RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS TREATMENT by POTASSIUM, chapter I

by Charles Weber, MS

This was the lead article in a series of articles about rheumatoid arthritis which discuss potassium nutrition and physiology.
--- Most of the former content of this site is no longer available on this site. It has been incorporated into a book called “POTASSIUM NUTRITION – in Heart Disease, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Gout, Diabetes, high blood pressure and Metabolic Shock”. It is published by iUniverse publishing company and it is a very comprehensive book about potassium. You may see the table of contents with chapter summaries and the introductory chapter below. It may be had for $17.00 , which includes shipping but not sales taxes. You may send a check to Charles Weber, 1908 Country Club Road, Hendersonville, North Carolina, 28739. You may also pay via Paypal by clicking on the following icon;

If you live in Australia, New Zealand, India, South Africa, the United Kingdom, or the European Union the cost including shipping is $24.50 in USA dollars. If you send a check, make sure it can be cashed in a USA bank. Alternately you can pay through Paypal by clicking on the icon below.

If you live in Canada the cost including shipping is $19.50 in USA dollars. If you send a check, make sure it can be cashed in a USA bank. Alternately you can pay through Paypal by clicking on the icon below.

--- The author, Charles Weber, has a degree in chemistry and a masters degree in soil science. He has researched potassium for 50 years, primarily a library research. He has cured his own early onset arthritis (33 years old). He has published articles on allied subjects in; The Journal of Theoretical Biology (1970, 1983), The Journal of Applied Nutrition (1974), Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology (1983), and Medical Hypotheses (1984, 1999).

TABLE OF CONTENTS of the BOOK

INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER 1: Potassium in Food.
--- This chapter describes the situation of the potassium status in food. Food is the most important part of our environment. Our health and our very life depends on food. So it is imperative to know this. So be sure to read which foods contain the most potassium, where you can find exact amounts, and how the amounts are expressed and why.

CHAPTER 2: Other Nutrients.
--- Discussed here are the characteristics of each of the three main food groups, animal sourced, vegetables, and grains with fruit. Potassium and its interactions are stressed, but other nutrients are also discussed, especially if they are likely to be deficient in our society.

Meat, Milk, Cheese, and Eggs
Vegetables
Grains and Fruit
Meat: Extended Discussion
Vegetables: Extended Discussion
Grain: Extended Discussion
Meat Toxins

CHAPTER 3: Heart Disease and Hypertension
--- It has been proven beyond any doubt that a potassium deficiency will cause heart disease in the presence of adequate vitamin B-1 by epidemiological surveys and numerous experiments on animals [Rubini]. Experiments on people are not possible because heart disease is very dangerous. The dangerous interaction between potassium and vitamin B-1, the affect of magnesium on the heart by way of potassium, the effects from magnesium as the orotate or the taurate on the heart, the invalidity of the cholesterol hypothesis, and the dependence of at least one of the forms of high blood pressure on chloride are discussed.

Magnesium
Taurine
Other Heart Disease Unpredictability
Cholesterol
Additional Affecters

CHAPTER 4: Rheumatoid Arthritis.
--- It is my contention that potassium deficiency is either causing, or permitting, rheumatoid arthritis. Symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis are discussed. The symptoms are very technical and lay readers may not want to study those parts. Evidence for potassium’s involvement is presented. Various treatments for rheumatoid arthritis are presented. Symptoms of a potassium deficiency are described.
--- There is not any indication in the literature that potassium has ever been tried by scientists as a cure for arthritis. A rather exhaustive search of the medical literature has failed to disclose any experiment. This includes Exerpta Medica 1947 to 1974, and a computer search by the Central Library of the American Medical Association from 1965 on back. In addition no search of mine since has revealed an experiment in the literature. It is only recently that a clinical trial has been performed by Rastmanesh with very encouraging results [Rastmanesh]. Even in the present, extensive books on arthritis fail to even mention potassium [Koopman] [Sobel]. Even extensive books on electrolytes fail to mention rheumatoid arthritis [Halpern] [Narins].

