Fibromyalgia Natural Cure
Fibromyalgia does not discriminate between race, age, social status, size, education or activity. New breakthroughs are welcome to the many who suffer from the multitude of symptoms.
Quote from Marcus Bloom "Fibromyalgia is not what you have been told it is by the, doctors, medical research scientists, and the pharmaceutical companies and it is absolutely 100% completely curable."
Fibromyalgia is not something that the non-medical community easily understands. Many people will not ever understand because it is beyond their capabilities to do so. Even within the medical community many general practitioners cannot grasp or envision the symptoms that definitively diagnose the disease. It is possible that because of global communications that Fibromyalgia became better known and accurately diagnosed.
For those who suffer from Fibromyalgia their friends, family, co-workers (it they are still able to work), fellow students and even medical providers may not believe the person is actually sick. A proper diagnosis can take takes months depending on the qualifications of the physicians and the facilities they use. I personally have heard too many times that Fibromyalgia is a term “some” doctors use when they cannot come up with another diagnoses. This only shows the ignorance of those that cannot grasp the concept of what they will never be able to understand, especially when they restate what they hear others state. Ironically this is much like those that believe media hype. Always remember if it bleeds it breeds true or not.
Supplements Can be a great benefit. CLICK HERE
I have some theories of my own. My daughter in the picture had been in a terrible auto accident in December 2001, that caused a traumatic brain injury, skull fracture, cracked vertebra in her neck and a multitude of bruised tissue, stretched muscles and strains throughout her body. The picture on the right was approximately 2009. From the day of her accident forward her life was never the same. She had just started doing modeling. One of her most favorite assignments was being one of the “Winston Girls” at area racing circuits. She did not have health insurance when the accident occurred (December of 2001). Because she did not have health insurance she was dismissed prematurely from the Neuro-Center at a large regional hospital. She did not receive the physical therapy, speech therapy and cognitive therapy that she desperately needed. As time went on, her conditions spawned into Fibromyalgia, RSD, Scoliosis, seizures, and a host of musculoskeletal and emotional problems.
There are a couple of root issues. One: needed affordable health care insurance was not available and therefore the health care she needed was not provided because she could not afford it and neither could I or her boyfriend that she lived with. This is why I took the necessary classes through “Centers for Medicare Services” to be certified to assist people through “Obama Care”. I also possess a State of Indiana Health, Life and Accident License, take the necessary Carrier specific training to qualify for Medicare, Advantage Plans, Prescription Drug Plans and Special Needs Plans. Second: An auto accident was the start of what contributed to her debilitating health problems. I was finally able to get her on disability through SSI around 2005-2006. Her boyfriend at the time took care of her finances, settlement from the accident and the SSI payments. When I moved her back to her home town she had $72.00 in her saving account. Around 2008, I was able to get her into Assisted Living and eventually was finally able to get her state based health insurance. This was many delays due to local management personnel who purposely stopped every attempt.
Erica was very pretty and petite, so, the local state agency personnel did not take her disabilities seriously and determined that she should not qualify. Living in a small populated area the personnel statements regarding their opinions and self regulated actions made their way back to me. Two times per year I had to count the manufacture of her jeans, her purses, submit a cost of each because local state authorities incorrectly presumed she had "New" designer clothing. Her clothing came from 2nd hand stores on half price day. Thankfully the staff has been replaced many times and now has competent personnel. To late to have been of assistance to Erica.
Her inability to remember “short term memory” was the initial basis for her disability approval. Although she had many physical conditions that would qualify anyone older full disability status, at the time of her approval the “short term memory testing” similar to that of early dementia was the determination for disability approval. She could remember almost every event or happening prior to the accident, but her recollection of current events was sketchy at best. After the state based health care was in place I asked ARC (Individuals with Disabilities & Association of Retarded Citizens) of NE Indiana to test her. The results of those tests had her at a math level of a 3rd grader. Her oral reading skills was that of an 8th grader but she could not remember what she read. Which is “Short Term Memory”. One person without vehicle insurance running the stop light over a 4-lane highway and into her path, ruined life as she knew it.
Because of her physical conditions: doctors and Pain Specialists prescribed too many medications. To treat her emotional conditions she was referred to a stress/mental health clinic. They too prescribed too many medications. My intervention attempts were met with: “do you have a medical degree” to which I answered no, then I would receive another response: “well then you have no qualifications to question our diagnoses or treatments”. Many of the medications created side effects that other medications were being prescribed for. Erica's sisters do have medical degrees now. The last incident I want to add is that the Doctor in charge of the Pain Center I mentioned has since been cited, fined and license revoked, but not before my daughter’s death due to an accidental over dose. Erica had 2 full sheets of listed medications from the pharmacy she used.
