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The
Man Who Shouldn’t Be Alive
by
Bill Sardi
Recently
by Bill Sardi: Did
the H1N1 Swine Flu Virus Emanate From a Herd of Rhinoceros?
Louis Campos
of Ventura, California, approaching his 64th birthday
this month, is a man who frankly should not be alive.
For a man who
has experienced four separate heart attacks over a period of 7 years,
and came within minutes of dying due to severe dehydration from
acute diabetes, which required emergent infusion of 13 liters of
intravenous fluid, and had a pancreas that ceased to function resulting
in his total dependence upon insulin, as well as the development
of small hemorrhages in the back of his eyes, Lou is a walking miracle.
Today Louis
takes no medications – no insulin or blood pressure pills, not even
a baby aspirin. His most recent electrocardiogram shows no evidence
of prior heart attacks, and even two recommended knee operations
were cancelled. There has been low loss of vision.
Lou attributes
it all to his use of dietary supplements and God’s steadfast guidance
in his life. It’s been a bumpy road for Lou, having abused his body
with street drugs and alcohol in his younger years, and having undergone
prolonged stress to earn a living as a fire sprinkler designer as
well as an extended ordeal taking care of his wife as she slowly
died of cancer in more recent years.
As stress increased
Lou would experience another heart attack (twice while sitting with
his wife in the hospital as she awaited cancer treatment) and his
blood sugar would roar out of control as well, requiring him to
go back on anti-diabetic drugs or take insulin.
A crisis
Lou’s health
saga began in 1996. He began to urinate frequently and had lost
45 pounds. He developed unquenchable thirst and was drinking up
to 3 gallons of water a day. He also experienced unbearable leg
cramps. Like most males, he resisted seeing a doctor. His friends
and family finally persuaded him to make an appointment at the doctor’s
office.
The doctor
had a concerned look on his face. There was good reason.
The finger-stick
blood sugar test in the doctor’s office was abnormal. So abnormal,
the nurse thought the blood sugar analyzer needed a new battery,
and once it was replaced, Louis’ blood sugar test was repeated.
There was no problem with the machine. His blood sugar was so high,
above 450 – the machine couldn’t read any higher. Louis fell asleep
in the doctor’s office, typical for a diabetic with such uncontrolled
blood sugar.
The doctor
advised Louis to obtain a blood sugar test from a local laboratory
that had more sophisticated equipment. He drove himself to the laboratory
and back, with a blood sugar that would have thrown most diabetics
into a coma.
The laboratory
called the doctor with the test results. He then called Lou and
advised him to go to the emergency room right away. Louis reluctantly
said he would go in the morning.
The doctor
called back moments later and wanted to speak with his wife. Louis’
blood sugar level was 750. The top of normal range is 200. The doctor
was trying to gently break the bad news to his wife, believing at
the time that the super-high blood sugar level might be a mortal
sign of pancreatic cancer, for which there is no successful treatment.
Finally, Louis
went to the emergency room at the county hospital, Ventura Medical
Center, where he again fell asleep in the waiting room. By now Louis’s
mouth was dry. He had no saliva in his mouth that morning. A nurse
ushered him to an exam room and took his blood pressure. It was
ghastly low. She quickly summoned a physician. Louis was extremely
dehydrated. He needed intravenous fluids, 13 bottles of IV fluids
in all before that night was over. His blood sugar level upon hospital
admission was 1150! His doctor says this is the highest blood sugar
count on record.
Louis was attempting
to tell his doctors and nurses about his faith in God while he was
undergoing frantic treatment by the medical staff in the emergency
room. He looked down, and from his ankles to his toes, his skin
was blue. His circulatory system was shutting down. Two days later,
in a hospital bed, one of his emergency room doctors paid him a
visit and told him he came within minutes of dying. Louis was closer
to God than he had thought.
Referral
to a diabetic specialist
Louis was referred
to a diabetic specialist. He immediately told the doctor he didn’t
want to take insulin injections. So the doctor put him on oral insulin.
The pills didn’t work. Two days later he returned to see the doctor
and began receiving instruction on how to self-inject insulin.
When he returned
home, his vision was so bad that he had to place two pair of reading
glasses, one on top of the other, in order to see, until he could
get a new eyeglass prescription. Louis also began to lose sensation
along the sides of his legs, his forearms and tops of his toes.
Diabetic neuropathy was setting in. It was 8 months before Louis
was strong enough to return to work full time.
Louis experienced
hypoglycemic episodes daily. He had to carry food with him at all
times to keep from passing out. His wife learned to cook meals and
to adhere to strict meal times to keep her husband’s blood sugar
levels constant. Every insulin-dependent diabetic knows the importance
of regular meal times.
