Winning cancer, diabetes, fibromyalgia, pain, arthritis, metabolism diseases from mixing application of Papaya leaf juice, baking soda, aspirin, sugar, temperature, Vietnamese Qi Gong breathing, exercise, metabolism and traditional medicine for cancer
Winning cancer, diabetes,
fibromyalgia, pain, arthritis, metabolism diseases from mixing application of
Aspirin
Sugar
Metabolism
Papaya leaf
Traditional medicine
Baking soda
Temperature
Deep breathing
Physical exercise
Vietnamese Qi Gong
In practice, the author has seen many cases that have been successfully recovered from cancer by alternative therapies without using any medicine. Astonishingly, Some of them are recovered by papaya leaf juice, some of them are by baking soda, some of them are by Qi Gong breathing or other therapies. On the other hand, the scientists also found that baking soda and raising body temperature also have a positive impact on cancer treatment so that physicians using baking soda and raising body temperature when applying chemotherapy for cancer. The question is how and why these cases are successful? The answer will give us an overall view of most diseases that we are dealing with. This is just part of my view and I have seen it had positive impacts on many cases. During studying the functions of the cells and organs, the author thought: “All of these functions will poorly execute or do not happens at all if we give its poor fuels or cut important parts of the metabolic reactions. The cells and organs are in an ecosystem. All fuels or ingredients should at the precise biological amounts. Nothing more, nothing less. Too many or too little of sugars can be seen as too much fuel or too little fuel, respectively, it can destroy the body, most are described well with hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, hypotension, and hypertension.
Forget biology, forget biogenetics, forget
biochemistry, forget immune system, forget the metabolism when there are the
problems that reduce blood circulation like glycemia and blood pressure.
What is oxygen in the blood circulation for? When we talk about
the vital role of oxygen, we forget that the vital role of oxygen is to interact with glucose
in the cells catalyzed by many enzymes to generate energy. The main source of
generate energy in cells is from glucose, enough glucose is as vital as enough
oxygen.
Blood pressure (BP) is
the pressure of circulating blood on the walls
of blood vessels. Most of this pressure is due to work done by the heart
by pumping blood through the circulatory system. Used without further
specification, "blood pressure" usually refers to the pressure in
large arteries of the systemic circulation. Blood pressure is
one of the vital signs, along with the respiratory rate, heart
rate, oxygen saturation, and body temperature.
The supply of the blood to the cells depends greatly on the blood
circulation. This is why the exercise seems to benefit health overall.
Physical movement greatly impacts the circulation of the blood to the organs,
the fact is when someone being splinted the hand for several months, the
splinted hand will become weak because it is reduced in size and muscle. This
can be observed when we do test on animals.
The circulatory
system, also called the cardiovascular
system or the vascular
system is an organ system that permits blood to
circulate and transport nutrients (such as amino
acids and electrolytes), oxygen, carbon
dioxide, hormones, glucose and blood cells to and from
the cells in the body to provide nourishment and help
in fighting diseases, stabilize temperature and pH, and
maintain homeostasis.
The circulatory system includes the lymphatic system, which
circulates lymph.[1] The passage of lymph, for example,
takes much longer than that of blood.[2] Blood is a fluid
consisting of plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells,
and platelets that is circulated by the heart through the
vertebrate vascular system, carrying oxygen and nutrients to and waste
materials away from all body tissues. Lymph is essentially recycled excess
blood plasma after it has been filtered from the interstitial
fluid (between cells) and returned to the lymphatic system. The
cardiovascular (from Latin words meaning "heart" and
"vessel") system comprises the blood, heart, and blood vessels.[3]The
lymph, lymph nodes, and lymph vessels form the lymphatic system,
which returns filtered blood plasma from the interstitial fluid (between cells)
as lymph.
