Forum Replies Created

  • Matt S.

    Member
    August 2, 2018 at 3:43 am in reply to: I Expect To Beat This Disease!

    Jean, Thank you for posting the link to the YouTube video about angiogenesis. I was aware of this company, but I hadn’t thought about it for a while. It is quite interesting to me because I have been suffering from a hypersensitivity to mold for most of my life, and I have had the great misfortune to have been exposed to excessive levels of it for much of that time. Someone who I consider the foremost expert in the field, Dr. Richie Shoemaker, believes that people like me can end up with a chronic inflammatory condition from such exposure, one of the symptoms of which is hypoperfusion, a condition of insufficient oxygen in the body’s tissues! Meanwhile, researchers at the company that is the subject of the video contend that the death of the dopaminergic neurons in the Parkinson sufferers brain is the result of hypoperfusion. What an interesting coincidence! Dr. Shoemaker has been saying that Parkinson-like symptoms can result from the chronic inflammatory condition that he is focused on. And even more importantly, there are drugs available now to treat that hypoperfusion. If I wasn’t so financially challenged, I would’ve pursued this long ago, but that may change for the better very soon.

  • Matt S.

    Member
    July 30, 2018 at 12:42 am in reply to: I Expect To Beat This Disease!

    Jean. Thanks for your reply. I will check out the YouTube link soon As I’m done here. I also wanted to mention that Pharma is not the only stumbling block. The doctors themselves make great investments to get into the profession. Such people tend to be conservative in their thoughts and actions. And the practice of medicine in itself, under the control, as it is in America, of large corporate interests, tends to further reinforce that tendency. These are not a people nor is it a system that that is conducive to “out of the box” thinking. I should add that I have some experience in this area apart from being a patient. I come from a family with many doctors. We half jokingly say that medicine is the family business.