Up to this
point Louis was struggling with his disease. No cure was in sight.
Most diabetics face inevitable loss of vision, impaired circulation,
high blood pressure, and worse.
Dietary
supplements
Long about
1996 I first heard of Lou’s health problems and had occasion to
educate him about some measures he could take to allay his diabetes.
Louis was advised to take food supplements, with strong doses of
vitamin E, vitamin C, thiamin (vitamin B1), magnesium, chromium,
niacin, biotin, zinc, vanadium, alpha lipoic acid and some herbs
like bilberry, lutein and milk thistle along with flax seed oil
and large doses of vitamin B12.
I explained
to Louis that the fatty insulation (called the myelin sheath) around
his nerves had deteriorated and needed to be rebuilt. Louis followed
instructions and took the food supplements religiously. His wife
was vigilant in helping him take his vitamins. Louis says he was
determined to try the supplements for 3 months, and if no changes
occurred, he would quit.
In just 3 weeks
he began experiencing noticeable improvement in his health. "I
noticed, for the first time in months, I was thinking clearly,"
remembers Louis.
I also spent
time teaching Louis about IP6, also called phytic acid, a component
of whole grain diets, found in the bran of seeds and grain. I explained
to Lou that IP6 was found to rescue the insulin-secreting cells
in his pancreas over a decade ago. Modern medicine had ignored this
discovery.
Days later,
while at work, Lou brushed up against an unfinished dry wall, and
the point of a nail cut his leg. He was excited. He could feel the
pain from the cut for the first time in months. The diabetic neuropathy
was disappearing. After 3 months of taking the vitamins he had regained
full feeling back in his arms and legs.
Lost eyeglasses
By October
of 1998 family finances were slim, so the last thing Louis needed
was to lose his prescription eyeglasses. He had left them on a construction
job and one of the cleanup crew had thrown his glasses in the trash.
Louis couldn’t function without his glasses, so he went to the eye
doctor for a new prescription.
His eye doctor
is a specialist in diabetes, and was amazed at Louis’s eyes. There
were no signs of diabetic eye problems, or swelling at the back
of his eyes. Small hemorrhages in the back of his eyes had disappeared.
His eyeglass prescription had actually improved and he needed a
thinner prescription than before.
Blood sugar
returns to normal
Prior to starting
on his dietary supplement regimen, Louis had been experiencing high
blood sugar in the morning, around 190, and low blood sugar in the
afternoon, around 85. On his third trip to visit with me, Louis
sat at the breakfast table, just months after starting on his regimen
of food supplements, and calculated his average blood sugar for
the previous month – 128, in the normal range!
Louis’ need
for insulin was diminishing now. His doctor split his insulin dosage.
When he first was discharged from the hospital, Louis needed 55
units of insulin in the morning and 35 at night. Now he was down
to 15 units in the morning, 10 in afternoon, and 10 in evening.
The doctor
suggested Louis undergo a hemoglobin A1c test. This is a fast-moving
form of hemoglobin (red pigment) in the blood. High hemoglobin A1c
levels signal a disruption in sugar metabolism. His hemoglobin A1c
at the hospital was 12. Louis didn’t have the money for the test
at the time, so he put it off for a year. Finally Louis went back
to the doctor’s office for the test. He waited at home for the results.
The April 1999
test report read as follows: "Hemoglobin A1c = 6. Non-diabetic"
Louis couldn’t
believe it. The test doctors use to chart the progress of diabetes
showed he was normal. His family was overjoyed to hear the news.
Louis was advised by his diabetic doctor that he would be placed
on Glucophage pills and he would be weaned off insulin. He only
needed 10 units at bedtime.
But now Louis
couldn’t get to sleep. He was itching all the time. He was taken
off insulin altogether. The symptoms didn’t completely subside till
two weeks later when he was finally taken off the oral medication
as well. His doctor asked Louis to chart his blood sugar levels
for 3 more days. His 3-day average was 132, perfectly normal, without
any medication!
But the stress
of his wife being diagnosed with cancer caused Lou to have to go
back on low doses of insulin.
Now, for
the heart attacks
The first of
Lou’s four heart attacks occurred in 1998 while he was waiting with
his wife to undergo cancer treatment. His legs began to shake, and
it felt like someone was sitting on his chest. He shrugged it off
but didn’t feel good for a week, so he went to the Veterans Hospital
Medical Center and underwent his first electrocardiogram (EKG),
which revealed damage to the heart.
