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DARWIN, MICROFURIES,
MACROFURIES, and DYSOX
From Volume 11 or The
Principles and Practice of Integrative Medicine
I begin this volume by proposing a model of science which I designate as the
"Darwin Principle"—a principle which, in my view, must be held higher than all
other principles of science in general, and particularly of clinical medicine. I
define the Darwin Principle as a principle of drawing simple conclusions from an
extended and integrated study of a large body of observations. The Darwin
Principle accepts the validity of each scientific observation but holds that
none of them singly be accepted as the definitive evidence of any conclusion
about the condition of the whole. The core tenet of the Darwin Principle is: No
part can be understood except through an understanding of its relationships with
the whole.
I see three principal threats to the human condition: toxic thoughts, toxic
environment, and toxic foods. Those threats may be called the three global
"macro-furies" of destruction. In the context of molecular biology, the three
essential homeostatic mechanisms are: oxygen homeostasis, redox equilibrium, and
acid-base balance. Derangements of those mechanisms—oxidosis, acidosis, and
dysoxygenosis (dysox), then, may be designated as the three "micro-furies" of
human biology.
When I think about the health/dis-ease/disease continuum, I think of the three
Furies of Greek Mythology. The ancient Greeks had three evil goddesses:
Tisiphone, Megaera, and Alecto. Each evil goddess was assigned the task of
spreading a different evil: Tisiphone engages in torture and murder, Megaera is
full of malice and causes jealousy in its victims, Alecto fumes with anger, for
ever inciting and perpetuating anger in others. In my view, the issues of
personal health—the three micro-furies of of human biology—cannot be dissociated
from the three global macro-furies of toxic thoughts, toxic environment, and
toxic foods.
In 1831, Charles Robert Darwin (1809-1882), started his journey aboard the
British Navy ship H.M.S. Beagle around South America. Over a period of five
years, he accumulated an enormous number of biologic and geologic samples,
studied them intensively, reflected on the interconnectedness of all of them,
and formed his simple—yet comprehensive— biological theory of natural selection.
In 1850, he published On the Origin of Species which, in my view, is the most
significant work in biologic sciences. For me, Darwin's core message is what I
designate as the core tenet of the Darwin Principle: No part can be understood
except through an understanding of its relationships with the whole.
The Darwin Principle and Integrated Clinical Trials
The clinical application of the Darwin Principle calls for clinical trials which
are radically different from the model of double-blind, placebo-controlled drug
trials in vogue today. Such trials are designed to address the macro furies
(toxic thoughts, toxic environment, and toxic foods), as well as the three micro
furies (oxidosis, acidosis, and dysoxgenosis) of disease. Of necessity, such
investigations can be conducted only as open, integrated trials in which teams
of experienced clinicians enter a sizeable number of individuals with
well-defined clinicopathologic entities into trials and then are free to address
all macro and micro issues on basis of the needs of individual patients. The
trial outcome is determined by evaluation of the results by patients as well
clinicians employing objective and subjective criteria. The integrity of outcome
is assured by: (1) a sufficiently large number of clinicians participating in
the trial who categorically have no financial interest in the outcome; (2)
inclusion in the study of all patients treated at the center for the disorder
under investigation; and (3) by. adequately extended period of study.
The matter of patients deciding the efficacy of treatment is likely to raise
some eyebrows. We have raised generations of doctors who think no clinical
trials must be considered valid in which the patients has any say in determining
the outcome of the trial. However, who can gauge the quality of sleep or
energy—may I ask—better than the patient himself? Or the freedom from toxic
thoughts? Or the qualities of mood, memory, and mentation? Or digestive and
menstrual health? Or sexual drive? Or absence or presence of dry skin and muscle
suppleness? For decades, I have been baffled by hearing otherwise intelligent
doctors mindlessly insist that the patient's voice must be vigorously excluded
from clinical trials. I return to this subject later in this preface for
additional critical commentary.
