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Reversing Heart Disease
Rebound and Reverse Heart Disease
As well as CFS, fibromyalgia and a host of other modern illnesses—and strengthen
your immune system at the same time
Scott E. Miners
You can bypass drugs, surgery, angioplasty or bypass procedures to heal or prevent
heart and other modern diseases such as asthma and diabetes. Here is a simple prescription
you can use to chelate (pronounced key-late), or cleanse arteriosclerotic blockages,
stimulate your immune system and cleanse toxins from the cardiovascular and all cellular
systems and organs of the body. It is not news that living an imbalanced life is
stressful to the body. Here the focus is upon the physical body; however, unwholesome
spiritual, mental and emotional bodies can be as toxic to your physical body as smoking
a pack of cigarettes a day or drinking excessive amounts of alcohol.
Chelation (pronounced key-lay-shun) therapy has proven to be a safe and effective
alternative to bypass surgery for atherosclerosis—and it has been shown by research
that illnesses traced to toxins in the body, such as cancer and chronic fatigue syndrome,
can also be eliminated using chelation therapy. (Elmer Cranton, M.D.,Well Being
Journal, January/February, 1998.)1
What is chelation therapy? The simplest explanation is that it is a process wherein
molecules of toxic debris, such as heavy metals found in accumulations of plaque
on artery or vascular linings in the brain and all systems of the body, are bonded
with molecules of chelation substances that pull them out of the body. The chelation
effect also takes place automatically from natural bodily processes. It is when disease
has taken a foothold that you may wish to accelerate or amplify the natural chelation
processes of the body. How?
There are many ways to support and accelerate the body's natural chelation process.
Certain foods help the process and some hinder, or are part of the disease creation
process throughout the system. Evidence is pointing to foods with additives, hydrogenated
oils, simple sugars and carbohydrates, and foods grown with chemicals, pesticides
and herbicides as being poor health choices, and of course plentiful research shows
toxins in the water and air are also causing a great deal of disease from chemical
sensitivities in most human bodies.
SEVERAL SOLUTIONS
Most of us eat conventionally grown foods, lacking in nutrition, rather than organic,
and then we don't drink enough water to flush out the toxins that were used to make
the conventional foods grow. The water most of us drink is chlorinated and probably
fluoridated. Add to that all of the processed foods sold in the supermarkets, foods
with additional chemical additives, flavorings, colorings, sweeteners, salts and
artificial sweeteners, and you have toxins entering the body on a constant, daily
basis. (Solution: Many people have begun writing to and calling the corporations
that produce and market foods asking for organic products; they may boycott conventionally
produced foods, or buy only organically produced fruits, vegetables and animals,
even driving many miles extra to stores that sell these products.) Why? Organically
grown foods, and especially the nutrients and fibers from fruits and vegetables,
naturally nourish the body and chelate toxins from it. Most organic growers use strong
seed lines, not environmentally (generationally) or genetically modified seeds.
Regarding drinking water, F. Batmanghelidj, M.D., has shown without doubt that the
vast majority of us humans have not been drinking enough water.2 Mountain spring
water, with its mineralized and magnetic properties, is the best water to drink.
Pure artesian water is a second best choice. Pure, vigorous water nourishes and chelates
toxins from the body due to its magnetic and trace mineral properties. However, if
you are putting too many toxins into the body, it would take far more copious amounts
of water to cleanse them out than you or I would wish to drink.3
You may wish to chelate toxins, residues and plaque from your body in a more immediate
way if you have an emergency situation, and then gradually include an organic diet
to both cleanse and prevent recurrence in the future. What is an immediate, clinical
way to chelate, especially in cases of cardiovascular disease?
CLEANSING OUT THE TOXINS
An immediate way to speed the chelation process very dramatically is to go to a clinic
as an “out-patient” and have a doctor inject ethylene diamine terra acetic acid (EDTA)
into your veins. This is also a natural chelating procedure that specifically targets
toxic metals, and it works systemically. It has been proven that EDTA chelation therapy
is not only effective, even in “emergency” cases of cardiovascular disease, but also
much safer and far less expensive than surgery or angioplasty.1 The staff at the
American College for Advancement in Medicine will refer you to medical doctors who
practice EDTA chelation therapy nationally: 1-949-583-7666.
Preventive or non-emergency measures also exist for chelating the body. There are
“oral chelation” formulas, or supplements that can be taken, and these are available
at health stores. Also, large amounts (varying for each individual person) of up
to 25,000 mg./day of vitamin C, mineral ascorbate form, is a very effective chelator,
as are vitamin E (400-800 IU/day), bilberry and ginkgo biloba, as all are antioxidants.
