes from other doctors supporting her findings. The article’s focus was on the controversy it had ignited regarding the widespread use of cholesterol-lowering statin drugs.

Dr. Demasi’s Determination to Expose the Harsh Realities of Statin Drugs Was Underestimated
dr-maryanne-demasi

A few years back around 2013/14, Dr. Demasi produced two Catalyst science show productions on the ABC Australia TV network. It’s as mainstream as it gets down under.

Part one, “Dietary Villains,” of the two-part series, “The Heart of the Matter,” exposes the big fat lie of heart disease, the “lipid theory of heart disease,” which has become the foundation of producing processed foods to avoid natural, healthy, edible fats. (Sources)

As the cholesterol count paranoia peaked, statin drugs were created and became huge blockbuster drugs, creating billions for Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies.

Dr. Demasi’s second report covered the successful statin hoax, based on the false premise of heart attacks and cardiovascular disease – cholesterol. The doctors and others that Demasi interviewed focused on the fact that yes, statins reduce cholesterol, but that’s bad for you! The reasons were expertly and clearly presented.

Her investigative reporting also revealed that statins not only reduced cholesterol, an important building block of the brain and central nervous system and hormone production, it also blocked the production of a heart nutrient, CoQ10. CoQ10 is also vital for mitochondria, the energy packages inside each of our cells.

The successful intent of reducing cholesterol is unnecessary as the lipid theory of heart disease has been proven false, it is still clung to by most mainstream practitioners and unfortunately too many holistic doctors as well. Inadvertently, impeding CoQ10 creates debilitating, even crippling, side effects.

If you’re doubtful about this information or not fully informed, Health Impact News has several articles and study references, you can educate yourself here.

The first show of “The Heart of the Matter” aired on Australian national TV. Immediately, the medical establishment demanded that ABC not air the second show, the one that discusses the downfalls of statin drugs. One even commented there would be blood on their hands while another medical bureaucratic claimed many would die after viewing the second segment and quitting their statin regimens.

The second show did also air, but the medical industry pressure persisted and ABC agreed to never air either documentary again and took both episodes off their website. But Health Impact News has them and you can view both from this site – episode one here and episode two here.

Both parts of Demasi’s two-part investigative report were high-quality productions and made their case very well. After such a backlash and removal of a fine production, many would have thrown in the towel thinking the powers that be are too big.

But Dr. Demasi returned with her BMJ article published in late 2017, titled “Statin wars: have we been misled about the evidence? A narrative review,” which was reported in the UK Express with some doctors expressing their support of Dr. Demasi questioning the claims of statin drugs and their research reports from the drug companies who make them.

Some Highlights of Dr. Demasi’s Publicized Narrative Review
Dr. Demasi reports how an independent study showed people who took a daily statin for five years only increased their life expectancy by 4.1 days after a serious negative heart health event or 3.2 days with primary prevention prescriptions for healthy individuals. (Source)

Her review mentions the actual drug company practices of omitting negative trial study reports from final complete reports to the FDA. Then there is the tendency to omit trial subjects who were “non-compliant” while not listing the side effects that may have caused them to quit. In her article, Dr. Demasi asks,

“If the data are hidden, can we even have a debate?”

One major non-industry-funded study on statins has been done showing that the statin drug pravastatin had no significant benefit in reducing either all-cause mortality or coronary heart disease when prescribed as a preventative, she wrote.

There remained the question of how much harm those statins caused. So Dr. Demasi decided it would benefit her investigation to gather raw data from all the statin study materials for a better understanding of actual efficacy and safety.

In England, an Oxford University group had established the Cholesterol Treatment Trialists’ (CTT) Collaboration, which handled a good deal of statin clinical trial reports from statin producing pharmaceutical companies.

The CTT Collaboration also cheerled for the statin industry by submitting dogmatic editorials to journals promoting greater distribution of statin drugs for lower ages without high cholesterol levels.

When Demasi queried the CTT Collaboration in an effort to obtain all their study reports to obtain the raw data disclosing what was filtered out, she got this official response:

“The CTT secretariat has an agreement with the principal investigators of the trials and, in those instances where trial data were provided directly by the drug manufacturers, with the companies themselves, that individual trial data will not be released to third parties. Such an agreement was necessary in order that analyses of the totality of the available trial data could be conducted by the CTT Collaboration: without such an agreement the trial data could not have been brought together for systematic analysis.”

Other interesting events disclosed in Dr. Demasi’s review is how two statin guideline committees, one in the UK, and the other in the USA, decided to expand statin prescriptions for larger population segments by lowering the age levels and cholesterol count levels and reducing symptoms required for recommending statin drugs.