I have two primary purposes in writing this volume: First to present sound
scientific basis and rationale for integrative medical philosophy; and second to
present the results of several integrated clinical trials conducted at the
Institute.
Ecologic Thinking
We physicians, by and large, are not ecologic thinkers. We need to be. In this
preface, I briefly examine what happens when we fail to think ecologically and
ignore the Darwin Principle in clinical medicine. In my view, the primary reason
why the critical issues of toxic thoughts, environment, and foods are neglected
by the Imperial Medicine in the United States, as well as by public health
policy makers, is that the Darwin Principle is neither recognized nor heeded. To
support my assertion, I ask the reader to pick up any issue of The New England
Journal of Medicine and scrutinize it for what it teaches its readers about the
three core issues of toxic thoughts, toxic environment, and toxic foods. Or,
about the issues of oxygen homeostasis, redox equilibrium, and acid-base balance
as applied to clinical care in doctors' offices. There will be no useable
information on these subjects in the Journal, which is committed to other goals.
As a consequence, the non-integrative doctors are neither sensitive to the
clinical problems caused by three macro furies, nor to the possibilities of
restoring health by addressing issues of molecular biology created by the three
micro furies.
Below, I present some verbatim text from the November 13, 2005 issue of The New
England Journal of Medicine1:
Personal Metrics for Practice —How'm I Doing?
Part of the challenge of being happy in medical practice arises from the
difficulty of ascertaining whether we are truly succeeding as doctors. In
primary care, we take on complex problems and often feel as if we're failing.
Those are noble sentiments of an internist who is struggling to be a good
doctor. Now consider some text that follows the opening passage:
So it was gratifying to learn that ... 90 percent said it wasn't a problem to
get prescriptions refilled. Current LDL cholesterol test results were available
for 19 of the 21 patients; of these levels, 12 were less than 100 mg per
deciliter and 3 were more than 130 mg per deciliter.
What the writer finds gratifying is the high rates of filled prescriptions and
what he considers the right blood levels of LDL cholesterol. I read the article
carefully looking for any comments about any of the following:
Cholesterol is an antioxidant;
Blood cholesterol levels rise in people who are subjected to incremental
oxidative stress caused by toxic thoughts, toxic environment, and toxic
foods2,3;
Blood cholesterol levels begin to fall when all issues of incremental oxidative
stress are effectively addressed4;
Statin drugs lower cholesterol by inhibiting enzymes in the liver and are known
to cause hepatotoxicity and other adverse effects; and
The clinical benefits of expensive long-term
statin therapy are questionable.
Consider the following quote from The New England Journal of Medicine5:
West of Scotland study found an absolute reduction in cardiac mortality of 0.7
percent after five years of pravastatin therapy (40 mg per day, costing $100 per
month). Therefore, 143 men with hypercholesterolemia must spend a total of
$858,000 (drug cost only) to delay 1 such death...The problem is that outcome
events in primary prevention are always rare, even in coronary disease, leading
to the paradox that pravastatin is both highly effective and of very little
benefit.
Both highly effective and of very little benefit! That's the reality of the real
value of statin drugs for preventing deaths from coronary heart disease.
The internist, quoted above, claimed credit for his finding that "90 percent
said it wasn't a problem to get prescriptions refilled." He also congratulated
himself for the fact that 12 of his 21 patients had LDL cholesterol levels below
100 mg per deciliter. I want to make three other points here.
First, the credit for filling 90 percent prescriptions goes to the efficiency of
pharmacists, not to the doctor writing those prescriptions.
Second, it would be useful to know how many of the patients had demanded that
the prescriptions for statin drugs be written specifically for the drug they had
seen advertised on TV and print media. That would tell us about the success of
direct marketing efforts of drug companies.
