Real Fibromyalgia Rx
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About this ebook
NEW -- for the FIRST time (for women) your guide to healing the constant tight chronic pain of fibromyalgia in your back and hips while finding out how to regain your health, regain your body, regain your proper weight, and get relief.
Have you been give the DREADED "F-word" diagnosis (that most women HATE to hear)? Wondering why you? Why the fibromyalgia? Why the pain? Why the insomnia? Why the fatigue? If you seem to have the trials of Job in the Old Testament, and just hate each day, and feel like you can't continue on another then this book is for you. In Real Fibromyalgia Rx, Dr. Purser explains how the pituitary is the root cause for those suffering from fibromyalgia, chronic pain, chronic fatigue syndrome, and even (YES!) interstitial cystitis. Are you wondering how your joints hurt so bad? Why your muscles up between your shoulder blades ache and seem so tense? Why you have sometimes HORRBILE insomnia and yet are exhausted all the time? Wondering why the gut and digestive problems torture you? Why do you suffer from the weird heart palpitations (what other doctor mentions THAT too?)? Why the bladder problems (SEVERE in ICS -- some of you know I'm talking to YOU)? Why the muscle wasting? On and on and on...it never seems to end. For women OR men (yes, they can get all of this too), Dr. Purser, who's done pituitary endocrinology research for a number of years explains (along with the medical literature) HOW you don't have the bad luck of having a bunch of disparate distinct problems but instead you have just one. This is a guide to understanding what the research says about the pituitary, your hormones, menopause, pain, and proper careful hormone replacement therapy. This is a perfect tool to help you find a doctor near you who knows and to take charge of your body and start feeling healthy, happy, and pain-free again! Buy one quick and GET HEALING!!!
Do wonder why you suffer from these? And what follows make sense?
Muscle wasting/No Libido/Fatigue -- could these all be of unknown cause or from low testosterone?Hot Flashes/Night Sweats/Migraines/Osteoporosis -- all from unknown causes or low progesterone?Cold hands and feet/Exhaustion/Weight Gain/Hair Loss -- all a "magic curse" or low thyroid? Bad Osteoporosis/Coronary Artery Disease/Wrinkles -- again a mystery or from low estrogen? Horrible Insomnia/Chronic Fatigue/Muscles that won't heal -- from a virus or from somatropin deficiency? See The Evidence
That This is Really ALL From Undiagnosed Pituitary Dysfunction/Damage/Loss!!! Hundreds of articles referenced and detailed -- no stone left unturned. See why you suffer the way you do, and how to unwind it all! See and understand for the FIRS Time why your ovaries have failed prematurely and what that REALLY means! Find Out Why WHEN You Hit Menopause Things Got REALLY BAD!!! (The DREADED "DOUBLE WHAMMY")
Dan Purser MD
Dr. Dan Purser (www.danpursermd.com), graduated with Honors from Brigham Young University and the University of Mississippi School of Medicine, and after years of endocrinology research is the bestselling author of 10 books, including co-writing a textbook, Program120: A Physician's Guide to Proactive Preventive Medicine, and the Program 120 Handbooks. His men's health book, Improving Male Sexuality, Fertility and Testosterone, was #1 in the Amazon Health Sex section for more than a week and his breast cancer book, The Breast Cancer Patient's Survival Guide: Amazing Strategies for Winning, was #1 in the Amazon Health Reference section. He is also an entertaining and dynamic educator and speaker (he has never NOT been voted as The Most Popular Speaker at any conference at which he's spoken) and is popular among both the public and physicians, and has travelled many thousands of miles doing book, radio and product tours all over the world. He is also the founder of a couple of successful health product design companies through which he makes a number of products for nutraceutical companies. He is also a BIG fan of Disneyland and Disney World where you can probably find him in his off time with his wife and some of their 10 children.
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Real Fibromyalgia Rx - Dan Purser MD
Chapter 1
Fibromyalgia; Theories and Opinions
Discovering the Meaning of Real Fibromyalgia: Problems with Big Medicine and Big Pharmaceutical Companies
Much of what physicians learn on the job and at so-called educational
conferences comes from pharmaceutical companies. Don’t get me wrong – I believe pharmaceutical companies have improved the modern world with incredible medications, but it is a lazy error by physicians to depend on self-serving pharmaceutical companies to be the sole source of their ongoing education. I remind doctors of the phrase caveat emptor – buyer beware. Or in this case, patient and physician beware. It’s our responsibility to do our homework, not to rely on pharmaceutical representatives. It’s the doctors’ job to know what’s going on. They shouldn’t be too busy to figure it out, I believe that handing over our education to drug manufacturing entities, or to hospital chains who benefit from unnecessary surgical interventions, or even to insurance companies that benefit from the belief that no therapies work for these patients, undermines appropriate care of many kinds of patients, especially those with the fibromyalgia syndrome.