Coronary circulation is the circulation of blood in the blood
vessels that supply the heart muscle (myocardium). Coronary
arteries supply oxygenated, and glucose blood to the heart
muscle and cardiac veins drain away from the blood once it has been
deoxygenated. Because the rest of the body, and most especially the brain,
needs a steady supply of oxygenated blood that is free of all but the slightest
interruptions, the heart works constantly and sometimes works quite hard. Therefore
its circulation is of major importance not only to its own tissues but to the
entire body and even the level of consciousness of the brain from
moment to moment. Interruptions of coronary circulation quickly cause heart
attacks (myocardial infarctions), in which the heart muscle is damaged
by oxygen starvation. Such interruptions are usually caused by ischemic
heart disease (coronary artery disease) and sometimes by embolism
from other causes like obstruction in blood flow through vessels.
Globally, the average blood pressure, age-standardized, has
remained about the same since 1975 to the present, at approx. 127/79 mmHg in
men and 122/77 mmHg in women.
[104] [127]
Blood pressure is influenced by cardiac output, total
peripheral resistance, and arterial stiffness and varies
depending on the situation, emotional state, activity, and relative
health/disease states. In the short term, blood pressure
is regulated by baroreceptors which act via the brain to
influence the nervous and endocrine systems. The main purpose is to give the cells enough energy to function well which varies
depending on the site, situation, emotional state, activity, and relative
health/disease states
Blood pressure that is too low is
called hypotension, and pressure that is consistently high
is hypertension.
Thermoregulation, by definition, is a mechanism by which mammals
maintain body temperature by tightly controlled self-regulation, no matter the
temperature of their surroundings. Temperature regulation is a type of
homeostasis, which is a process that biological systems use to preserve a
stable internal state to survive. the temperature of around 37 degrees Celsius,
which is equivalent to around 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. Core temperature is most
accurately measured via a rectal probe thermometer. This is the temperature at
which the human body’s systems work together at their optimum, which is the
reason the body has such tightly regulated mechanisms. Thermoregulation is
crucial to human life. Without thermoregulation, the human body would not be
able to adequately function and, inevitably, will expire.
When the body’s ability to thermoregulate becomes hindered and is
left untreated, organ failure is imminent. Blood flow will be reduced, leading
to ischemia, and, ultimately, multiple organ failures. [24] [25] [104] [112]
[222] [96] [101] [102] [123] [222]
Most of the symptoms have a relation to the hypoglycemia
Hypoglycemic symptoms can be divided into
those produced by the counterregulatory hormones (epinephrine/adrenaline and
glucagon) triggered by the falling glucose, and
the neuroglycopenic effects produced by reduced brain sugar. For a
long time, we only afraid of hyperglycemia and forget that hypoglycemia maybe
much more dangerous than hyperglycemia. The diabetic patients usually have the feeling of hypoglycemia when they are late for meals with the signs of
weakness, dizziness, tremor and cold sweating.
The most common cause of hypoglycemia
is medications used to treat diabetes mellitus such
as insulin and sulfonylureas. Risk is greater in diabetics
who have eaten less than usual, exercised more than usual or have
drunk alcohol.
Other causes of hypoglycemia
include kidney failure, certain tumors, such
as insulinoma, liver disease, hypothyroidism, starvation,
an inborn error of metabolism, severe infections, reactive
hypoglycemia and a number of drugs including alcohol. Low blood sugar
may occur in otherwise healthy babies who have not eaten for a few hours.
Table 9: The signs and the effects of hypoglycemia
In newborns, hypoglycemia can produce irritability, jitters,
myoclonic jerks, cyanosis, respiratory distress, apneic episodes, sweating,
hypothermia, somnolence, hypotonia, refusal to feed, and seizures or
"spells."
[104] [112] [222] [96] [101] [102] [123]
In both young and old patients, the brain may
habituate to low glucose levels, with a reduction of noticeable symptoms
despite neuroglycopenic impairment. In insulin-dependent diabetic patients,
this phenomenon is termed hypoglycemia unawareness and is a significant
clinical problem when improved glycemic control is attempted. Another aspect of
this phenomenon occurs in type I glycogenosis, when chronic hypoglycemia before
diagnosis may be better tolerated than acute hypoglycemia after treatment is
underway.
