Prostate Natural Cures - Larry Clapp

Heal PROSTATE Cancer, BPH or Prostatitis, naturally, following the 10 year old, widely successful program in, best selling, "Prostate Health in 90 Days", and subsequent e-Books by Larry Clapp, PhD. The books have a wide circulation in many languages, have guided 1,000s of men to heal naturally, 100s with personal coaching by Dr Clapp. Healing naturally monitored by repeat sonograms, has proved easier than conventional means and far more permanent, actually extending one's natural lifespan.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Prostate Healing Inflamation

This is interesting, however see more natural treatments on http://www.prostate90.com


Why symptoms of prostate inflammation can be misleading Dr Thomas Stuttaford
Your health questions answered
A 39-year-old faithfully married man has e-mailed about his diagnosis of prostatitis. Unfortunately, he doesn’t describe his symptoms in detail, but tells us that he suffers “discomfort”. Presumably this refers to the usual symptoms of prostatitis: low back ache, radiating into his loin, inner thighs, genitalia and the area between his scrotum and anus (the perineum).
The reader didn’t mention it, but the discomfort would also probably have been associated with difficulty and/or frequency when passing urine. Not all symptoms occur in every case. The start of his condition coincided with a stressful job demanding long hours in the office and a three-hour commute, beginning at 5.15am. The sedentary life that resulted from this lifestyle had caused his weight to increase by almost two stone. His self-prescribed treatment — self-prescribed because none of that offered by doctors over the past two years had helped — was to lose 6lb in weight and to increase his intake of broccoli and berries.
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Prostatitis is a term that strictly means the inflammation of the prostate, although this is not always demonstrable, and is picked up either from the girlfriend or the bladder. It is one of the subjects that medical writers approach with trepidation. The subject is so contentious that whatever they write will produce angry correspondence from experts (most of whose opinions will differ), disgruntled patients who are still suffering and alternative practitioners. Unsurprisingly, our reader writes that he has been unable to obtain clear answers to his questions, either in this country or the United States. One American source suggested that the symptoms could follow too much sitting when tense.
Dr Eric Dunlop, my mentor at the Royal London Hospital, has heavily influenced my opinions about prostatitis. He was the man who overcame widespread professional ridicule by battling to gain acceptance of his research that chlamydial infections were important and were the cause of pelvic inflammatory disease. His work and persistence has saved the fertility of countless women.
Another of Dr Dunlop’s causes was to achieve more precision about the diagnosis of prostatitis. He was sceptical about the diagnosis in most of the cases of prostatitis that were presented to him, unless its bacterial origins were obvious. In many of the cases that he saw, he suspected that the prostate was healthy and that the trouble lay elsewhere. Bacterial prostatitis can be acute or chronic. Both types may be difficult to eradicate with antibiotics and often need exceptionally long courses of these.
Another of the Dunlop teachings was that, even if the bacteria was sensitive to a specific antibiotic, it didn’t necessarily follow that it could penetrate prostatic tissue easily. The antibiotic needed to be chosen with care. The organisms involved include chlamydia as well as those that haunt the urinary tract. These include E.coli, proteus and klebsiella. Often the presence of bacteria can be established only by prostatic massage and analysis of the prostatic fluid, or by the analysis of urine taken before and after prostatic massage.
The controversy surrounding prostatitis centres on those patients who have such symptoms as low back ache, pain in the thighs and genital pains, but are without evidence of a bacterial infection. These cases are sometimes diagnosed as prostatodynia, a pseudoclassical term that means no more than a painful prostate.
Two cases that are typical of the many that had been incorrectly diagnosed as non-bacterial prostatitis were those of the machinery manufacturer and the travel courier. Both had had months, if not years, of treatment after some very uncomfortable investigation.
The manufacturer travelled north about once a month to supervise the running of the equipment that his factory had installed. These visits were followed by pain in his lower back, worse after sex, that radiated to his perineum, inner thigh and genitalia. He was convinced that his girlfriend up north had something nasty. Dr Dunlop and I were equally convinced that she hadn’t. An MRI scan of his back showed a disc lesion that was pressing on his spinal cord at a level that would account for his pain. Disc pain is often made worse by sex and by long car drives, hence its association with the journeys north by the manufacturer. Intervention by the orthopaedic surgeons enabled him to continue to visit his friend, and to keep his factory’s machinery working.
The courier developed his “prostatic” symptoms every time he took a party overseas. He too had a clearly demonstratable disc lesion. Once he had been told to leave the carrying of heavy cases to others, he lost his symptoms of “prostatitis”.
It is not surprising that a popular American textbook not only recommends long courses of the appropriate antibiotics for bacterial prostatitis but also muscle relaxants, anti-inflammatory drugs and tranquillisers for those in whom there is little evidence of infection.
Incidentally, the reader is on the right track. His spine will be helped by weight loss, and as a precautionary measure tomatoes, berries and pomegranate juice are excellent for prostate health.

Dr Larry Clapp Comment-It is refreshing to have the Doctor deal with back pain, which often is a cause of prostatitis, because most Doctors will not. Medicine still believes that if a prostatitis patient takes enough antibiotics for long enough, (months-years) he will be healed. We find the opposite, the more antibiotics, the worse the symptoms become and the more tenacious the ptostatitis becomes, because the imune system is severely crippled by the antibiotics. Also the more antibiotics the more candida, which is always a major component of prostatitis. We find that cleansing and rebuilding the immune system has a far better track record of permanently healing the prostate. For more info see: www.prostatitis60daycure.com/

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