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The
Seven for Asthma:
When the Lungs Become the Spokesorgan for the Body
by Majid Ali, MD
This article was provided by:
Aging Healthfully Magazine
Note:
The information on this website is presented for educational purposes
only.
It is not a substitute for the advice of a qualified
professional.
For asthma control, we must
clearly understand seven aspects of this problem:
(1) Asthma can be controlled with nondrug, integrative
therapies in most persons;
(2) Asthma attacks can threaten life quickly and drug therapies must
not be delayed in acute attacks;
(3) Asthma is always caused by mold and food allergy;
(4) Stress and environmental pollutants worsen asthma;
(5) The secret to the prevention of asthma attacks is in the
restoration of battered
bowel-blood-liver ecosystems;
(6) "Asthma smart" nutrients, herbs, and water therapies can
prevent asthma attacks; and
(7) Prayer, meditation, and spiritual surrender are necessary for
long-term nondrug asthma control.
How Bad Is the Problem?
An estimated 15 million Americans suffer from asthma. But
does that figure tell the whole story? How effective is the modern
American drug treatment of asthma? Consider the following two recent
quotes:
"I began to collect news reports about the children in the
South Bronx,
one out of every four of whom carries an inhaler."
New York Magazine July 13, 1998, page 35.
"From 1982 to 1992, the prevalence of asthma increased by 42%
and the average annual deaths by 40%..."
Journal of American Medical Association, 1996;276:1473.
Message of the Article
Before describing the nondrug therapies the author and his
colleagues use at the Institute of Integrative Medicine, the author
wishes to state the two core messages of this article clearly: For
asthma control and prevention, first it is the:
Bowel! Bowel! Bowel!
And second, it is:
Spiritual Surrender!
The author's emphasis on the bowel might irk some readers. On the
surface, asthma is a breathing problem and hence should require focus
on the lung. Here are the author's reasons for focusing on the bowel:
(1) Asthma is an immune disorder, and all immune disorders arise in
the bowel;
(2) Asthma is considered a chronic inflammatory disorder, and all
inflammatory disorders begin in the bowel;
(3) Mold allergy and food sensitivities cause asthma attacks and such
reactions start in the bowel;
(4) Microbial toxins poison antioxidant and immune defenses, and all
such defenses are primarily located in the bowel;
(5) Low levels of certain enzymes (catalysts) set the stage for asthma
attacks, and levels of such enzymes fall because of elements in the
bowel;
(6) Chemicals trigger asthma when the liver detox system is overtaxed,
and the bowel is
the guardian angel of the liver;
(7) Asthma often appears after lung infections, and all such
infections are related to
immune responses rooted in the bowel.
Spiritual Surrender
The author's emphasis on spiritual work is also likely to
irk some. But he does not rank spirituality high in his priorities for
asthma because it has become fashionable to do so. He has been a
student of medicine for 40 years. His work with the sick has convinced
him that constant thinking about one's disease stands in the way of
healing. The popular notion of mind-over-body healing does not work.
An energy-over-mind approach does work. If that be so, why put the
bowel ecology above spiritual surrender? That's a valid question.
Indeed, spiritual work does become the #1 item once all the issues of
the battered bowel ecosystem have been addressed. The author discusses
this important issue in Healing Miracles and the Bite of the Gray Dog.
Asthma Attacks Can Threaten Life
Quickly
An asthma attack must be vigorously treated with effective
drugs if nondrug, integrated therapies do not quickly break it.
Persons suffering from asthma must be under the supervision of
experienced clinicians.
Asthma Is Always Caused by Mold
and Food Allergy
For the diagnosis of mold allergy, a common mistake is to
do the RAST test. This is a poor test for diagnosing mold allergy. In
1980, the author and his colleague, Dr. Madhava Ramanarayanan,
developed a highly sensitive micro-ELISA test for the diagnosis of
mold allergy (for which they received a US patent) which diagnoses
mold allergy that is often missed by the RAST test.3 With the
sensitive microELISA test, the author and colleagues have been able to
diagnose mold allergy in all their patients with asthma.4 Most
specialists in lung diseases now regard asthma as an inflammatory
disease. The critical point here is that before asthma becomes an
inflammatory disease, it is an allergic problem.
How Is Asthma Diagnosed?
Simply stated, asthma is reversible chest tightness, air
hunger, and wheezing. Most persons diagnose their own asthma when they
begin to wheeze. Parents usually have no difficulty in recognizing
wheezing and air hunger in their asthmatic children. In the presence
of other coexisting conditions, such as heart disease, lung function
tests (spirometry) can readily establish the diagnosis.
Efficacy of Nondrug, Integrated
Therapies for Asthma
In a 1991 outcome study of asthma presented at the 26th
Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Environmental Medicine, the
author reported control of asthma without drugs in 77% of patients
after more than six months of treatment.5
Exercise-Induced, Stress-Induced,
and Pollutant-Induced Asthma
Extensive experience has convinced the author and
colleagues at the Institute that all cases of so-called
exercise-induced, stress-induced, and pollutant-induced asthma are
caused by undiagnosed mold allergy and food sensitivities, and by
damage to the bowel ecosystem caused by excess sugar, antibiotic
abuse, synthetic hormones, and other pollutants. Exercise, stress, and
environmental chemicals in such cases simply act as the last triggers.