Health-related reference literature is abundant with research studies reporting beneficial
results of using these vitamin and nutrient chelators as supplements. Consult your
health practitioner if you need assistance in determining amounts for you. From hereon
this article will focus on a form of exercise that has been found remarkably efficient
in chelating toxic elements from the body. Journal readers will recognize rebounding
and its immune system stimulating and cellular-level toxic debris removing effects
from the Fall, 2001 issue of the Journal (“Bouncing for Health”).4
CREATE YOUR OWN CHELATION THERAPY BY REBOUNDING
Dr. Morton Walker, D.P.M., states that exercising on a rebounder (mini-trampoline)
causes “a natural process of chelation therapy to proceed throughout the body.” There
are many sources indicating the overall health-giving effects of rebounding exercise.
(See Well Being Journal, Fall, 2001, for more information.)4 Réné
and Maggie Gaudette and the Wonders write: “The protocol [of taking antioxidant supplements
and doing rebounding exercise]...eliminates a good portion of cellulite, which is
an accumulation of toxins within the fat structure of the body. [Also] that exercise—bouncing
up and down on a mini-trampoline—is a good way of loosening up all of that fat structure
so that the toxins can be eliminated.... You shake it up and down. Rebounding clears
the lymph glands, it provides the aerobic exercise for the heart, it provides oxygenation
to the body, it is not destructive to the joints of the body, it loosens the toxins
within the subdermal portion of the skin in the body, it allows the body to perspire,
it even allows your hair to grow a little longer because when you go up and you come
down it pulls the hair out of your scalp. And it tones the muscles. There are many
[more] benefits....”3
Dr. Walker writes: “Exercising on a minitrampoline for its beneficial rebounding
result enables you to create chelation therapy within your body and brain.” How does
chelation take place? First of all, each cell in the body is “exercised” when bouncing
up and down. The force of gravity first pulls, then releases each cell, thus stimulating
cells to move their fluids and flush out toxic material as well as absorb nutrients.
Additionally, the valves in the lymphatic system, the powerful force behind your
immune system, open and close and pump lymphatic fluid during bouncing, even with
very gentle up and down bouncing movements. The lymph fluid then removes toxins from
the body as a whole, and it even produces more white blood cells. Those who have
had major illnesses, such as cancer, attribute healing to the use of rebounding once
per hour for two to three minutes. White blood cells increase dramatically during
a short session of two to three minutes of rebounding.
Albert Carter, who first discovered the rebounding effect in the late 1970s, called
it “the most efficient, effective form of exercise yet devised by man.”5 Dr. Walker
states that “your whole cardiovascular system becomes stronger even without increasing
its heart rate,”5 thus the elderly or ill need not begin vigorously exercising in
order to receive chelation or other health benefits from rebounding. One of the many
ways rebounding helps chelate toxins from the body and specifically from the cardiovascular
system is through the stimulation of production of lactic acid by the muscles.
Lactic acid is a natural by-product of muscular activity. Shirley Vanderbilt writes:
“There are elevated levels of lactic acid in muscle tissues after exercise....”6
She cites research by exercise physiologist Dr. George Brooks from the 1980s: “Lactic
acid is a key substance for providing energy, disposing dietary carbohydrate, producing
blood glucose and liver glycogen.... Lactic acid goes through a chemical cycle ultimately
becoming lactate, which can then be transported quickly from the muscle into the
blood. Lactate levels in the blood rise during moderate exercise. At the completion
of exercise, lactate levels return to normal within an hour. Light exercise is the
most effective approach to speed this process. The muscles copiously produce lactic
acid during light exercise.”
Dr. Walker notes that lactic acid is a weak organic acid that chelates toxic components.
He states, “Because natural lactic acid acts in the same way as does the medical
intravenous infusion of the chelating amino acid EDTA, the resulting responses from
rebound movements produce numerous therapeutic effects...:
1. They dissolve atherosclerotic plaque attached to the intima (the innermost
layer of arteries);
2. They pull [toxins] out of the media layer of blood vessel walls; and
3. They trap the foreign proteins that occupy space between cell membranes and then
remove these unwanted proteins for deposition as waste, carrying away also the toxic
type of proteins for processing through in the kidneys as urine, through the liver
as nitrogenous waste, and then through the bowel as feces.”
Walker cites a study done in Sweden almost twenty-five years ago, where exercise
therapists evaluated a group of hospitalized patients whose chief difficulties were
palpitations of the heart, breathlessness from cardiovascular inadequacy, peripheral
vascular insufficiency indicated by cold hands and feet, dizziness, headaches and
deep sighing. He states that “each patient averaged 5.4 symptoms.”
Collectively these patients had been suffering from 150 different clinically recorded
ailments, but by the end of the program of rebounding the clinicians found only 21
persisting symptoms; 68 symptoms had diminished and 44 ailments were entirely gone.
“The average number of symptoms per patient had dropped from 5.4 to 1.1,” writes
Walker. The clinicians at the Karolinska Institute who conducted this investigation
concluded that “rebound exercise protects and strengthens the cardiovascular and
peripheral vascular systems,” and offsets any potential harm caused by catecholamines,
or nerve transmitting chemicals released under stress, that increase blood pressure.