I still see a continuous loop of symptom creation to treat symptoms. I stand by one of my tag lines: “it is profitable to treat symptoms and not cure disease”, and as a result too many people are caught in the continuous loop of symptom creation to treat symptoms. That is how “Big Pharma” makes their money.
Why is Fibromyalgia now a disease/condition we hear about when most of society had not heard of it before? Well let’s look at one of the most famed physicians of the 2000’s explanation of the condition.
Mehmet Oz, MD, Cardiology: With Fibromyalgia in the news more and more, it can seem like it's some sort of modern affliction, but doctors have been describing what we know now as Fibromyalgia since at least the early 1800s. In 1824, a Scottish physician described tender points, the hallmark of the condition. In 1904, Dr. William Gowers coined the phrase "fibrositis". The name implies that it's a disorder relation to inflammation, and we now know that's not correct. It wasn't until the late 1970s and 1980s that medical researchers began to identify Fibromyalgia and focus on diagnosing and treating it.
From Web MD: Fibromyalgia is the most common musculoskeletal condition after osteoarthritis. Still, it is often misdiagnosed and misunderstood. Its characteristics include widespread muscle and joint pain and fatigue, as well as other symptoms. Fibromyalgia can lead to depression and social isolation.
This overview of Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) covers symptoms, diagnosis, and both standard and alternative treatments.
Recommended - Related to Fibromyalgia can be more noticeable at night Do you toss and turn at night because of Fibromyalgia pain or discomfort? "People with Fibromyalgia tend to have very disturbed sleep," says Doris Cope, MD, director of Pain Management at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. "Even if they sleep 10 hours a night, they still feel fatigued, don't feel rested." Research shows that with Fibromyalgia, there is an automatic arousal in the brain during sleep. Frequent disruptions prevent the important restorative processes from occurring. Growth...
What Is Fibromyalgia Syndrome? A syndrome is a set of symptoms. When they exist together, they imply the presence of a specific disease or a greater chance of developing the disease. With Fibromyalgia syndrome, the following symptoms commonly occur together:
Anxiety or depression
Decreased pain threshold or tender points
Incapacitating fatigue
Widespread pain
Are Women More Likely to Get Fibromyalgia Than Men? More than 12 million Americans have Fibromyalgia. Most of them are women ranging in age from 25 to 60. Women are 10 times more likely to get this disease than men.
What Are Fibromyalgia Symptoms? Fibromyalgia causes you to ache all over. You may have symptoms of crippling fatigue -- even on arising. Specific tender points on the body may be painful to touch. You may experience swelling, disturbances in deep-level or restful sleep, and mood disturbances or depression.
Your muscles may feel like they have been overworked or pulled. They'll feel that way even without exercise or another cause. Sometimes, your muscles twitch, burn, or have deep stabbing pain.
Some patients with Fibromyalgia have pain and achiness around the joints in the neck, shoulder, back, and hips. This makes it difficult for them to sleep or exercise. Other Fibromyalgia symptoms include:
Abdominal pain
Chronic headaches
Dryness in mouth, nose, and eyes
Hypersensitivity to cold and/or heat
Inability to concentrate (called "fibro fog")
Incontinence
Irritable bowel syndrome
Numbness or tingling in the fingers and feet
Stiffness
Fibromyalgia can cause signs and feelings similar to osteoarthritis, bursitis, and tendonitis. Some experts include it in this group of arthritis and related disorders. However, while the pain of bursitis or tendinitis is localized to a specific area, pain and stiffness with Fibromyalgia are widespread.
What Tests Are Used to Diagnose Fibromyalgia? To make an accurate diagnosis, your doctor will rely on a comprehensive physical exam and your medical history. There is a blood test to help diagnose Fibromyalgia. The test -- called FM/a -- identifies markers produced by immune system blood cells in people with Fibromyalgia. Ask your doctor if the FM/a test is right for you.
To rule out more serious illnesses, your doctor may run some specific blood tests. For example, your doctor may ask for a complete blood count (CBC). The doctor may also ask for tests for chemicals, such as glucose, that can create problems similar to problems caused by Fibromyalgia. A thyroid test may also be done. An under-active thyroid (hypothyroidism) can cause problems similar to Fibromyalgia. That includes fatigue, muscle aches, weakness, and depression.
As with many diseases: The Cure starts with diet change, Natural non-GMO foods, no sugar, no breads, No red meat, and no processed foods. What Americans have at their local stores does not make the choices good for you. Research and read labels on everything you buy.