Third, who set the standard of LDL cholesterol levels below 100 mg per
deciliter, which he is so dedicated to? Also, who was paid and how much by
statin makers to establish that standard? To answer those questions, I ask the
reader to consider the following three quotes from On the Take,6 an eye-opening
book on corruption among the standard setters of American medicine written by
Jerome Kassirer who was the editor-in-chief of The New England Journal of
Medicine for over eight years:
How much the meeting coordinators and speakers get paid for doing this is a
closely guarded secret, but another prominent cardiologist bragged to a young
colleague that he had made more than $100,000 at a single meeting of the
American Heart Association for these "extracurricular" activities (page 17)
The lead editorial in the October 2002 issue of the Lipid Letter by Dr. Antonio
Gotto, the dean of Cornell Medical School in New York and Dr. Peter Libby, chief
of Cardiovascular Medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston (of Harvard
Medical School) and co-chairs of ESLM (Emerging Science of Lipid Management) "challenge[d]
the medical community to consider whether our present criteria for therapy [with
statins] ate too conservative," meaning that statins should be used much more
widely. Both Drs. Libby and Gotto as well as the six "national faculty" listed
in the Lipid Letter have financial arrangements with Pfizer (page 97).
Some physicians become known as whores. Whore is a strong descriptor but I heard
it repeatedly from colleagues about physicians who tour the country for drug
companies, changing their talks repeatedly to hawk the products of the company
that is sponsoring their visits. Still, I held back using the "W" word until the
wife of a prominent academic physician in a major medical center used it to
describe her husband (page 25).
Like Dr. Kassirer, I have also heard some doctors described as whores. I find
such comparison grossly unfair to whores. Hookers are always forthright in
presenting their wares. They are forthcoming in the exact cost of their
services. They deliver what they promise, and at the pre-determined. They risk
their own lives in the practice of their profession, not those of others. Dr.
Kassirer and I cannot say the same about many doctors of Imperial Medicine. I
discuss the larger subject of intellectual bankruptcy of doctors of Imperial
Medicine in my book The Rooster, the Flu, and the Imperial Medicine of the New
Empire.
There is another aspect of medical standards established by the prestigious
medical journals. To illustrate one of those problems, I will consider the case
of Herceptin, the antibody that blocks the human epidermal growth factor
receptor, and which is used to treat breast and other types of cancers.
Herceptin and The New England Journal of Medicine
Mark Twain had a way with words. Concerning statistics, he said, "There are
lies, damn lies, and statistics." This phrase from the celebrated wordsmith
comes to mind when I read reports about "major breakthroughs" in cancer
treatment. In this section, I include brief commentary on two articles and an
accompanying editorial about the use of the drug Herceptin for treating breast
cancer which were published in the October 20, 2005 issue of The New England
Journal of Medicine.7-9 First consider the following quote concerning those
articles, the first being by the lead author of one of these two articles:
The results of these studies represent in quantitative terms the largest
improvement in outcome for any group of women with breast cancer in 25 years.10
In 1991, I didn't know that we would cure breast cancer and, in 2005, I'm
convinced we have.
A cancer expert at the National Cancer Institute.
Now consider how an editorial in the Journal celebrated the great cancer
treatment:
The strength of the evidence is so overwhelming at this point that it would be
almost impossible to withhold this drug from the appropriate group of patients."
Editorial, The New England Journal of Medicine.9 9
The author, according to Townsend Letter, received between $10,000 and $90,000
from the drug maker.
Next, consider how some others chimed in to salute what was being projected as a
great medical advance in the treatment of breast cancer:
For some women, breast cancer drug could equal a cure.
Writer of the above editorial quoted in Houston Chronicler
We don't have to wait ten more years for data. The data is here today. So I'm
happy. I am also humble to be part of this great study.
Another cancer expert paid by the drug maker, speaking on CBS News
Major breakthrough (describing Hereceptin for breast cancer).