Hypoglycemic symptoms can also occur when one
is sleeping. Examples of symptoms during sleep can include damp bed sheets or
clothes from perspiration. Having nightmares or the act of crying out can be a
sign of hypoglycemia. Once the individual is awake they may feel tired,
irritable, or confused and these may be signs of hypoglycemia as well.
In nearly all cases, hypoglycemia that is
severe enough to cause seizures or unconsciousness can be reversed without
obvious harm to the brain. Cases of death or permanent neurological damage
occurring with a single episode have usually involved prolonged, untreated
unconsciousness, interference with breathing, severe concurrent disease, or
some other type of vulnerability. Nevertheless, brain damage or death has
occasionally resulted from severe hypoglycemia.
Research in healthy adults shows that mental
efficiency declines slightly but measurably as blood glucose falls below 3.6
mmol. Hormonal defense mechanisms (adrenaline and glucagon) are normally
activated as it drops below a threshold level 3.0 mmol for most people,
producing the typical hypoglycemic symptoms of shakiness and dysphoria. Obvious
impairment may not occur until the glucose falls below 2.2 mmol, and many
healthy people may occasionally have glucose levels below 3.6 mmol in the
morning without apparent effects. Since the brain effects of hypoglycemia,
termed neuroglycopenia, determine whether given low glucose is a
"problem" for that person, most doctors use the term hypoglycemia
only when a moderately low glucose level is accompanied by symptoms or brain
effects.
What if local hypoglycemia, local hypotension
appears in the brain, and other tissues of the body for years or even the
decades? The author did record glycemia, temperature, and stiffness of the
pain, numbness areas, the recorded results are much different from the normal
areas of the same body. And when practitioners take sugar juice with suitable
exercise, the author did see when the local glycemia, local temperature back to
normal, most of the pain and numbness disappeared.
Table 10: Long-term effects of hypoglycemia
Long-term effects of hypoglycemia
Significant hypoglycemia appears to
increase the risk of cardiovascular disease
Serious illness may result in low blood
sugar. Severe disease of nearly all major organ systems can cause
hypoglycemia as a secondary problem.
Hormone deficiency: Not enough cortisol,
such as in Addison's disease, not enough glucagon, or not enough epinephrine
can result in low blood sugar. This is a more common cause in children.
Pathophysiology: Like most animal tissues,
brain metabolism depends primarily on glucose for fuel in most circumstances.
A limited amount of glucose can be derived from glycogen stored in
astrocytes, but it is consumed within minutes. For most practical purposes,
the brain is dependent on a continual supply of glucose diffusing from the
blood into the interstitial tissue within the central nervous system and into
the neurons themselves.
Therefore, if the amount of glucose
supplied by the blood falls, the brain is one of the first organs affected.
In most people, a subtle reduction of mental efficiency can be observed when
the glucose falls below 65 mg/dL (3.6 mM). Impairment of action and judgment usually becomes obvious below 40 mg/dL (2.2 mM). Seizures may occur as the glucose falls further. As blood glucose levels fall below 10 mg/dL (0.55 mM),
most neurons become electrically silent and nonfunctional, resulting in a coma.
These brain effects are collectively referred to as neuroglycopenia.
The importance of an adequate supply of
glucose to the brain is apparent from the number of nervous, hormonal and
metabolic responses to a falling glucose level. Most of these are defensive
or adaptive, tending to raise the blood sugar by glycogenolysis and
gluconeogenesis provide alternative fuels. If the blood sugar level falls too
low, the liver converts a storage of glycogen into glucose and releases it
into the bloodstream, to prevent the person going into a diabetic coma, for a
short time.
Prolonged, severe hypoglycemia can produce
lasting damage to a wide range. This can include impairment of cognitive
function, motor control, or even consciousness. The likelihood of permanent
brain damage from any given instance of severe hypoglycemia is difficult to
estimate and depends on a multitude of factors such as age, recent blood and
brain glucose experience, concurrent problems such as hypoxia, and
availability of alternative fuels.