Symptoms of Rheumatoid Arthritis
Potassium in the Etiology of Rheumatoid Arthritis
Treatments with Potassium
Cell Potassium Content During Rheumatoid Arthritis
Evidence

CHAPTER 5: Gout
--- Causes of gout by lead and other poisons is presented. How to cure gout using potassium bicarbonate is shown, as well as orotate and coffee as ameliorators. Some of the history of gout is mentioned.

CHAPTER 6: Diabetes
--- A brief history of diabetes is presented. There are some mitigating procedures you can adopt. Potassium is extremely important during diabetes and all aspects of too little and too much are discussed. Magnesium is also important and it is discussed. Vitamin B-3 may be able to reverse even type 1 diabetes. The nutrients taurine, inositol, alpha lipoic acid, acetyl L carnitine, and maybe flavinoids have advantageous affects on diabetes, Chile pepper is proposed as a possible cause of type 1 diabetes. A number of other causes of diabetes are discussed, including other poisons, deficiencies of vitamin D, chromium, pyridoxine, vitamin B-6, zinc, copper, omega oils, iodide , and probiotics will make diabetes worse.

History
Mitigating Procedures
Potassium
Magnesium
Vitamin B-3 as a cure
Chile pepper as a cause
Poisons as causes
Deficiencies that contribute
Some Terms Used in Diagnosing Diabetes

CHAPTER 7: High Blood Potassium --- High blood potassium (metabolic shock) can be caused by injury. The usual cause is kidney failure from diabetes, lupus erythmatosis, plaque build up, poisons (such as fluoride), or medicines. Prostate blockage from oil hydrogenation or a zinc deficiency can also cause high blood potassium. There are corrective procedures such as avoiding dehydration, eating sodium bicarbonate, eating less meat, drinking no wine, possibly using no glucosamine, eating no acidic foods, of course using no potassium supplements, making use of enemas and sweating, and hyperventilating.

Procedures available at home that would reduce the danger until you can get to a hospital.
Causes of High Blood Potassium
Corrective Procedures

CHAPTER 8: Potassium Supplementation
--- This chapter discusses the interactions of potassium supplements with magnesium and vitamin B-1. It explores the utility of the various forms of potassium supplementation such as sodium free table salt, glucosamine, vegetable juices, tablets and solutions, sodium free baking powder, water softeners, and fertilizer. Some inadequate supplements are also discussed such as sea salt and athletic drinks. Magnesium

Sodium free Table Salt
Glucosamine
Vegetable Liquors
Tablets and Liquids
Juice
Sodium Free Baking Powder
Water Softening Agents
Combination Salts
Sea Salts
Fertilizer
De Coti Marsh Salts
Athletic Drinks

CHAPTER 9: Regulation of Potassium by Hormones.
--- Potassium and sodium are regulated by at least four steroid hormones. ACTH from the pituitary gland in the brain controls these steroids.. Aldosterone is used when potassium intake is high and sodium intake is low. Deoxycorticosterone is used when potassium intake is high and sodium intake is high. 18hydroxy-doxycorticosterone is used when potassium intake is low and sodium intake is low. That last hormone also regulates acidity. 16alpha-18dihydroxy-deosycorticosterone is used when potassium intake is low and sodium intake is high. Diseases and conditions associated with each of these cases are discussed.

Sodium is Low, Potassium is High
Sodium is High, Potassium is High
Sodium is Low, Potassium is Low
Sodium is High, Potassium is Low
Conclusions

CHAPTER 10: Potassium Physiology
--- Potassium is essential for nerve transmission and to provide cations for the cell.
Symptoms of a potassium deficiency are shown. These include abnormal thirst, inability of kidneys to concentrate fluid, reduction of muscular strength, and reduction of cell alkalinity, Symptoms of a potassium deficiency that are difficult or impossible to reverse are also shown. These include atrophy of the glomerulosa of the adrenals, scarring of the kidneys, destruction of mitochondria, death of heart cells, and increased mortality from stroke. It is proposed that potassium is important for resisting bacterial disease. Rheumatoid arthritis is proposed to be greatly accentuated by potassium deficiency.

