Benefits of Chelation Therapy
By 1948 the U.S. Navy had begun using EDTA to
safely and successfully treat lead poisoning. At the same time, EDTA
was being used to remove calcium from pipes and boilers. Director of Research at Providence Hospital in
Detroit, Michigan, Norman Clarke, hypothesized that because calcium plaque
is a prominent component in atherosclerosis, EDTA would be an
effective treatment for heart conditions. His experiments with EDTA
chelation treatments for heart patients retified his theory.
Patients with angina
reported dramatic relief from chest pain. Curing was also reported
by patients with gangrene. For many patients, memory, sight, hearing,
and sense of smell improved, and most reported increased vigor.
EDTA chelation therapy has since proven to be
safe and effective in the treatment and prevention of sicknesses linked to atherosclerosis
such as coronary
artery disease (heart attacks), cerebral vascular
disease (stroke), peripheral vascular disease (leading to pain in
the legs and ultimately gangrene and amputation), as well as
arterial blockages from atherosclerosis elsewhere in the body.
According to current drug safety standards, aspirin is nearly three
and a half times more toxic than EDTA.
Warren Levin, M.D., of New York City, once
administered chelation therapy to a psychoanalyst on the staff of a
major New York medical center. He was in his fifties and
looked remarkably healthy, except that he was in a wheelchair. He
had awakened that morning to discover his lower leg was cold, numb,
mottled, and blue, with two black-looking toes. He rushed to his
hospital and consulted the chief of vascular surgery, who
recommended an immediate amputation above the knee.
He asked several physicians about chelation
therapy, but their response was, ''You can try it if you want, but it's a waste of
time.''
Through his own tenacity, the
psychoanalyst came to Dr. Warren. They started emergency chelation
and after approximately nine treatments-one taken every other day-he
was pain free and picking up. After approximately seventeen
chelation treatments, he was walking on the leg again. He never had
an amputation, and he lived the rest of his life without any further
complications.
A medical researcher Morton Walker,
D.P.M, says, that those poeple who lived in fear of potentially
impendent death, blindness, amputation, paralysis, and so on, are presently free of all signs of their former health problems. About two hundred individuals who were victims of
hardening of the arteries are now vigorous, productive,
youthful looking, full of energy, and enthusiastically approve chelation therapy as the cause of their prolonged good
health.
Medical journalists Harold and Arline Brecher,
who have written about chelation therapy, note that
physicians who use it not only advise it for their patients, but use
it for themselves, unlike many of their orthodox colleagues. "
They
report, they have yet to find a physician who offers chelation to his patients
who does not chelate himself, his family, and friends. One study documented significant improvement in
99 percent of patients suffering from peripheral vascular disease
and blocked arteries of the legs. Twenty-four percent of those
patients with cerebrovascular and other degenerative cerebral
diseases also showed marked improvement, with an additional 30
percent having good improvement. Overall, nearly 90 percent of all
treated patients had marked or good improvement as a result of
chelation therapy.
A double-blind study in 1989 revealed that every
patient suffering from peripheral vascular disease who was treated
with chelation therapy showed a statistically significant
improvement after only ten treatments. In another study published in
1989, 88 percent of the patients receiving chelation therapy showed
improvement in cerebrovascular blood flow.
Other documented benefits of chelation therapy
include:
-
Normalization of 50 percent of cardiac arrhythmias
-
Improved cerebrovascular arterial
occlusion
-
Improved memory and concentration when diminished circulation
is a cause
-
Improved vision (with vascular-related vision difficulties)
-
Significantly reduced cancer mortality rates (as a preventive)
-
Protection against iron poisoning and iron storage disease
-
Detoxification
of snake and spider venoms
Elmer Cranton, M.D., of Troutdale,
Virginia, states that chelation therapy has a strong effect on overall health.
In his clinical experience there is no doubt that intravenous
EDTA chelation therapy to some extent slows the aging process. Allergies and chemical sensitivities also
seem to improve somewhat due to a better functioning of the immune
system. All types of arthritis and muscle and joint aches and pains
seem to be more easily controlled after chelation, although it is
not a cure. In most cases, the progression of Alzheimer's disease
will be slowed, and in some cases the improvement is quite
remarkable and the disease does not seem to progress. Macular
degeneration, a major cause of visual loss in the elderly, is often
improved and almost always slowed in its progression by
chelation therapy.
Chelation Therapy Versus Bypass Surgery and Angioplasty
Cardiovascular
disease became the number one killer in the United States, when
about 1 million Americans died of it in 1988. Each
year nearly three hundred thousand bypass surgeries and two
hundred-fifty thousand angioplasties are performed in the United
States. Moreover, nearly twenty thousand deaths occur each year
as a result of these procedures.
In 1992, Nortin Hadler, M.D., Professor of
Medicine at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine,
wrote that none of the two hundred-fifty thousand balloon
angioplasties performed the previous year could be justified, and
that only 3 to 5 percent of the three hundred thousand coronary
artery bypass surgeries done the same year were actually indicated.
Yet a cost comparison study prepared for the Great Lakes Association
of Clinical Medicine in 1993 estimated that $10 billion was spent in
the United States in 1991 on bypass
surgery alone.
At a symposium of the American Heart Association, Henry McIntosh,
M.D., stated that bypass surgery should be limited to patients with
crippling angina who do not respond to more conservative treatment.
Chelation therapy offers a viable alternative.
In a 1988 study of 2,870 cases, Efrain Olszewer, M.D., and James
Carter, M.D., head of nutrition at the Department of Applied Health
Science, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine at Tulane
University, documented that EDTA chelation therapy brought about
significant improvement in 93.9 percent of patients suffering from
ischemic heart disease (coronary artery blockage).
Elmer Cranton, M.D., of Troutdale, Virginia,
estimates chelation therapy can help avoid bypass surgery in 85
percent of cases. He points out that during all the time that
chelation therapy has been administered according to established
protocol, not one serious side effect has been reported.