I don’t know what pressure will be brought to bear on me because of what I’ve written, but the literature I present and the therapies I suggest have been proved with numerous patients over many clinical years of experience. I also realize that connecting of the dots
in this book is done via my clinical experiences at Program120®. You’ll see throughout the text that I suggest larger long-term multi-center double-blind trials to further validate this data.
Some Caregivers’ Opinions
To present all opinions on this complex matter, let’s hear what physicians are saying. Here are some excerpts from an article by an excellent doctor in Utah named Hugo Rodier, MD. He’s an expert in integrative medicine. His article was printed in the Utah Medical Association UMA Bulletin, Volume 52, Number 2 from February 2005, available at www.utahmed.org.
"It seems the FDA feels their clients are really the pharmaceutical companies, not the American public, according to whistle-blower Dr. David Graham, interviewed by the U.S. Senate and PBS’s Now news program.
(www.pbs.org/now/transcript/transcriptNOW101_full.html)
"When a great profession and the forces of capitalism interact, drama is likely to result. This has certainly been the case where the profession of medicine and the pharmaceutical industry are concerned. On display in the relationship between doctors and drug companies are the grandeur and weaknesses of the medical profession, its noble aspirations and its continuing inability to fulfill them. Also on display are the power, social contributions and occasional venality of a very profitable industry whose products contribute in important ways to the health and longevity of the American people but that at times employs methods that are deeply troubling and even criminal. Government also plays a part as it tries with limited success to help the profession stay true to its own tenets and to deter the industry’s most egregious excesses. The spectacle is profoundly human and like most such spectacles, seems never to end or to lose its fascination."
Doctors and drug companies, NEJM2004;351:1885
"Statins’ benefits are largely independent of initial LDL and total cholesterol concentrations ... Statins reduce the risk of Myocardial infarction more than would be predicted from the reduction in cholesterol achieved."
Statins and micronutrients: unanswered questions,
is the editorial that accompanied the article on statins presented above. (J. Lancet 2004;97:459)
"Medical education should prepare students for the clinical problems they will face in their future practice. However, that is not happening for the most prevalent problem in health care today: chronic disease [which comprises] 78 percent of health expenditures.
"Chronic disease has dramatically transformed the role of the patient... [he/she] becomes experienced, is often more knowledgeable than the physician about the effects of the disease and its treatment, and has an integral role in the treatment process ... knowledgeable patients achieve a better outcome. A collaborative physician improves both understanding by patients and health outcomes ... Unfortunately, few if any medical schools are preparing their students adequately."
I love that excerpt from Chronic disease: the need for a new clinical education,
JAMA2004;292: 1057. It explains why most physicians fail to help people with chronic conditions while we do quite well with acute problems like emergency room visits, heart attacks, and trauma caused by car accidents.
[All the above italics were added by this author.]
There is no magic bullet to cure
chronic disease. The process to help someone return to near normalcy is tedious and complex. I spend hours per week helping patients. I spend time evaluating them and holding their hands. It’s almost always hugely beneficial for the suffering patient and for their family as they realize some return to normalcy is indeed possible.
Chapter 2
The Definition and History of Fibromyalgia
Modern Definition of Fibromyalgia
The National Library of Medicine has more than 10,000 articles related to fibromyalgia[1]. Researchers are trying to discover the cause of fibromyalgia syndrome. All of this data has added to the confusion and often muddies the waters.
Defining the disease symptoms and diagnostic criteria is arduous, as noted in various recent articles:
"To date, there is no gold standard
for diagnosing fibromyalgia. Until a better clinical case definition of fibromyalgia exists, all diagnostic criteria should be interpreted with caution, considered rudimentary, and subject to modification[2]." [Italics and bold added by this author.]
Because there are no specific laboratory tests for fibromyalgia, the 1990 American College of Rheumatology (ACR) classification criteria have been used in clinical settings; however, they are not ideal for individual patient diagnosis. Clinicians should be aware of limitations inherent in using tender points in the diagnosis of fibromyalgia. The multiple symptoms of fibromyalgia often overlap with those of related disorders and may further complicate the diagnosis[3]." [Italics and bold added by this author.]
"There is still no gold standard for making a diagnosis of fibromyalgia, but there is an increasing consensus for the development of new guidelines for diagnosis that modifies the currently prescribed tender point evaluation[4]." [Italics and bold added by this author.]
Regardless of the ongoing clinical opinions and research, definitions are still attempted.
