Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Articles Alternative Health Natural Discovery offers hope for rheumatoid arthritis

Natural Discovery offers hope for rheumatoid arthritis

PDF Print E-mail
(0 votes, average 0 out of 5)
Written by Rapid City Journal   

rheumatoid arthritisNATURAL HEALTH: Discovery offers hope for rheumatoid arthritis

"I have my life back!" announces Cindy C. in "Our Road Back" compiled by Dr. Hanna Rhee.

Cindy lives pain-free after using a simple treatment for her once-debilitating rheumatoid arthritis.

How bad was her pain?

Let us follow her testimonial: "The chronic pain was almost unbearable at the time. Here, I was only 50 years old and felt like I was 90! I could not walk the stairs easily, and getting in and out of the car was excruciating. I could not squeeze hard enough to use a manual can opener, turn on lamps and turn the car key in the ignition, because it was so painful."

After 2-1/2 years of treatment with a method provided by her physician, Dr. John S. Sinnott, Cindy writes: "I can safely say that I am now about 95 to 97 percent back to where I was before I was diagnosed with RA! I know there was some initial joint damage done that is irreversible, but every month, I have more mobility and feel like a ‘normal person' again!"

One testimonial cannot alone bring hope to the millions of people afflicted with rheumatoid arthritis, so what if I disclose that the method used by Sinnott - and other medical or osteopathy doctors - is scientifically proven, addresses the cause of rheumatoid arthritis vs. the symptoms and is described in medical journals? Will you have more than a ray of hope?

In 1939, Dr. Thomas McPherson Brown published in Science a study in which he successfully isolated mycoplasma bacterium from the joints of rheumatic patients. Other researchers at that time tried to identify the same bacteria or other pathogens, but with no success. The reason is that mycoplasma is a bacterium that can irreversibly bind to tissues in the body, and it is this binding that makes it difficult to culture. It took Brown, a physician and researcher, more than three months and hundreds of experiments to spot it.

Continue reading this article

 

Add comment

Anyone can post comments however comments will be moderated if you are not a registered member.


Security code
Refresh

Login