ABC Evening News
Reality Check
The real story was dramatically different. When I read the two articles that
prompted the above quotes, I wondered how many doctors who read The New England
Journal of Medicine would have the curiosity to look beyond the hype. Consider
the following quote from an editorial written in response to the Herceptin
papers in the British journal, Lancet (www.thelancet.com / Nov. 9, 2005):
The best that can be said about Herceptin's efficacy and safety for the
treatment of early breast cancer is that the available evidence is insufficient
to make reliable judgments.
Herceptin is known to be toxic to the heart. Furthermore, cardiotoxicity of the
drug is significantly potentiated by the cardiotoxicity of adriamycin and
cytoxan, two drugs that are often prescribed along with Herceptin. The
oncologists and the journalists on the Herceptin bandwagon had little, if any,
time to warn the frightened and gullible women with breast cancer against the
heart toxicity of the drug.
What might—one may ask—can be made of all that hoopla among the American
oncologists and in the American media in view of the editorial in Lancet? The
simple answer is that the Herceptin maker stood to rake in an estimated $1
billion a year from the sale of the drug. The drug costs nearly $40,000 a year
for a single patient. The drug maker hopes to use its paid oncologists to
recruit 30,000 or more women to take the drug. What is a mere few hundred
thousand paid out as bribes to oncologists for their exultation!
The above story becomes even more remarkable when we consider the following
quote from the authors of the Journal articles themselves:
"Overall survival of the two groups (the one receiving Herceptin and the other
used as a control) was not statistically significant."
The New England Journal of Medicine.7
Translation: Women may not expect to live longer if they take Herceptin. That's
the Imperial Medicine.
Vioxx and Calcium Channel Blockers
Next, let us consider the celebrated case of Vioxx. The drug maker first
withheld crucial information about drug toxicity and then paid editors of major
journals to write exuberant editorials extolling the virtues of the drug. Next,
it intensely marketed it to the ill-informed body of doctors who take editorial
advice about drug therapies as divinely ordained. Vioxx rapidly became a darling
drug of doctors. Later there were many drug-related deaths. Then lawyers swarmed
the courts for their loot. Doctors were saved from liability suits by the "deep
pocket" strategy of lawyers who know where the real money is. Victims of the
ill-advised use of the drug saw limited compensation.
The Vioxx story is replayed every day in doctors offices, albeit without much
media noise. Occasionally there are reports of drug toxicities but they soon die
out. Consider the following quote from a report about calcium channel blocker
drugs published in Time magazine of September 11, 2000:
Many patients suffering from high blood pressure were probably surprised last
week to hear that one of the most popular class of drugs for treatment of their
conditions—calcium channel blockers—was being blamed for some 85,000 avoidable
heart attacks and heart failures a year.
I recognize that the long-term use of drugs can never be completely safe.
However, the issue highlighted in the above quote is different. How many
internists diligently consider the issues of toxic thoughts, toxic environment,
and toxic foods that cause hypertension before prescribing calcium channel
blockers to their patients with hypertension? Indeed, how many internists—one
might ask—are set up to effectively address any of those three issues? I often
hear that there is no proof that non-drug therapies work for hypertension. That
can be true only for those internists whose entire study of medicine is limited
to the use of drugs, or those who do not have the courage to try and test some
non-drug therapies.
The Dysox Model
There is but one fundamental difference between a healthy cell and an unwell
cell: a healthy cell has a well preserved oxygen homeostasis. A healthy cell
utilizes oxygen well, without incremental oxidative stress (oxidosis) and
without accumulating organic acids (acidosis). In contrast, an unwell cell
cannot utilize oxygen well and gets clogged up with Krebs cycle metabolites and
other organic acids —much like an automobile engine which gets clogged up
rapidly when it cannot burn its fuel completely. The presence of the cellular
dysox state can be readily documented by the measurement of 24-hour urinary
excretion of organic acids. This subject is presented at length in the chapter
entitled, "The Dysox State."