About a year
later Lou and his wife went to the hospital again, and he experienced
another heart attack. Then again, while at the City of Hope cancer
hospital where his wife was undergoing treatment, Lou experienced
his third heart attack, which he largely ignored. He didn’t want
to cause worry for his wife.
His fourth
heart attack was more severe and occurred in September of 2005 at
home. Ambulance personnel had to place five nitroglycerin tablets
under his tongue to relieve his chest pain. Lou says he had never
been through such pain in his life. The electrocardiogram in the
doctor’s office revealed three prior heart attacks, and now this
fourth heart seizure.
His doctor
advised him to take a baby aspirin and wrote him a prescription
for a calming medicine, which he didn’t take.
I again had
occasion to meet and talk with Lou. He brought me up to date on
his health status. I explained to Lou that a Dr. Lester Morrison,
a Loma Linda University cardiologist, had cured
heart disease in the 1970s, in the era prior to cholesterol
drugs.
Dr. Morrison
employed two dietary supplements, first lecithin, and then more
powerfully, chondroitin sulfate, to eliminate arterial plaque and
to eradicate scarring (fibrosis) of heart muscle following a heart
attack. Dr. Morrison published convincing photographs of how the
heart tissue healed after a heart attack when given chondroitin
sulfate. Lou said he would take those.
I also suggested
he supplement his diet with fish oil, magnesium and a pill that
combined resveratrol, quercetin, IP6 from rice bran and vitamin
D.
It was September
27, 2009 when Lou underwent another EKG, after he had been taking
the above dietary supplements for quite a few months.
The doctor’s
technician thought there must have been some mistake, as his electrocardiogram
showed little or no evidence of any prior heart attack. Possibly
the EKG technician had mixed his test with another patient’s test
by mistake.
The electrocardiogram
was repeated. The results were the same. The doctor’s assistant
was dumbfounded. This just doesn’t happen. Lou called me to say
what had happened at the doctor’s office.
Today Lou has
trimmed his weight from 215 to 158 pounds and he receives coaching
from a military trainer. He works out physically three times a week
and in between goes for 810 mile bicycle rides.
Two knee operations
were also recommended, but those operations weren’t needed when
I coaxed him into trying an oral hyaluronic acid supplement. Lou
says his joint problem returns when he forgets to take hyaluronic
acid.
Louis’s doctors
did a wonderful job of saving his life. But from that point on Louis
needed to learn how to manage his diet and take food supplements
on his own. This is where modern medicine falls down. There is no
one to coach patients back to health. The nutrients recommended
to Louis were much more effective, less costly and problematic than
his prescription drugs.
The nation’s
challenge
Chronic age-related
diseases like diabetes and heart disease, like Lou suffered with,
comprise about 75% of US health care costs. We read news reports
that the cost
of treating diabetes will triple by the year 2034. We read that
one-in-three
Americans will be obese by the year 2018 and that the cost of
treating these diseases amounts to hundreds of billions of dollars.
Had Louis Campos
gone the conventional route, he would be on life-long medications,
have likely have suffered loss of his vision, would have continued
to be overweight, would have undergone two knee operations, would
have racked up hundreds of thousands of dollars of healthcare costs,
and his lifespan would have been shortened considerably. Frankly,
Louis Campos has defied the odds – he shouldn’t be alive today.
Studies now
show that all
diet plans are equally ineffective. Nor
does a low-fat diet decrease the risk for cardiovascular disease.
Alternatives outside the existing menu of treatments for America’s
diabesity epidemic must be explored. Surprisingly, most anti-diabetic
drugs cause weight gain and eventual total dependence upon insulin.
The reason
why conventional approaches to America’s diabesity epidemic don’t
work is because heart disease, diabetes and obesity are not drug
deficiencies, but they are treated as such. Overlooked nutritional
factors can rescue a failing pancreas and even reverse heart disease
and diabetes, even at an advanced stage, as demonstrated in the
life of Louis Campos.
Dietary approaches
to avert obesity and diabetes fail miserably because they are not
caused by calories, fats and refined sugars per se – they are caused
by a disturbed state of over-mineralization. My new book, Downsizing
Your Body (256 pages) explains why modern diet plans and
anti-obesity and anti-diabetic drugs fail miserably.
February
6, 2010
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is a frequent writer on health and political
topics. His health writings can be found at www.naturalhealthlibrarian.com.
He is the author of You
Don’t Have To Be Afraid Of Cancer Anymore.
Copyright
© 2010 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
This article has been written exclusively for www.LewRockwell.com
and other parties who wish to refer to it should link rather than
post at other URLs.
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