Determination of Potassium
Symptoms of a Potassium Deficiency
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Conclusions

CHAPTER 11: History of Rheumatoid Arthritis Research
--- Research on rheumatoid arthritis in the past has been performed as spurred by several hypotheses. These were; stress hormones, copper or boron deficiency, bacterial infection with mycobacteria, mycoplasmin, or amoebas, .a hypothesis that the body’s own immune system attacks the joints for some mysterious reason, that Epstein barr virus is involved, some kind of allergy, poisons in nightshade related foods or something added to coffee, and poisons such as fluoride in drinking water. Of course you already know of my efforts to relate a potassium deficiency to rheumatoid arthritis. Medicines have been developed, but they are largely palliative.

Stress Hormones
Nutrient Deficiencies
Microorganisms
Autoimmune Hypotheses
Allergy
Medicines
Future Research

CHAPTER 12: Cortisol
--- This chapter will propose that the primary purpose of cortisol (hydrocortisone) and corticosterone in mammals is to mobilize the body's physiological processes against infection and its adverse effects, cortisol against potassium wasting intestinal disease and corticosterone against serum disease. These steroids control a large number of enzymes, hormones, and processes, most of which could enhance growth of pathogens or make the adverse symptoms worse. The few which do not, do not affect immunity either, and are probably opportunistic adaptations of these hormones to peripheral functions. Extinction of juvenile play traits is an example. They do this inversely by declining. Cortisol inversely conserves potassium, and loses sodium, conserves water, Cortisol has little affect on glucose and glucagon and no affect on insulin, while corticosterone has a marked inhibition of insulin and stimulation of glucagon. Cortisol inversely stimulates collagen formation and uptake of amino acids by muscle, while inhibiting protein degradation. Both glucocorticoids inversely inhibit gastric secretion. Cortisol inactivates renal glutaminase enzyme generation of ammonium. Net chloride secretion into the intestines is inversely inhibited by cortisol, which negates cholera’s affect. Cortisol inversely shuts down most copper containing enzymes. Glucosteroid response modifying factor hormone inhibits most of cortisol’s affects when endotoxin containing bacteria attack the body in order to counter that toxin’s effects. Some strategies implied by those characteristics are suggested.

Potassium
Sodium
Water
Glucose
Amino Acids
Hydrogen Ion
Chloride
Copper
Miscellaneous
Endotoxin
Glucosteroid Response Modifying Factor
Conclusions

CHAPTER 13: Potassium in Food Table, Table 1
--- Potassium in food expressed as milligrams per Calorie and listed alphabetically.

CHAPTER 14: Potassium in Food Table, Table 2
--- Potassium in food expressed as milligrams per Calorie and listed in order of declining amounts.

CHAPTER 15: Popular High Potassium Diets
--- The history of some popular diets for increasing potassium including the DASH diet, the macrobiotic diet, the Gerson diet, the vegetarian diet, and Vermont folk medicine is discussed.

DASH Diet
Where is the Potassium? Where is the Salt?
Vermont Folk Medicine
Macrobiotic Diet
Origin of the Macrobiotic Word
History of the Macrobiotic Diet from Yin and Yang

CHAPTERS 16 and 17: References
--- References are presented by chapter. Many of the references are old. This is because most of the research establishing potassium as essential was done in the first half of the last century and very little investigation is going on at present.