It has been frequently found that those
type 1 diabetics found "dead in bed" in the morning after suspected
severe hypoglycemia had some underlying coronary pathology that led to an
induced fatal heart attack. In 2010, a case report was published
demonstrating the first known case of an individual found "dead in
bed" whilst wearing a continuous glucose monitor(CGM), which provided a
history of glucose levels before the fatal event; the patient had suffered a
severe hypoglycemic incident, and while the authors described only a
"minimal counter-regulatory response" they stated no "anatomic
abnormalities" were observed during autopsy.
[104] [112] [222] [96] [101] [102] [123]
Hypoglycemia is also found in many people
with hypothermia, like hypothermia, may be a result of hypoglycemia. The distribution of temperature in the body will lead us to
know where the cells may suffer hypoglycemia and low temperature. The level of
sugar in the blood is like the level of supplying energy for the billions of
cells and organs function normally. Body temperature is also maintained by the the function of the body cells. The whole body is a big biologic machine that all
of the activities of the cells in the body are belong to the energy supplied by
the reaction that control by enzymes and these enzymes are very sensitive to
the changing of the temperature.
Table 11: The signs and the effects of
hypothermia
The signs and the effects of hypothermia
Mild
Moderate
Severe
With sympathetic nervous system excitation.
Mental status changes such as amnesia.
Cold
Shivering
Confusion
No shivering
High blood pressure
Slurred speech
Hallucinations
Fast heart rate
Decreased reflexes
Inflamed skin
Fast respiratory rate
Loss of fine motor skills.
Pulmonary edema
Contraction of blood vessels
Mental status changes such as amnesia
Lack of reflexes
Increased urine production due to
cold
Fixed dilated pupils
Mental confusion
Low blood pressure
Liver dysfunction may also be present
Physiological systems falter and heart
rate, respiratory rate, and blood pressure all decrease.
Pulse and respiration rates
decrease
Fast heart rates: ventricular tachycardia,
atrial fibrillation
Table
12: Organ Systems Involved in disordered thermoregulation
Multiple organs and body systems are
affected when thermoregulation is not working correctly
1. During heat illness as a result of improper thermoregulation,
the following organs and systems are impaired. Notice that many of these
issues cause or are influenced by other issues.
2. The heart experiences an increased burden due to elevations
in heart rate and increased cardiac output.
3. The circulatory system sustains intravascular dehydration.
4. The brain suffers from cerebral ischemia and/or cerebral
edema.
5. The gastrointestinal tract is vulnerable to hemorrhage and
also, sepsis because the mucosa of the intestines increases its permeability
6. The lungs suffer from the increase of hyperventilation,
hyperpnea, and pulmonary vasodilation.
7. Acute renal failure can commence because of the dehydration
and impairment in circulation.
8. Liver cells suffer because of the fever, ischemia, and
cytokines increase in the intestinal tract.
9. Electrolyte abnormalities are likely as well as hypoglycemia,
metabolic acidosis, and respiratory alkalosis.
[72] [73] [74] [75] [140] [178]
The facts of hypotension.
We do know that Blood the pressure is the vital signs, but we are
taught that hypotension is so dangerous that we forget the danger of lower
blood pressure. So that most of the therapists only afraid of hypertension and
skip the danger of hypotension. Blood pressure is the vital signs of a
healthy body. Blood pressure tell us the state of the circulatory system, also
called the cardiovascular system, an organ system that permits blood to
circulate and transport nutrients (such as amino acids and electrolytes),
oxygen, carbon dioxide, hormones, glucose and blood cells to and from the cells
in the body to provide nourishment and help in fighting diseases, stabilize
temperature and pH, and maintain homeostasis.
The circulatory system includes the lymphatic system, which
circulates lymph. So the blood pressure tells us whether or not the cells,
tissues, organs, and body in balanced. Traditional therapists pay close
attention to the local blood circulation. Their treatment is aim at making
systemic circulation and localized circulation in balanced. Traditional
therapists can sense the tell exactly whether or not the specific organs,
tissues have good blood circulation based on visible signs and sensual signs.
By observing, the healthy people only have the feeling of dizziness or vertigo
when they have hypotension or hypoglycemia.