Quote from Marcus Bloom "Fibromyalgia is not what you have been told it is by the, doctors, medical research scientists, and the pharmaceutical companies and it is absolutely 100% completely curable."
Fibromyalgia is not something that the non-medical community easily understands. Many people will not ever understand because it is beyond their capabilities to do so. Even within the medical community many general practitioners cannot grasp or envision the symptoms that definitively diagnose the disease. It is possible that because of global communications that Fibromyalgia became better known and accurately diagnosed.
For those who suffer from Fibromyalgia their friends, family, co-workers (it they are still able to work), fellow students and even medical providers may not believe the person is actually sick. A proper diagnosis can take takes months depending on the qualifications of the physicians and the facilities they use. I personally have heard too many times that Fibromyalgia is a term “some” doctors use when they cannot come up with another diagnoses. This only shows the ignorance of those that cannot grasp the concept of what they will never be able to understand, especially when they restate what they hear others state. Ironically this is much like those that believe media hype. Always remember if it bleeds it breeds true or not.
Supplements Can be a great benefit. CLICK HERE
I have some theories of my own. My daughter in the picture had been in a terrible auto accident in December 2001, that caused a traumatic brain injury, skull fracture, cracked vertebra in her neck and a multitude of bruised tissue, stretched muscles and strains throughout her body. The picture on the right was approximately 2009. From the day of her accident forward her life was never the same. She had just started doing modeling. One of her most favorite assignments was being one of the “Winston Girls” at area racing circuits. She did not have health insurance when the accident occurred (December of 2001). Because she did not have health insurance she was dismissed prematurely from the Neuro-Center at a large regional hospital. She did not receive the physical therapy, speech therapy and cognitive therapy that she desperately needed. As time went on, her conditions spawned into Fibromyalgia, RSD, Scoliosis, seizures, and a host of musculoskeletal and emotional problems.
There are a couple of root issues. One: needed affordable health care insurance was not available and therefore the health care she needed was not provided because she could not afford it and neither could I or her boyfriend that she lived with. This is why I took the necessary classes through “Centers for Medicare Services” to be certified to assist people through “Obama Care”. I also possess a State of Indiana Health, Life and Accident License, take the necessary Carrier specific training to qualify for Medicare, Advantage Plans, Prescription Drug Plans and Special Needs Plans. Second: An auto accident was the start of what contributed to her debilitating health problems. I was finally able to get her on disability through SSI around 2005-2006. Her boyfriend at the time took care of her finances, settlement from the accident and the SSI payments. When I moved her back to her home town she had $72.00 in her saving account. Around 2008, I was able to get her into Assisted Living and eventually was finally able to get her state based health insurance. This was many delays due to local management personnel who purposely stopped every attempt.
Erica was very pretty and petite, so, the local state agency personnel did not take her disabilities seriously and determined that she should not qualify. Living in a small populated area the personnel statements regarding their opinions and self regulated actions made their way back to me. Two times per year I had to count the manufacture of her jeans, her purses, submit a cost of each because local state authorities incorrectly presumed she had "New" designer clothing. Her clothing came from 2nd hand stores on half price day. Thankfully the staff has been replaced many times and now has competent personnel. To late to have been of assistance to Erica.
Her inability to remember “short term memory” was the initial basis for her disability approval. Although she had many physical conditions that would qualify anyone older full disability status, at the time of her approval the “short term memory testing” similar to that of early dementia was the determination for disability approval. She could remember almost every event or happening prior to the accident, but her recollection of current events was sketchy at best. After the state based health care was in place I asked ARC (Individuals with Disabilities & Association of Retarded Citizens) of NE Indiana to test her. The results of those tests had her at a math level of a 3rd grader. Her oral reading skills was that of an 8th grader but she could not remember what she read. Which is “Short Term Memory”. One person without vehicle insurance running the stop light over a 4-lane highway and into her path, ruined life as she knew it.
Because of her physical conditions: doctors and Pain Specialists prescribed too many medications. To treat her emotional conditions she was referred to a stress/mental health clinic. They too prescribed too many medications. My intervention attempts were met with: “do you have a medical degree” to which I answered no, then I would receive another response: “well then you have no qualifications to question our diagnoses or treatments”. Many of the medications created side effects that other medications were being prescribed for. Erica's sisters do have medical degrees now. The last incident I want to add is that the Doctor in charge of the Pain Center I mentioned has since been cited, fined and license revoked, but not before my daughter’s death due to an accidental over dose. Erica had 2 full sheets of listed medications from the pharmacy she used.