INTRODUCTION

--- It is my belief that a pervasive potassium deficiency caused by improper processing of food is causing a large part of the poor health in western civilization, being especially involved in heart disease, rheumatoid arthritis, gout, diabetes, and high blood pressure.
--- Virtually any textbook in the past would devote no more than a paragraph to potassium which would state that potassium is never deficient in the diet, or give one exception from the dozen or more known ways of loss, or in some only under clinical conditions.
--- The reason for this careless treatment of potassium is probably because potassium is present in almost all foods as grown in large quantities. Professionals think about it as if it were air or water. However, even air and water can be deficient and if voluminous texts are not written about those deficiencies, it is because both of those deficiencies can be detected by our senses. Extremely powerful emotions and instincts impel people to correct those deficiencies immediately and at any cost. Potassium is odorless, colorless, and, in the usual concentrations, tasteless. There is no way to detect a deficiency and cell content can not even easily be assessed in the body by modern analytical procedures other than whole body scintillation counters. Whole body cell content is virtually "invisible" other than by whole body scintillation counters.
--- When potassium supplements are prescribed, they get around the discordance between their convictions and practice semantically by calling the supplements "salt substitutes”, "polarizing solutions”, “GIK” (glucose, insulin, potassium) salts. "pharmaceutical affecters”, "ORT salts (oral rehydration therapy for diarrhea)", or similar terms. A deficiency is further defined out of existence by defining the blood serum content is normal at a 4.2 Meq/liter when the actual figure is 4.8 [Scribner].
--- Psychic stress stimulation of aldosterone, diarrhea (Potassium supplements to babies brought mortality from a virulent strain of diarrhea from 35% to 5% [Darrow] ), profuse perspiration, excessive vomiting, eating sodium carbonate or bicarbonate (because hydrogen ion is excreted at the same site as potassium), laxatives, diuretics, licorice, hyperventilating, enemas, shock from burns or injury, hostile or fearful emotions, and very high or low sodium intakes all increase potassium losses, some massively. All together would probably be lethal in a fairly short time. Reliance on grain (especially white flour) or fatty foods, boiling vegetables, use of chemicals (soft drinks, for instance) instead of food, and use of most processed foods including frozen and canned permit considerable reduction of intakes. So does the reduced appetite associated with a sedentary life.
--- To speak of potassium deficiency as an aberration when enormous numbers of people are affected by these circumstances and our food is so badly damaged is not logical. Even if a serious degenerative disease does not materialize, an adequate intake is desirable to forestall future disasters and to permit one to operate at optimum. Some of the manifestations of the placebo effect become understandable in light of the affect of emotions on electrolyte hormones. However, we cannot always be assured of a placebo being available, certainly not on the firing line, but not even for that matter in the quiet of a hospital where even nurses can be testy at times.
--- It is especially important that nutrition be established by experiment. Currently, every one in the medical establishment is convinced that potassium deficiency cannot be involved in rheumatoid arthritis, but this with only one experiment ever having been performed. It simply is not possible to predict the outcome of an experiment with certainty without actually performing it. It would be desirable to determine the affect of every food common in commerce not only on arthritis, but on all the degenerative diseases. Some foods, known to be poisonous to animals or have poisonous related species in the wild, have been used for thousands of years without ever having been tested. This is undoubtedly due to a universal quasi religious conviction or instinct that foods our parents taught us to eat or taste good could not possibly be harmful. This is not necessarily the case. Such experiments could have another advantage in that they might uncover foods that have a beneficial effect. Even small effects would be worth knowing about. The above conviction (or instinct) is so strong that most people will not eat nutritious food if tastier, but less nutritious food is available. Their instincts override their intellect not only in their eating habits, but in their scientific efforts. These scientific efforts are further thwarted from pursuing nutritional investigations because medical science stresses pharmaceuticals and glamour theories [Forman].
--- Please keep in mind, though, that potassium ramifies through every cell and process in the body, has almost no storage, and has a dangerous dependence on its precise control for nerve impulse transmission. This makes it a mineral to be cautious about. In particular I recommend getting as much as possible from food. Even food requires a little care because it has a wide range of concentrations. You must take responsibility for your own intake and I assume no liability for the correctness of advice in this book. You use this information at your own risk. Also please keep in mind that some of the information in this book is based on poorly performed experiments or biased commercial sites. If you have a medical problem, be sure to seek the consultation of a medical or nutritional professional. Such a person has more information available than just potassium nutrition and, perhaps equally important, is in a position to run tests.
--- Anything a doctor or dietitian can learn about nutrition, you can also. If you do not know the meaning of a word in these articles, for a definition click on (Mirriam-Webster), or on (a medical encyclopedia) or on (a comprehensive encyclopedia).