Nondrug Management of Asthma
At the Institute, the author and his colleagues
individualize care for asthma with focus on the following:
(1) diagnosis and treatment of mold and food sensitivity;
(2) optimal choices in the kitchen, avoiding sugar-insulin-adrenaline
roller coasters;
(3) optimal hydration;
(4) asthma-smart nutrients (see below for details);
(5) asthma-smart herbs;
(6) enzyme therapies, including fresh vegetable juices and
supplemental enzymes;
(7) support for the battered bowel ecology;
(8) support for the blood ecosystem with therapies for cleansing blood
of microclots and
microplaques, such as EDTA chelation and IV hydrogen peroxide and
ozone;
(9) improvement in liver detox with nutrients, such as glutathione, N-acetylcysteine,
MSM, and
lipoic acid, and use of herbs such as milk thistle, schizandra, and
turmeric;
(10) judicious use of liver and gallbladder flushes under professional
supervision;
(11) diagnosis and treatment of the troubled trio of
thyroid-adrenal-pancreas (which can frequently
be diagnosed with proper laboratory tests);
(12) support for the pituitary-sex hormone-neurotransmitter trio,
especially in women with hormonal disorders (see RRT for hormone
disorders of this series);
(13) limbic exercise (prayerful and non-goal-oriented); and
(14) stress control with prayer, meditation, and spiritual surrender
discussed in
What Do Lions Know About Stress?
Asthma-Smart Nutrients
The big seven among nutrients are: magnesium, glutathione,
vitamin B12, protein and peptide protocols, pantehein, essential oils,
and taurine. The following guidelines are often used by the Institute
physicians:
(1) antioxidant vitamins, including vitamins A and beta carotene
(together 10,000 IU), vitamin C
(1,000 to 3,000 mg), vitamin E (400 to 600 IU), pantethein (150-250
mg), and some members
of B complex (25 to 50 mg each) ;
(2) sulfur-containing antioxidants, including glutathione (500 to
1,000 mg), NAC
[N-acetylcysteine] (500 to 800 mg), MSM 500 to 1,000 mg), and lipoic
acid (200 to 500 mg);
(3) minerals, including magnesium (1,500-2,500 mg), potassium (200-500
mg), chromium
(400-600 mcg); selenium (400-600 mcg), molybdenum (400-600 mcg), and
calcium
(1,000 to 1,500 mg);
(4) essential oils, including cold-pressed extra virgin olive oil,
flaxseed oil, pumpkin oil, and
sesame oil; and
(5) protein and peptide protocols containing 80-90% amino acids.
Asthma-Smart Foods and Herbs
The big seven herbs for asthma are: uncooked ginger (an
inch long (or less) piece of chopped root eaten with food or taken
with water), licorice, wild cherry, hawthorne berry, fennel seeds,
bloodroot, and Ephedra. Others of value include sundew, Grindelia and
mouse ear. Since anxiety about asthma attacks often triggers an
attack, herbs such as lobelia, valerian, skullcap and St. John's wort
are also valuable.
Intramuscular and Intravenous
Nutrient Support
Judicious use of intramuscular injections and intravenous
infusions of nutrients, in the author's experience, are extremely
valuable in managing difficult cases of asthma and in avoiding the use
of steroids or other immune-suppressing drugs. The seven nutrients
mentioned earlier are especially valuable when given by injections.
For specific information, advanced and professional readers are
referred to the author's monograph, Intravenous Nutrient Protocols in
Molecular Medicine.
Restoration of the Battered Bowel
Ecosystems
When properly searched, clear evidence of damage to the
bowel ecosystem can almost always be recognized in persons suffering
from asthma. The author recommends a seed, feed, and occasionally weed
approach to restore the bowel ecology described in detail in The
Canary and Chronic Fatigue. The author and his colleagues often
prescribe on an intermittent basis antifungal drugs, such as Nystatin,
Diflucan, Sporanox and others. However, good long-term results can be
assured only with natural remedies.
Two Things to Avoid: Antibiotics
and Steroids
Antibiotics and steroids for asthma can usually be avoided
by physicians experienced in the principles and practice of
integrative medicine. Both groups of drugs severely damage the bowel
ecology, and hence all the antioxidant, enzyme, and immune defenses of
the body. Even when the use of such drugs is considered necessary, it
is essential to use nondrug therapies at the same time to prevent
further attacks.
The author ends this article by stating that asthma is a serious
condition, and by strongly advising that no one attempt to manage his
asthma on a self-help basis.
References:
(1) Ali M, Ali O. AA Oxidopathy: The core pathogenetic
mechanism of coronary heart disease. J Integrative Medicine
1997;1:6-112;
(2) Ali, M. Oxidative regression to primordial cellular ecology. J
Integral Medicine 1998;2:4-53;
(3) Ali M. Intravenous Nutrient Protocols in Molecular Medicine
(monograph) 1987, Institute of Preventive Medicine, Bloomfield, New
Jersey ;
(4) Ali M, Ramanarayanan M. A computerized microELISA aassay for
allergen-specific IgE antibodies. Am J Clin Pathol 1984;81:591-8;
(5) Ali M. Abstracts of the 26th Annual Meeting of the American
Academy of Environmental Medicine, 1991.
Comments?: E-mail
to Dr. Ali
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İMajid Ali İAging Healthfully, Inc.
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