Science and Drug Use in Imperial Medicine
I often hear claims of the scientific method by doctors practicing essentially
drug medicine. Such claims bring to mind the complexity of genetic, enzymatic,
and mediator pathways of human biology. There are an estimated 30,000 genes and
100,000 proteins in the body. I do not know a single internist who can even name
100 genes or 125 proteins. With that profound level of ignorance, it is hard for
me see any merit in the claims of "scientific" medicine of doctors who regularly
and completely ignore all issues of toxic thoughts, environment, and foods. How
often do those who measure their effectiveness by the percentage of filled
prescriptions ever consider the critical issues of oxidosis, acidosis, and
dysoxygenosis in their office practices?
Evidence-Based Medicine
For several years, evidence-based medicine has been a euphemism for
pharmacologic medicine in which issues of toxic thoughts, environment, and foods
are consistently and completely neglected. Nor is any consideration given to the
three primary issues of molecular biology: oxidosis, acidosis, and dysoxygenosis.
For an equally large number of years, I have been amused by the use of the
evidence-based medicine phrase by doctors whose total commitment has been to
first finding the name of a disease then prescribing the "drug-of-choice" to
treat that disease. That becomes even more remarkable when we recognize that
nearly all clinical drug trials are conducted by doctors on the payroll of
companies that make those drugs. That is considered good science while astute
clinical observations of physicians, who have no conflict of interest, are
dismissed as unscientific.
The following are several serious problems with the double-blind,
placebo-controlled clinical trials in use today:
Blinded trials begin with a carefully selected patient population entered on the
basis of highly exclusive entry criteria;
The drugs under investigation do not remain blinded for the patients for long
since they have pharmacologic effects experienced by patients;
The drugs under investigation do not remain blinded for the doctors for long
since they are generally astute enough to recognize whether the patient is
responding to the drug or not;
The drugs under investigation reveal their identity because they alter the
results of laboratory tests performed as integral parts of the trial;
Patients almost never just take the trial drugs and persistently refuse natural
measures (including nutrient supplements and self-regulatory approaches) for the
entire duration of the study;
Each patient is a unique individual with unique set of life circumstances that
profoundly influence his response to the drug under investigation; and most
importantly
Trials for individual drugs are conducted as single agents for some months but
doctors prescribe the drug concurrently with two, three, four, five, or more
drugs for years.
For the above seven reasons, I do not believe double-blinded, placebo-controlled
drug trials can be accepted as valid science. That model serves drug makers well
but poorly the doctors. As for patients, they suffer in silence, often totally
unaware that they are victims of reprehensible perversion of science.
Human Intellect, Holism, and Integration
Human intellect evolved through spiritual, philosophic, and scientific
explorations. Those three forms of explorations were integrated by the following
three simple notions:
First, all exploratory beginnings occurred as mere imaginings—speculations in
the contemporary vernacular;
Second, the natural order of things could not be understood unless it was
regarded in its settings as a whole; and
Third, the exploratory endeavor had to be continued beyond the established
knowledge at any given time.
The above three simple notion appear to be as old as human consciousness.
Science, defined here as the aggregate of physical observations is then
designated as the conquered territory of philosophy and spirituality. It follows
from that science must be considered true only when it seeks to be
holistic—Darwinian.
The whole is the reality, was the central theme of Hegel's (Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel 1770-1831) Encyclopedia of Philosophic Sciences. However, Hegel
was a Johnny-come-lately. The notion of wholeness was the prize bequeathed to us
by the pre-Socratics. Parmenides (515-450 B.C.), the greatest of the Eleatic
school and celebrated by Plato, taught that reality is unchanging, the entire
world of being. The mathematical philosophers—yes, mathematics was spawned by
philosophy—of the Pythagorean school held that all things were numbers. Socrates
could answer questions only by raising more questions—a telling evidence of his
preoccupation with the relatedness of everything with everything else, which is
seldom, if ever, recognized among ecologists. In Plato, we see merging of the
ethical and the scientific. Centuries later, the Persian physician al-Razi (Abu
Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariyya al-Razi, 841-926 A.D.) addressed that subject with
the following words:
The truth in medicine is a goal that one cannot attain, and everything that is
written in books is worth much less than the experience of a physician who
reflects and reasons.