--- The health of people in the USA is abysmal, and a major part of it is poor nutrition. Vegetable oils and refined sugars, which are essentially devoid of potassium, make up one third of the total food energy. Displacement of vegetables and fruit by whole grains and milk products further reduces the potassium intake because potassium concentrations in vegetables are four times and twelve times those in milk and whole grains, respectively, whereas in fruit the potassium the potassium concentration is two and five times that in milk and whole grains. The disaster is made much worse by refining of whole grains, which white flour has only one quarter the potassium of whole grain. Added to this is the ingestion of huge amounts of sodium chloride salt, beyond anything the body can easily handle.
--- As the 12th century physician, trying to cure by diet before he administers drugs, said; “No illness that can be treated by diet should be treated by any other means" or as Hippocrates expressed it in 460 - 377BC; "If we could give every individual the right amount of nourishment and exercise, not too little and not too much, we would have found the safest way to health". It would seem that a healthy life style has been known for a long time. It is my belief that an unprocessed, unfrozen, not canned, high in vegetables, free of poisons diet would keep a large majority of people reasonably healthy and without the need for fad diets. 80% of Americans do not eat adequate vegetables, but even though 72% of Americans take vitamin or mineral supplements daily or occasionally, their health is atrocious. These supplements never include significant amounts of potassium with vitamin pills. Even potassium pills have only a tiny amount. Fairly significant amounts would be obtained if a dozen or two were taken each day (see chapter 8 before taking any). Very few do so though.
--- I would suggest that a partial solution to the problem of poor potassium nutrition would be to place a tax on all food that has had potassium removed by food processors and completely fund all Medicare and workman’s compensation for injuries and disease that relate to rheumatoid arthritis, gout, heart disease, strained ligaments, and high blood pressure. This would also take the Medicare and Medicaid onerous tax burden now incurred for them and place it on the shoulders of those who cause the problem.
--- All the references are gathered together at the end and organized according to chapters except URLs, which follow statements pertinent to them. You may see a site that has links to words used in nutritional and biological science in this site.
--- I repeat, I assume no liability for statements in this book. They are sometimes based on flimsy evidence. Of course, better flimsy evidence than no evidence at all. But in any case I do not want anyone getting sick from a miss print and then even so much as becoming irritated with me.


An epilogue from the original article is shown below. It contains some information not pertaining to potassium. Evidence from individual case histories that I have seen myself and the known characteristics of potassium physiology supports the proposal that arthritis is either a potassium deficiency or that a deficiency much enhances its most important symptom. There is also a single case history in which a subject was injected with various steroid hormones for a short time each to determine their effect. The only consistent change during the course of the experiment was that his daily intake of potassium was raised to 3500 milligrams per day. His arthritic symptoms showed a consistent improvement throughout the course of the experiment even though some of the hormones used increase potassium excretion [Clark]. Also an unpublished experiment has been performed by Rudin on arthritics in which potassium supplements showed favorable results on eight patients [private communication].The replete body contains about 75 times as much potassium or more as is usually in the processed diet, so if it is increased, it will still take quite awhile to come up to normal if it as much as 30% low. However there should be satisfying initial results in a month or two or even less if the other nutrition is adequate, especially magnesium [Kremer][Schoner] and maybe inositol [Charalampous] and probably less time yet if potassium is taken as the chloride (potassium as the chloride is possibly not a good idea if you have high blood pressure since chloride increases blood pressure or suffer from chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS or CFIDS).

I have been almost alone in proposing potassium as being central to rheumatoid arthritis (but see Dr. Jan de Vries' article). Also the pioneering efforts about potassium for arthritis by Charles de Coti-Marsh in the 1950s and 1960s enabled him to form a foundation currently active in England that promotes the use of potassium and has helped 3500 people. Das has recently suggested that glucose-insulin-potassium (GIK) therapy might suppress tumor necrosis (TNF) which is thought to produce some of the symptoms of arthritis [Das]. However there is no substitute for an experiment, which has never been reported in a journal until Rastmanesh’s clinical trial recently [Rastmanesh], because scientists are specialized and sometimes have trouble being interested in simple approaches, as are their funding agencies. A doctor has reported to me that potassium and magnesium had inconclusive results, but it is possible that some of the subjects had osteoarthritis or chronic fatigue syndrome so I am unwilling to accept this as negative evidence yet. I am virtually certain that you will be healthier and will certainly have less risk of stroke, high blood pressure, and kidney stones. I wish you good health.

