The NBC National News, quoted the Washington
Post in March of 2000, about the concerns
that the FDA had over the mixing of supplements
and conventional medications. There were
concerns that millions of people are taking
supplements (considered herbs, homeopathic,
vitamins, minerals, amino acids, enzymes
and some diet products) and having reactions
when they mix these things with common
and prescribed medications.
I have studied this phenomenon for over
20 years and do know for a fact that with
conventional medications, these reactions
are quite common. The AMA is calling for
the FDA to reverse their ruling on supplements
implemented in 1997.
But is this really the best approach?
Many Universities across the nation have
closed their Ethno -botany and Botany
labs, disallowing many with the gift in
this field to aid in the search for new
cures, and to determine which plants will
have adverse reactions when combined with
other chemicals
A good example is the treatment of Gout.
Medications that are prescribed by traditional
medicine are normally Allopurinal or Zyloprim
and Colchicine (which, by the way, is
a homeopathic remedy from the bulb of
the Autumn Crocus) which decreases the
reaction that causes uric acid in the
blood. Allopurinal and Colchicine can
be enhanced by a specialized diet and
the elimination of some supplements that
can cause an elevation of certain enzymes
in the diet. Both of these drugs can also
cause serious side effects and toxicity
when taken in high doses and/or for a
prolonged period of time.
The deficiency of certain nutrients can
provoke an attack of gout, people who
take antibiotics can increase the risk
of an attack and a persons diet can certainly
influence not only the severity of an
attack, but the frequency of attacks.
There are other reactions that need to
be taken into account also, and that is
that Allopurinal and Colchicine has a
negative effect on the liver after 6 months
of use, which will make it harder for
those drugs to work effectively. If you
also add some supplementation, even a
regular multi-vitamin into the system
when the liver is already struggling to
keep up with the demands of the system,
this can cause an adverse reaction to
the liver, in part because the liver has
to work harder to absorb the micro-nutrients
given in the multi-vitamin.
The balance between conventional medicine
and alternative medicine is a delicate
one. Right now, both schools of thought
refuse to work together, and the general
public is who suffers.
For some who suffered from allergies
when Seldane was prescribed, this was
a very concerning issue. When taking Seldane,
patients were not told that taking the
medication along with certain micro-nutrients
could prove to be fatal, and was in a
few cases across the United States.
In 1993, the New England Journal of medicine
published an article in which researchers
estimated that as many as 60 million people
had participated in alternative medical
care. A follow-up study to that one, which
appeared in a 1998 issue of JAMA, estimated
that the number of visits to alternative
practitioners had increased more than
47 percent between 1990 and 1997 and that
expenditures in 1997 for alternative medicine
services exceeded 21 billion dollars.
In our small town we had a family practitioner
that took care of the community needs.
He was a wonderful man that always gave
of his time, energy and knowledge freely.
A week after he was diagnosed with Gastric
Carcinoma, he called me for advice. I
asked him why he would call me and ask
me for help. He told me that he had watched
the patients that he had diagnosed with
this same disease die slow, painful and
miserable death, even while they were
on conventional medications. He said he
knew that the traditional medications
and protocols didn't work, he had diagnosed
cancers, informed the patients, watched
them slowly die and he wanted something
else. I treated him for 9 months; the
cancer did not advance in that time, it
didn't go away either, but it didn't advance.
I asked him to do both treatments together,
traditional and integrative, but he refused.
He had a friend that was a Oncologist
and this friend finally convinced him
to try some clinical trials at a couple
of Universities. In order to do that,
the family doctor had to come off all
other protocols that he had been taking.
They waited a few weeks for the nutrients
to leave his body, then started him on
a protocol called PP6 and Thalidomide.
A few days after the first treatment,
he told his closest friend, "I've killed
myself." Within a few weeks, he was totally
incapacitated. He passed away some 5 months
later, in severe pain and agony.
It's not always conventional medicine
at fault....A cancer patient in N-stage
was being treated by both conventional
physician and naturopathic physician.
Because the patient had been put on Prednisone
he had become edemic. The Naturopath told
the patient to come off the drug immediately,
and then left town on a business trip.
I got a call a few days later, the patients
breathing was labored and he had fluid
in his lungs. The massage therapist that
called explained what had happened. I
told her to call the man's medical physician
immediately, the reduction of Prednisone
can not be halted that quickly without
the patient undergoing repercussions .
The patient paid the ultimate price for
the bridge between alternative and conventional
medicine. There is so much that can be
integrated into both schools of thought
and treatment. These stories are why the
public is turning to other methods for
treatment, most do a combination, which,
as the previous story illustrates, can
be detrimental to health, unless the health
care giver has a knowledge of both fields
and an understanding of the chemical reactions
that can occur.
It is always best to be responsible for
your own health and treatment. No health
care professional should be given total
and complete control over another man's
life. The need for knowledge is a necessity
when deciding to integrate different methods
of treatment for the health care provider
involved, it could mean the difference
between the life and death of a patient.
The future of Integrated Medicine lies
in the publics demand for the combination
of traditional, alternative medicine,
Bio-technology and Nano-technology. This
integration will be needed in order to
give patients the best of all fields of
study.
D.S. Epperson is the top Formulary for
Home Blend Gourmet, (www.sugarblend.com)
a Fuctional Foods Company based in the
U.S., and South Pacific Health, the Corporate
Base for 9 different Company's associated
with Human Health, Enviromental, Agricultural,
Veterinarian, Nutraceutical, Topical,
Functional Food, Skincare, Sports and
Fitness and Botanical Extractions. Her
work spans a period of 20 years as a Nutritional
Biochemist in protocols for acute and
chronic conditions. She has writen reference
books on herbs and manufacturing medicines
from botanicals, and formulates functional
foods for the benefit of those suffering
from disease. More information can be
found at: http://www.sugarblend.com.