There have also been some dissenting voices. The core tenet of wholeness of the
human condition and its place in the continuum of human explorations was
challenged by Rene Descartes (1596-1650), who disavowed all his prior thinking
by proclaiming Cognito ergo sum (I think, therefore I am). His celebrated
duality of the soul and body can be traced to the following words with which he
expounded his philosophy:
...that is to say, the soul by which I am what I am, is entirely distinct from
body, and is even more easy to know than is the latter; and even if body were
not, the soul would not cease to be what it is.11
Descartes's words puzzle me. Evidently, humans were humans long before Descartes
conceived the notion of Cognito ergo sum. However, how much of his professed
essential dichotomy had to do with his fear of the righteous of his time remains
unknown. He must have known about the fate of Giordano Bruno (1548-1600). Bruno
believed in the indivisibility of all matter and supported Copernican thought,
for which he was burnt on stake by the lieutenants of the Pope.
The connectedness of everything in all imaginable realms was the central and
recurrent theme in the wisdom of the East—millennia before any documented
notions of relatedness among things in the West. Specifically, the problems of
the human condition—physical and emotional included—were not seen discrete from
the matters of the soul, nor from the cosmic considerations in the ancient
Indian, Chinese, and Tibetan schools of philosophy and spirituality. However,
until recently, there was little, if any, appreciation of this in the West.
Consider the following words from the Nobelist Bertrand Russell (1872-1970):
For in some vital respects the philosophic tradition of the West differs from
the speculations of the Eastern mind. There is no civilization but the Greek in
which a philosophic movement goes hand in hand with a scientific tradition.
The Wisdom of the West10a
That is a remarkable statement from one of the most celebrated the
twentieth-century literary figure of the West. One can only wonder how serious
students of the ancient literatures of the East might respond to that. Let us
consider the wisdom of the West in this matter.
Doing Clinical Ecology and Dysox Medicine
Clinical ecology is completely neglected by the practitioners of drug medicine.
That is so because their thought leaders do not practice it. Those thought
leaders do not practice it because it does not fit into their
placebo-controlled, double-blinded methodology of what they consider to be the
only acceptable form of science in medicine. The ecologic dynamics—interaction
of environmental elements with human metabolism, in common language—of course,
cannot be blinded. Nor can people, I might add here, be blinded to what they
eat, nor to the presence or absence of physical fitness with exercise. Another
lament I have heard from some thoughtful physicians is that the ecology cannot
be brought into a doctor' office. Why? Because The New England Journal of
Medicine does not permit it.
The only way to find out what philosophy is, is to do philosophy.
Bertrand Arthur William Russell, in Wisdom of the West10b
Russell in the above quote, of course, was struggling with the problem of
defining philosophy. He contended philosophy cannot be defined, since any
definition of philosophic exploration confines it to some specific philosophic
attitude. So, he concluded that one had to do philosophy to know philosophy.
Taking Russell's lead, I suggest the following to the practitioners of drugs and
scalpel medicine:
The only way to find out what clinical ecology is, is to do clinical ecology.
The only way to find out what detox medicine, is to do dysox medicine .
No amounts of mere reading can give any clinician a clear sense of what dysox
medicine is and how it can prevent illness, reverse disease, and ameliorate
suffering. What is required is deep reflection and courage to embark upon a
journey of exploration of the fundamental energetics of cells and molecular
dynamics of the health/dis-ease/disease continuum presented in this volume. I
also present in this volume a large body of data obtained with integrated
clinical trials conducted at the Institute. It is my hope that such information
can help readers break the myopia of the mind created and perpetuated by blind
subservience to the placebo-controlled, double- blinded model—seldom really
blind for long, in real life. Then they can go on to develop an ecologic,
integrated, and synoptic view of clinical medicine.
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