If you come across a researcher who is in a position to do an arthritis experiment, perhaps you could refer him to this letter of mine to The British Medical Journal or to Dr. Rashmanish’s information at the beginning.

EPILOGUE

SOME LINKS TO HEALTH ARTICLES

----There is an an article discussing anacardic acids in cashew nuts to cure a tooth abscess Which might prove useful.
----VII. Copper nutrition to heal hemorrhoids, slipped discs, emphysema, and aneurisms.
---- The Eve Controversy,
a proposal as to why the human species seems to be derived from a single couple.
----Fluoride in city water will cause fluorosis discoloration of teeth, weakened bones, damage to the kidneys and immune system, damaged thyroid and, worst of all, damage to the nerves resembling Alzheimer’s disease. It will also cause damage to ligaments resembling arthritis.

See this site for evidence of a correlation between magnesium deficiency and cancer. The taurate is proposed as the best magnesium supplement. Taurine or 2-aminoethanesulfonic acid is an acidic chemical substance sulfonated rather than carboxylated found in high abundance in the tissues of many animals (metazoa), especially sea animals. Taurine is also found in plants, fungi, and some bacterial species, but in far less abundance. It is an amine with a sulfonic acid functional group, but it is not an amino acid in the biological sense, not being one of the twenty protein-forming compounds encoded by the universal genetic code. Small polypeptides have been identified as containing taurine, but to date there has been no report of a transfer RNA that is specifically charged with taurine [from Wikipedia]. It is essential to babies. It has been found that supplements of the amino acid, taurine, will restore the abnormal electrocardiogram present during a potassium deficiency by an unknown mechanism. This information has been used in several case histories by George Eby to control a long standing type of cardiac arrhythmia called pre atrial contractions (PACs), a benign but irritating and nerve racking heart problem, with 2.5 grams of taurine with each meal. Taurine is said to be low in the diets of vegetarians. The 2,500 grams recommended by the American Heart Association causes diarrhea in some people and should probably be reduced in those people. Taurine has been used for high blood pressure, migraine headache (I suspect that less than 1000 milligrams can remove the headache caused by allergy to peanuts), high cholesterol, epilepsy, macular degeneration, Alzheimer’s disease, liver disorders, alcoholism, and cystic fibrosis, and depression. Keep in mind that some people may have a genetic defect that limits the amount of taurine tolerated and that adequate molybdenum may desirable. Taurine may make a copper deficiency worse, based on a single case history [Brien Quirk, private communication]. This may be because taurine may be mobilizing copper and zinc into the plasma [Li]. So if you should decide to take taurine, make sure your copper intake is more than adequate, as well as your zinc.