Both committees were stacked with doctors having financial interests with the very pharmaceutical companies that make and market statin drugs. The 2004 US National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) committee’s membership had eight of its nine members with financial ties to pharmaceutical companies who marketed statin drugs.

Shortly after the NCEP committee’s guideline release, the UK’s National Institute for Health Care Excellence (NICE) created statin prescription guidelines that reduced the risk profile for statin drug prescriptions by half, greatly expanding statin use in the UK. Eight of the 12 committee members were financially involved with statin producers.

Dr. Demasi’s review also included how editorial efforts to nullify doubts about statin efficacy and safety included claims that negative media reporting on statins would be the death knell for many who should be taking statins, and most reported side effects were nocebo events.

A nocebo effect occurs when known negative expectations from treatments cause the patient to experience a more negative effect than if it were unknown.

All this and more led Dr. Demasi to conclude:

“Dissenting views about statins have been publicly derided and effectively silenced by proponents who are often funded by statin manufacturers.”

Among medical experts interviewed by the Express who supported Dr. Demasi’s views was the Queen’s former personal physician, Sir Richard Thompson, who added his perspective:

“This formidable review adds to the voices that are questioning the cholesterol/statin/cardiovascular disease hypothesis and are criticizing the presentation of many of the trial data. Physicians should emphasize the benefits on cardiovascular disease of physical activity and a Mediterranean diet, both of which are effective and safer and cheaper than drugs.” (Source)

Dr. Demasi’s BMJ article can be viewed here.

Another Dissenting Statin Report Publicized in UK Mainstream Press
The same newspaper, The Express, offered more coverage of dissenting doctors in a different publication. This exposure was covered in an Express article, “STATINS WARNING: Heart medicine pills ‘do more HARM than good’.”

Cardiologist Dr. Aseem Malholtra led a coalition of medical experts whose study concluded statin drugs did more harm than good.

Again, Sir Richard Thompson, the Queen’s former personal physician, registered his support, this time also referring to the bogus lipid theory of heart disease:

“The seductive theory that cholesterol in the blood and the diet is the enemy, and therefore must be lowered at all costs, has diverted attention from the unnatural increase in sugar intake that has a greater influence on obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. It’s time for a rethink and a change in our diets.” (Source)

Here in the United States, mainstream media is hostage to the revenue from rampant direct to consumer advertising: print, radio, and especially TV advertising meant for convincing many to “… ask your doctor about [pharmaceutical product].”

Direct to consumer pharmaceutical advertising is allowed only in the USA and New Zealand. But most other industrialized nations don’t allow it.

This allows the media, especially print media, to step outside the boundaries of pharmaceutical propaganda, even if it’s only to create controversy. Unfortunately, it takes a lot to pry most out of the illusion that Big Pharma rules the mainstream medical establishment with an iron fist, and the motive is money and more money, not a concern for human health.

A good start here would be to stop allowing drug companies advertising direct to consumers via mainstream media outlets. This would allow the media to listen and report dissenting expert viewpoints, on at least statin drugs, for starters.

They [the media] could start with Dr. Jeffrey Dach of South Florida, who reports in his newsletter how Duane Graveline MD, MPH, a former NASA astronaut, suffered an unusual form of amnesia called transient global amnesia (TGA) from the statin Lipitor, twice. Dr. Dach has his own statin commentary as well in his newsletter, where he also recommends a cardiovascular disease remedy from Linus Pauling.

The second time was shame on him. So he researched why and how this happens when suppressing the main ingredient of brain and nerve matter, cholesterol, is drastically reduced. He explained this in his article “Lipitor: Thief of Memory” on his blog – space doc.

Sources and References

https://healthimpactnews.com/2013/abc-australia-exposes-cholesterol-lowering-statin-drug-scam-and-pharmaceutical-criminal-activity/

https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/health/908399/UK-statins-health-news-cholesterol-heart-pills-drug-no-millions-without-benefit

https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/health/828448/statins-warning-heart-medicine-fail-harms-health-study-reveals

http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/bjsports/early/2018/01/16/bjsports-2017-098497.full.pdf?ijkey=Rsap0XafljfcOCR&keytype=ref

http://www.drdach.com/Lipitor_Jarvik_Dracula.html

http://www.drdach.com/Heart_Disease.html

https://www.peoplespharmacy.com/2015/10/05/statins-are-not-a-magic-bullet-for-longer-life/ http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/5/9/e007118

Two recent articles published in the UK mainstream hard copy and online newspaper Express revealed there’s something wrong with cholesterol-lowering statin drug prescription policies, quoting several doctors who claim statins cause more harm than benefit. Dr. Rita Redberg, a cardiologist professor...

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