Dr. Walker concludes: “For a sick person who is able to rebound even in the midst
of illness, rebounding serves as a physiological antidote to [catecholamines] that
act as internal stressors. Besides cellular detoxification and nourishment, rebounding
produces a kind of cellular sedative that gives any damaged or sick cells the opportunity
to heal themselves.”5
James R. White, Ph.D., an exercise physiologist at the University of California,
San Diego, whose research Walker cites, asserts that a rebound exercise program has
the following cardiovascular health benefits:
1. Increased strength and size of the left ventricle of the heart;
2. Increased diameter of the heart;
3. Increased diameter of the arteries of the heart;
4. Increased number of latent arteries used for distributing blood to the heart and
the rest of the body.
5. Slowdown of the heart rate; and
6. Decreased amount of oxygen needed by the heart.
Rebounding even causes peripheral vascular improvement of occlusive disease by encouraging
blood clots in the limbs to dissolve.
Since rebounding also stimulates the immune system through lymphatic fluid drainage
and more production of white blood cells—due to the force of gravity pull and then
release during the act of jumping—the effects are beneficial not only for the rest
of the body, but especially for the blood circulatory system. Walker cites the work
of Hitendra H. Shah, M.D. [Dr. Shah strongly recommends rebound exercise. Rebounding,
he emphasizes, must be part of any chelation/detoxification program for reaping the
optimal advantages of intravenous EDTA chelation therapy], who notes: “Several problems
occur when the lymph drainage slows and fluids begin to accumulate around the cells....
Cells are forced to survive in their own waste and toxic byproducts. Such a situation
can eventually lead to the degeneration and destruction of organs. For example, poor
lymphatic drainage of the extremities can lead to tissue damage and then to poor
blood circulation with swelling and pain.... [S]imilar problems can happen in any
other organs of the body.”
CONCLUSION
Given the amount of toxins in our water, air and food—and thus entering our bodies—and
given the viruses and bacteria we encounter, it is not difficult to understand why
doctors and other health professionals not only rebound every day themselves but
recommend it to their patients. Rebounding stimulates the immune system like no other
form of exercise due to its effects on the lymphatic system; it stimulates cellular
cleansing, exercises the musculo-skeletal system, and helps restore bone density—and
it is simple, gentle on the joints of the body and an enjoyable! exercise anyone
can do. Dr. Walker recommends the Soft Bounce™ Needak® brand of rebounders in
his book, but any good quality rebounder will give you results and be gentle on the
body at the same time. The Needak® absorbs 85% of the impact when you jump. Imagine
the potentials, if rebounding alone can help you achieve these kinds of results,
if you combine this exercise with drinking plenty of pure mountain spring or artesian
water and a wholesome organic food diet (thus helping clean up the “outer” environment
too), along with a balanced spiritual, mental, emotional and physical life. It seems
it may very well be easier to be healthy than ill.
Well Being Journal readers may purchase a Needak® rebounder for $225 (plus shipping),
10% off the retail price of $249.95. (See www.needak-rebounders.com). Readers receive
a copy of Linda Brooks' book, Rebounding to Better Health (most testimonials quoted
above are from Brooks' book), as well as a video on the immune system by Al Carter,
when ordering a Needak® rebounder. We will also include two back issues of Well
Being Journal (Vol. 9 #3 & #4) containing a two-part article on Lymphatic Immune
Support. Call us toll free at 1-888-532-3117 and order with any major credit card.
(Allow approximately two weeks for shipping.)
REFERENCES
1. “Reversing Heart Disease Simply and Naturally,” by Elmer Cranton, M.D., Well
Being Journal, Vol. 7, No. 1, p. 4, P.O. Box 739, North Bend, WA 98045-0739,
425-888-0375. See article also in “back issues” on the internet at www.wellbeingjournal.com.
2. Your Body's Many Cries for Water: You Aren't Sick, You are Thirsty, by
F. Batmanghelidj, M.D., Global Health Solutions, Inc., P.O. Box 3189, Falls Church,
VA 22043, 703-848-2333, www.watercure.com.
3. Let's All Get Well Soon, by Réné Gaudette and Maggie McGuffin-Gaudette
and the Wonders, page 216; The Wonders Press, Inc., 8361 11th Line, RR 2, Thornton,
Ontario, Canada, LOL 2NO.
4. “Bouncing for Health,” by Scott E. Miners, Well Being Journal, Vol. 10,
No. 4, op cit.
5. “The Internal, Self-Chelation Therapy,” by Morton Walker, D.P.M, in Everything
You Should Know about Chelation Therapy, by Dr. Morton Walker and Dr. Hitendra
Shah; Freelance Communications, 484 High Ridge Rd., Stamford, CT 06905; $18, includes
s/h in U.S.
6. “A New Look at Lactic Acid,” by Shirley Vanderbilt, Massage and Bodywork
magazine, October/November 2001, p. 101.
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