See this site for some links to health articles.
For a procedure that discusses tetrathiomolybdate for removing copper and thus preventing further solid cancer growth and Hodgkin’s, see this site. This might buy some time until you can persuade a doctor to try tumor necrosis factor or interferon or an opioid antagonist drug called Naltrexone (Naltrexone in the large 50 mg size, originally manufactured by DuPont under the brand name ReVia, is now sold by Mallinckrodt as Depade and by Barr Laboratories under the generic name naltrexone) that blocks some endorphin receptors. Said blockage is thought to cause the body to temporarily secrete more endorphins, especially after midnight at night. These endorphins are thought to stimulate the immune system, and in particular to stimulate the TH-1 or type 1 antiviral response by decreased interleukin-4 and with increased gamma interferon and interleukin-2 and a simultaneous decrease of type 2 anti bacterial response [Sacerdote]. It appears to be especially effective for minimizing symptoms and retarding progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) There are drugs listed in this site that should not be taken with low dose Naltrexone, including cortisol. There is information in this site for mitigating side effects, including starting with one milligram doses. Advice how to proceed if you have been taking cortisol may be seen here. (also see these sites; this site and this site and this site and a trial) . A few doctors have had encouraging results in Crohn's Disease, and even to some extent in cancer. Low doses of Naltrexone (LDN), 1.5 to 4.5 milligrams, at bedtime is used (timing is important, and it is important not to buy slow release forms). It is said to have no known bad side effects at those doses other than insomnia the first week or two in some. There is also reports from an extensive survey in this site. and an extensive discussion at this site. I think some clinical studies on Naltrexone are in order, and it should not be a prescription drug (I have a petition to make Naltrexone an over the counter drug with the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research FDA Rockville MD 20857, Re; Docket No. 2006P-0508-CPI. Perhaps if enough people wrote supporting the petition it could be enacted). Though side effects appear unlikely, it is not proven over longer periods. If you try it (it is a prescription medicine in the USA), it seems likely that you should discontinue if you get a bacterial infection in view of its inhibition of antibacterial response. There are suggestions on how to obtain Naltrexone without a prescription in this site. Naltrexone is currently being used by Dr. Enlander, a New York City doctor, but with limited success using 3 to 4.5 milligram doses for CFS or CFIDS. . It is also being explored for AIDS by Dr. Bernard Bihari, 29 W 15th St. New York, NY 10011, 212) 929-4196 who is still prescribing Naltrexone for HIV/AIDS. (and currently Executive Director of the Community Research Initiative). Dr. Gale Guyer of Advanced Medical Center located in Zionsville, Indiana also is using it for cancer. Dr. Bihari has shown promising results for a large percentage of his cancer patients.

Olive leaf extract has shown clinical evidence of effectiveness against a wide range of viruses, including AIDS [Bihari], herpes, and cold viruses. It sometimes produces a Herxheimer or pathogen die off symptoms (from effectiveness against bacteria?). There is evidence that it is synergistic (reinforce each other) with Naltrexone. There have been a few case histories of improvement in what were probably arthritis patients and CFIDS patients. The active ingredient is said to be oleuropein or enolate. There has been very little follow up research done on it.

Also it has been found that curcumin in turmeric or curry powder will inhibit several forms of cancer, including melanoma. People who live in India where these spices are eaten, have one tenth the cancer elsewhere.

Here is an article with anecdotal evidence for pressurized oxygen, zinc, vitamin B6, and vitamin C after head injuries. They also claim keeping a fair percentage of prison inmates from psychiatric disorders after head injuries.

A site is available which shows. foods which are high in one nutrient and low in another (including calories). This last site should be especially useful for a quick list of foods to consider first, or for those who must restrict another nutrient because of a genetic difficulty with absorption or utilization

You may find useful a search for abstracts of journal references, "Gateway".. or a list of medical search engines or Google’s “scholar” feature for journal articles only.

There is a site that contains reviews of natural remedies for many diseases .

If you use medication for arthritis, you may see technical evaluations and cautions of drugs at the bottom of this site.

The very extensive USDA Handbook #8 may be seen here. To access the information you must press "enter" to search, and then divide Kcal into milligrams of potassium. This last table is very comprehensive, is used in search mode, and even lists the amino acids. There are also links in it to PDF types of printouts from the table for individual nutrients available here Just click on the “A” or “W” button for the nutrient you desire. There is a free browser called Firefox, which is said to be less susceptible to viruses or crashes, has many interesting features, imports information from Iexplore while leaving Iexplore intact. You can also install their emailer. A feature that lists all the URLs on a viewed site can be useful when working on your own site.

If you have Iexplore, there is a tool bar by Google that enables you to search the internet from the page viewed, mark desired words, search the site, give page rank, etc.

There is a free program available which tells on your site what web site accessed you, which search engine, statistics about which country, statistics of search engine access, keywords used and their frequency. It can be very useful.

Email to Charles Weber = isoptera at att.net or 828 692 5816


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