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Heart Disease Requires Surgery?
Does heart disease require
surgery? Perhaps not as often as we are lead to believe. Years
ago I read that balloon angioplasty is not routine in England
as it is here, and yet the death rates for those who would normally
have it here was the same without it as those who had the surgical
procedure. Many doctors think it is an invasive, dangerous and
expensive surgery that has no net benefit, yet here we are years
later, and most doctors still believe in it. Doctors are slow
to change their minds.
Heart disease in general is
very profitable for heart surgeons, and so it is easy to understand
their resistance to new ideas. I am not saying that they would
purposely perform dangerous surgeries if they believed in a safer,
less invasive treatment. But I am saying that it is harder to
believe in such treatments if it means losing your livelihood.
An example of such a treatment is EDTA chelation therapy.
EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic
acid) was synthesized for the first time in Germany in 1935.
It has been used to clean out arteries for over 70 years with
no significant side effects reported. Chelation therapy is done
either intravenously, or orally using capsules, and is considered
very safe.
EDTA chelation is so safe,
in fact, that the AMA (American Heart Association) recommends
it in the form of large direct intravenous injections to treat
heavy metal poisoning. For example, hundreds of thousands of
children in the U.S. have undergone chelation therapy for lead
poisoning. The FDA (Food and Drug Administration) and USDA (U.S.
Department of Agriculture) both approve of its various uses in
foods even.
It was known early on that
EDTA attaches to poisons in your system and carries them out
of your body. As far back as 1955, research done at Providence
Hospital in Detroit, Michigan also found that it chelates the
excess calcium deposits in joints, kidneys, inner ears, and in
the plaque on your artery walls. It essentially dissolves the
plaque in your arteries.
More than a million people
in the U.S. have undergone chelation therapy. Many of them were
scheduled for heart surgery, but no longer needed it after the
therapy. Like washing hands before surgery, which after being
introduced took 50 years to catch on with doctors, chelation
therapy has been slow to be accepted, but it is becoming more
common.
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