Fibromyalgia is a common nonarticular disorder of unknown cause characterized by generalized aching (sometimes severe), widespread tenderness of muscles, areas around tendon insertions, and adjacent soft tissues, as well as muscle stiffness, fatigue and poor sleep. Diagnosis is clinical. Treatment includes exercise, local heat, stress management, drugs to improve sleep, and analgesics.
From The Merck Manuals Online Medical Library
"In fibromyalgia, any fibromuscular tissues may be involved, especially those of the occiput, neck, shoulders, thorax, low back, and thighs. There is no specific histologic abnormality. Symptoms and signs are generalized, in contrast to localized soft-tissue pain and tenderness (myofascial pain syndrome—see also Temporomandibular Disorders: Myofascial Pain Syndrome), which is often related to overuse or microtrauma.
Fibromyalgia is common; it is about 7 times more common among women, usually young or middle-aged women, but can occur in men, children, and adolescents. Because of the sex difference, it is sometimes overlooked in men. It sometimes occurs in patients with systemic rheumatic disorders.
The cause is unknown, but disruption of stage 4 sleep may contribute, as can emotional stress. Patients may tend to be perfectionists. Fibromyalgia may be precipitated by a viral or other systemic infection (e.g. Lyme disease) or a traumatic event[5]."
[The bold added by this author.]
This is a generally accepted definition of fibromyalgia but it’s incomplete.
Look at these phrases again, because these will become more important as we go through the data we have:
It is a disorder of unknown cause.
It is seven times more common among women than men.
It sometimes occurs in patients with systemic rheumatic disorders.
Disruption of stage 4 sleep may contribute.
It may be precipitated by a viral or other systemic infection (eg, Lyme disease) or a traumatic event.
I’ll explain through independent studies and articles how this definition is wrong, how these five simple points are critical, and how this disease is not of unknown cause, but from a very clearly defined cause. It is a disease whose symptoms have been long mistreated, when in reality it can and should be properly diagnosed and treated.
The History of Fibromyalgia Syndrome
Although the term
fibromyalgia" was not coined until 1976, people throughout history have reported illnesses with strikingly similar symptoms. These reports can be found as far back as Old Testament Biblical times.
Early Evidence: Job vividly described his physical anguish: I, too, have been assigned months of futility, long and weary nights of misery. When I go to bed, I think, `When will it be morning?' But the night drags on, and I toss till dawn ... And now my heart is broken. Depression haunts my days. My weary nights are filled with pain as though something were relentlessly gnawing at my bones.
(Job 7:3-4; 30:16-17 - New Living Translation™)
Another well-known person who reported fibromyalgia-like symptoms was Florence Nightingale, an English army nurse during the Crimean War (1854-1856) who was a pioneer in the International Red Cross movement. Nightingale became ill while working on the front lines and never really recovered. She was virtually bedridden much of the rest of her life, with pain and fatigue symptoms resembling fibromyalgia until her death in 1910.
Florence Nightingale (original photograph, 1856, Perry Special Collection).
C:\Users\DV2415nr Owner\Desktop\FloNightingale.jpgTerminology: This illness has been studied since the 1800s and has been identified by a variety of names; hysterical paroxysm, muscular rheumatism and fibrositis. The term fibromyalgia was coined in 1976 in an effort to describe its primary symptom. (Fibro – meaning fibrous tissue, my – meaning muscle, and algia – meaning pain).
It wasn’t until 1990, when the American College of Rheumatology developed a diagnostic criteria for doing fibromyalgia research, that the term fibromyalgia gained wide usage.
1990 Criteria for the Classification of Fibromyalgia
1. History of widespread pain.
Definition. Pain is considered widespread when all of the following are present: pain in the left side of the body, pain in the right side of the body, pain above the waist, and pain below the waist. In addition, axial skeletal pain (cervical spine or anterior chest or thoracic spine or low back) must be present. In this definition, shoulder and buttock pain is considered as pain for each involved side. Low back
pain is considered lower segment pain.
2. Pain in 11 of 18 tender point sites on digital palpation.
Definition: Pain, on digital palpation, must be present in at least 11 of the following 18 sites:
Occiput: Bilateral, at the suboccipital muscle insertions.
Low cervical: bilateral, at the anterior aspects of the intertransverse spaces at C5-C7.
Trapezius: bilateral, at the midpoint of the upper border.
Supraspinatus: bilateral, at origins, above the scapula spine near the medial border.
Second rib: bilateral, at the second costochondral junctions, just lateral to the junctions on upper surfaces.
Lateral epicondyle: bilateral, 2 cm distal to the epicondyles.
Gluteal: bilateral, in upper outer quadrants of buttocks in anterior fold of muscle.
Greater trochanter: bilateral, posterior to the trochanteric prominence.
Knee: bilateral, at the medial fat pad proximal to the joint line.
Digital palpation should be performed with an approximate force of 4