Coronary circulation is the circulation of blood in the blood
vessels that supply the heart muscle. Coronary arteries supply oxygenated, and
glucose blood to the heart muscle and cardiac veins drain away from the blood
once it has been deoxygenated.
Interruptions of coronary circulation quickly cause heart attacks,
in which the heart muscle is damaged by oxygen starvation and glucose
starvation. Such interruptions are usually caused by ischemic heart disease
(coronary artery disease) and sometimes by embolism from other causes like
obstruction in blood flow through vessels. Cardiologists are taught well about
the vital role of blood circulation to the heart so they pay attention very
closely to the health of the coronary arteries. Coronary artery disease
causes the blood flow to the heart below the optimum level. but the facts are
all the living cells of the body need an optimum level of the blood
circulation. Many tissues and organs are not as important as the heart, so we
do not see immediately the signs of localizing ischemic of these tissues. Poor
local circulation will make the local disordered metabolism which will lead to
abnormal functions of the organs, and the cells may die quicker than normal,
withdraw to an inactive state or speed up the degeneration of the tissues. If
too many tissues and organs have poor circulation for a long time, we may soon
have systemic diseases or severe syndromes. This is why the hypotension should
be paid more attention than normal. Any number of blood pressure below the
normal number will cause the cells and organs to work below the normal level.
The author has seen many practitioners who said they feel more tired,
dizziness, fatigue or weakness since recent years, but when they went for a
check-up, doctors could not find any diseases and problems. After checking
their blood pressure, the author usually got the number below the normal
number, the systolic pressure may be around 110 mmHg or 100 mmHg. This made the
author think that, if these people have these low blood pressure for years or
decades, they will get specific diseases. It is just the blood flow to all
organs and tissues are below the optimum level.
Table 13: The
signs and the effects of hypotension.
The signs and the effects of hypotension
The mechanism
· Lightheadedness or dizziness.
Not enough glucose and oxygen
· If the blood pressure is
sufficiently low, fainting may occur.
Severe lacking glucose and oxygen
· Chest pain
Not enough glucose and oxygen make the
heart and lung have to work more, this causes the pain
· Shortness of breath
The brain stimulate to take more breath to
get oxygen
· Irregular heartbeat
Not enough glucose and oxygen
· Fever higher than 38.3 °C
(101 °F)
Impaired thermoregulation
· Headache
Not enough glucose and oxygen
· Stiff neck
Not enough glucose and oxygen make the
muscle cells become inactive. These are muscle we use most of the time.
· Severe upper back pain
Not enough glucose and oxygen make the
muscle cells become inactive. These are muscle we use most of the time.
· Cough with sputum
· Prolonged diarrhea or vomiting
Not enough glucose and oxygen make the
muscle cells become inactive or semi-paralyzed mixed with overactive
· Dyspepsia (indigestion)
Not enough glucose and oxygen for the cells
act well.
· Dysuria (painful urination)
· Acute,
life-threatening allergic reaction
The reduction of the immune system
· Seizures
Severe lacking glucose and oxygen make the
brain cells overactive disharmony mixing with inactive.
· Loss of consciousness
Not enough glucose and oxygen
· Profound fatigue
Hypotension are the vital signs
· Temporary blurring or loss of vision
Not enough glucose and oxygen
· Black tarry stools
Not enough glucose and oxygen for the
intestine cells.
[172] [69] [103] [104] [121] [172] [187]
Finding and removing trigger points in the lungs, stomach, important ograns & the whole body can help to prevent and treat Covid-19, flu A, cough, asthma, bronchitis, pneumonitis, difficulty breathing, COPD, simply by Qigong excercise, right clapping
Tự tìm và loại bỏ các điểm gây đau, tắc, chèn trong phổi, ổ bụng, các tạng quan trọng và toàn cơ thể sẽ giúp phòng và chữa cúm, Covid-19, biến chứng của do Coronavirus, hen, ho, khó thở, COPD, bệnh tim mạch, đơn giản chỉ với bài tập khí công, bài thở, tự vỗ, day, rung cơ học.
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