WESAK 2008 - New Age Festival of Spiritual Unity and Blessings
Lectures, Teaching & Meditation On 17th,18th May 2008,9:30 am to 5:30 pm
venue: The auditoriam of the Indian Society of International Law, opposite the supreme Court 9, Bhagwan Dass Road, New Delhi.
Moon Light Meditation
19th May 2008, 6:30pm to 9:30pm Venue:97-A Eastern Avenue, Sainik Farm,New Delhi. For Reg:Poonam Sharma: 919313034752,Snigdha Nanda: 919818291375. More Detail>>
When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
Your heart is your lifeline. So protect it from
toxins to prevent surgical intervention with the new EDTA chelation therapy
The
only solution to heart disease? No, there are alternative therapies and
the latest on the scene is chelation. Practiced by over 1,500 doctors
in the USA, it has perhaps been adopted by only one practitioner in India
so far. Based in Ludhiana, Dr Sukhbindar Singh Sibia, MD, calls it something
much simpler-Artery Clearance Therapy (ACT). Besides chelation, this includes
the use of antioxidants and lifestyle management as well.
Research indicates heart disease to be mankind's No 1 killer. Explains
Dr Sibia: "Stress,
pollution, bad dietary habits, smoking and sedentary lifestyles are the
primary factor for heart disease. Today one out of ten persons suffers
from it."
How did he turn to this unconventional form of medicine? The doctor, trained
in chelation at the John Buckley's Arterial Diseases Clinic at London,
says: "I've always been interested in the non-operative parts of medicine.
For ACT, I was motivated by Dr Elmer M. Cranton's book Bypassing Bypass.
Since ACT removes blockages in the blood vessels, I wanted to bring it
to India."
Writes
Dr Cranton in a website: "Chelation therapy is a new hope for arteriosclerosis
patients (fatty deposits in arteries) and age associated disease." So
what exactly is chelation therapy? Pronounced key lay shun, this is a
chemical process by which a metal or mineral (lead, mercury, copper, iron,
arsenic, aluminum, calcium) is bonded to another substance. It is a natural
process. In this therapy, a small amino acid called ethylene diamine tetra
acetic acid (EDTA) is administered to the patient intravenously. A small
needle is placed in the patient's arm and the fluid containing EDTA is
infused. The EDTA infusion bonds with excess metals and other toxic elements
in the body and throws them out through the urine.
The treatment usually consists of 20 to 50 infusions, but it varies from
person to person. Each infusion takes three to four hours and a patient
normally receives one to five infusions per week. "Over a period of time,
these infusions reduce free radicals that damage the blood vessel's lining,
and remove calcium and other heavy metals," says Dr Sibia. "Thereby, blood
flow is restored and diseased arteries heal." Thus, major problems-heart
attacks, strokes, leg pain,
gangrene, bypass surgery and balloon angioplasty - can be prevented.
Before starting chelation therapy, a complete medical history of the patient
is obtained, the diet analyzed and a special note made of allergies. Blood
and urine are tested. Kidney function is carefully assessed. An ECG and
chest X-ray is ordered.
This treatment does not involve any hospitalization or anesthesia. Sitting
in the physician's clinic, you can nap, watch TV, or chat with other patients
while the fluid containing EDTA flows into the veins. Dr Sibia says: "The
success rate is 90 per cent. Besides, this is a much cheaper process.
Each sitting costs around Rs 1,500, whereas the cost of bypass surgery
could be as high as Rs 2 lakh."
Since lifestyle counts to a large extent, Dr Sibia recommends various
changes. "Smoking should cease completely. When a patient recovers, he
often resumes this habit without realizing the disastrous results. Try
to substitute alcohol with fruit juice or other non-alcoholic drinks,"
he advises. "A balanced
nutrition is also essential." Researches conducted in the USA show
that more than 75 per cent chelation patients improved dramatically. In
another study, more than 90 per cent patients receiving 35 or more chelation
treatments benefited when they corrected diet, exercise and smoking habits.
Chelation is relatively nontoxic and risk-free, especially when compared
with other treatments. "The risk of serious side effects, when properly
administered, is less than 1 in 10,000 patients," writes Dr Cranton. However,
some patients may experience mild nausea, dizziness or headache but these
minor symptoms soon disappear.
Some people claim that EDTA damages the kidneys. "The latest research
(consisting of kidney function tests done on 383 consecutive chelation
patients, before and after treatment with EDTA indicates the reverse.
An occasional patient may be sensitive, but physicians closely monitor
kidney function," corrects Dr Cranton.
Citing the advantages of chelation, Dr Sibia says: "Chelation patients
resume their normal activities sooner than patients who have undergone
surgical procedure. With proper diet, regular exercise, nutritional supplements
and periodic maintenance chelation treatments, they can usually go many
years without suffering any more problems."
Chelation's earliest application could be traced back to World War II
when the British used another chelating agent, British Anti-Lewesite (BAL),
as poison gas antidote. BAL is still used today.
EDTA was first introduced in the USA in 1948 as a treatment for industrial
workers suffering from lead poisoning. Shortly thereafter, the US Navy
advocated chelation for sailors who had absorbed lead while painting government
ships and docks. And now an oral chelator is also being developed. Many
nutrients such as vitamin C and the amino acids cysteine and aspartic
acid have the ability to weakly chelate metals. They also protect against
free radical damage as antioxidants.
The problem is that only 5 per cent or less of EDTA is absorbed by mouth.
When given intravenously, EDTA is absorbed 100 per cent and can be given
on only 20 to 30 days in one year.
Chelation is not a "cure-all" by itself, warns Dr Cranton. It merely reduces
abnormal free radical activity, allowing normal healing and control mechanisms
to come into play to restore health.