FruitsAndVegetables

From Polypharmacy to the Natural Way

When last we left our subject, he had a stent inserted while having a heart attack and was sent to cardiac rehab. He was on six medications (the very definition of polypharmacy) for congestive heart failure, A-fib, and hypertension. He decided that he wanted to get off all the medications he could because they contributed to him feeling weak, with no energy and a foggy brain.

The wellness center he went to had a strong nutrition-education program so while he was exercising, he was learning how to eat. The diet? As much as her wanted of raw, baked, and steamed vegetables; limited amounts of grains, beans, seeds, nuts; no meat. No SOS—that stands for sugar, oil, or salt.

The results? In five months, he lost ten pounds, but that wasn’t a goal. He reduced medications from six to two and will stop another when he’s a year out from his stent. He has normal sinus rhythm, normal blood pressure, and no signs of congestive heart failure. He states that his diet compliance isn’t perfect, but since following the nutrition approach, he has no brain fog, lifts weights, and runs on a treadmill. He wakes up every day with energy.

If you want to really get off medication for cholesterol, BP, and other associated conditions, that’s the natural way. It must be done under supervision and with your physician’s guidance. This man was fortunate that he could afford to participate in the in-patient program where he continued to learn, but many people have done it without an in-patient experience. This case report says it can be done and outlines the way. The effort is up to you.

The Kids’ Top Health Issues webinar on January 26 still has openings. I’ll cover the question I get asked most often in detail: constipation. Reserve your spot today.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Reference: BMJ Case Rep 2018;11:e227059.2. Arch