I still see a continuous loop of symptom creation to treat symptoms. I stand by one of my tag lines: “it is profitable to treat symptoms and not cure disease”, and as a result too many people are caught in the continuous loop of symptom creation to treat symptoms. That is how “Big Pharma” makes their money.
Why is Fibromyalgia now a disease/condition we hear about when most of society had not heard of it before? Well let’s look at one of the most famed physicians of the 2000’s explanation of the condition.
Mehmet Oz, MD, Cardiology: With Fibromyalgia in the news more and more, it can seem like it's some sort of modern affliction, but doctors have been describing what we know now as Fibromyalgia since at least the early 1800s. In 1824, a Scottish physician described tender points, the hallmark of the condition. In 1904, Dr. William Gowers coined the phrase "fibrositis". The name implies that it's a disorder relation to inflammation, and we now know that's not correct. It wasn't until the late 1970s and 1980s that medical researchers began to identify Fibromyalgia and focus on diagnosing and treating it.
From Web MD: Fibromyalgia is the most common musculoskeletal condition after osteoarthritis. Still, it is often misdiagnosed and misunderstood. Its characteristics include widespread muscle and joint pain and fatigue, as well as other symptoms. Fibromyalgia can lead to depression and social isolation.
This overview of Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) covers symptoms, diagnosis, and both standard and alternative treatments.
Recommended - Related to Fibromyalgia can be more noticeable at night Do you toss and turn at night because of Fibromyalgia pain or discomfort? "People with Fibromyalgia tend to have very disturbed sleep," says Doris Cope, MD, director of Pain Management at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. "Even if they sleep 10 hours a night, they still feel fatigued, don't feel rested." Research shows that with Fibromyalgia, there is an automatic arousal in the brain during sleep. Frequent disruptions prevent the important restorative processes from occurring. Growth...
What Is Fibromyalgia Syndrome? A syndrome is a set of symptoms. When they exist together, they imply the presence of a specific disease or a greater chance of developing the disease. With Fibromyalgia syndrome, the following symptoms commonly occur together:
Anxiety or depression
Decreased pain threshold or tender points
Incapacitating fatigue
Widespread pain
Are Women More Likely to Get Fibromyalgia Than Men? More than 12 million Americans have Fibromyalgia. Most of them are women ranging in age from 25 to 60. Women are 10 times more likely to get this disease than men.
What Are Fibromyalgia Symptoms? Fibromyalgia causes you to ache all over. You may have symptoms of crippling fatigue -- even on arising. Specific tender points on the body may be painful to touch. You may experience swelling, disturbances in deep-level or restful sleep, and mood disturbances or depression.
Your muscles may feel like they have been overworked or pulled. They'll feel that way even without exercise or another cause. Sometimes, your muscles twitch, burn, or have deep stabbing pain.
Some patients with Fibromyalgia have pain and achiness around the joints in the neck, shoulder, back, and hips. This makes it difficult for them to sleep or exercise. Other Fibromyalgia symptoms include:
Abdominal pain
Chronic headaches
Dryness in mouth, nose, and eyes
Hypersensitivity to cold and/or heat
Inability to concentrate (called "fibro fog")
Incontinence
Irritable bowel syndrome
Numbness or tingling in the fingers and feet
Stiffness
Fibromyalgia can cause signs and feelings similar to osteoarthritis, bursitis, and tendonitis. Some experts include it in this group of arthritis and related disorders. However, while the pain of bursitis or tendinitis is localized to a specific area, pain and stiffness with Fibromyalgia are widespread.
What Tests Are Used to Diagnose Fibromyalgia? To make an accurate diagnosis, your doctor will rely on a comprehensive physical exam and your medical history. There is a blood test to help diagnose Fibromyalgia. The test -- called FM/a -- identifies markers produced by immune system blood cells in people with Fibromyalgia. Ask your doctor if the FM/a test is right for you.
To rule out more serious illnesses, your doctor may run some specific blood tests. For example, your doctor may ask for a complete blood count (CBC). The doctor may also ask for tests for chemicals, such as glucose, that can create problems similar to problems caused by Fibromyalgia. A thyroid test may also be done. An under-active thyroid (hypothyroidism) can cause problems similar to Fibromyalgia. That includes fatigue, muscle aches, weakness, and depression.
As with many diseases: The Cure starts with diet change, Natural non-GMO foods, no sugar, no breads, No red meat, and no processed foods. What Americans have at their local stores does not make the choices good for you. Research and read labels on everything you buy.