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  #400   ^
Old Sat, Oct-21-06, 08:22
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Zer Zer is offline
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Posts: 11,255
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 508.7/413.3/199 Female 5'10" (top weight 508???)
BF:223chol; 120/80bp
Progress: 31%
Location: SoCal, USA
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In a couple of days, I'll see the HMO MD who will advise me to avoid salt (even though my bloodwork shows a fine sodium level) and to avoid fat (even though I've told him I'm aiming at Atkins) and to be concerned about my bp (even though it's the HMO's cuffs on my batwings that gives a false reading and causes me massive bruising and ungodly pain - probably a sign of Dercum's) as he thinks maybe I need some bp meds. Me with home bp scores mostly under 120/80 taken in a calm atmosphere on a device that reads my bp from a digit. No bruising. Sigh.

And he's one of the better MDs I've seen at this HMO - and in life. Where can I find a metabolic medicine practitioner? Are all of an HMO's MDs likely to be focused on medicating a symptom as if the symptom (obesity, pain in my hip/leg) is the problem? Allopathic medicine offers drugs to stifle symptoms. I want more.
Quote:
Metabolism is the never ending biochemical process by which life carries out its functions. Doctors who deal with disease by means or attempting to restore normal metabolism are said to practice metabolic medicine. At first glance one would think this should be the only type of medicine practiced, but in fact main stream medicine uses man-made drugs to try to alter the natural process of metabolism and induce an artificial state in which undesirable symptoms are not allowed to be expressed. This is called allopathic medicine. http://www.medical-library.net/spec...c_medicine.html
Or does a wise person become adept at righting what's wrong in one's own metabolism, by educating one's self and seeking to become more than a patient to a befuddled MD whose training has gaps and holes and whose interest simply cannot be as strong as that of a patient who is determined to avoid being drugged into toxic dependence on allopathic doctors? Can I become a healthy person on my own? Dare I defy my HMO's MD's medical knowledge and nutritional ignorance? Dare I ignore the blatant signals that are sent by mystified MD's who see my labwork is puzzlingly good in spite of my obvious obesity? How can this be? Well, just hand out the advice about eating low-fat and tell a fat patient to watch the salt - nevermind that the labwork says sodium is in safe range. Sigh... what can a person do?
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