Kelatox Suppositories
"Removes and Improves"
Heavy Metal Detox System
You
Can Prevent Hardening of the Arteries and
Rejuvenate Your Cardiovascular System
Excerpts from
Chapter One of
"The Chelation Answer" by Dr Morton Walker (1982)
"What
if you heard that your case of severe hardening of the arteries
need not lead to open heart surgery or heart attack?
Suppose
someone told you that your father's leg, scheduled to be amputated
because of diabetic gangrene, did not have to come off?
How
would you react to learning that your senile old mother, vegetating
in a nursing home, could be restored to the active, alert, productive
person she once was?
What
will you do if macular degeneration has taken your daughter's eyesight,
and you've just found out that her blindness can be reversed by
a series of intravenous injections?
Suppose
a stroke recently left your spouse paralyzed and speechless; would
you be interested in a safe, nonsurgical, medical procedure to remove
I these tragic symptoms?
Having
such startling revelations laid before you, more than likely you'll
become amazed and perplexed, right? Maybe even be dubious! You might
wonder why you hadn't heard of such dramatic treatment before.
Will
it be a surprise if your local doctor says he isn't at all acquainted
with this procedure called chelation therapy and possibly would
be reluctant to prescribe it even if he knew something about it?
Well,
if you plan to read further, you'll be exposing yourself to an incredible
medical education. The knowledge will probably have you responding
positively and quickly to prevent further deterioration of your
own or someone else's cardiovascular system. ...
Chelation
therapy ... should be made available to anyone who is suffering
from an impairment of the flow of blood to the head, limbs, heart,
and other internal organs ...
The
story of chelation therapy will be presented here as I know it from
statements made by the courageous physicians who provide the treatment
...Also submitted will be case histories of people I have interviewed.
They will tell of their experiences with recovery from life-threatening
conditions by taking a series of intravenous infusions of the EDTA
chemical.
As
a person possibly at risk of being one of the millions suffering
each year from heart attack, stroke, high blood pressure, and other
degenerations of the circulatory system, you must have this information
to make important health care choices. Is the chelation alternative
to surgery, drugs, and other forms of establishment medicine right
for you? All of us must eventually come to such a decision.
George
W. Frankel, M.D., of Long Beach, California, was one of those forced
to make his own life-saving decision. While golfing under the Southern
California sun in December 1971, Dr. Frankel got the shock of his
life when he was suddenly seized by severe chest pains. His golfing
partners helped him return to the clubhouse, and after resting,
Dr. Frankel visited his cardiologist.
Following
electrocardiograms and treadmill tests, a coronary angiogram (a
heart catheterization) was performed at the hospital. Dr. Frankel
was told by the cardiologist and a chest surgeon that this angiogram
revealed obstructing plaques (tumorlike bumps) in the left main
coronary artery. They recommended a triple coronary artery bypass.
This operation must be done as soon as possible, the specialists
said, in order to avoid heart attack and possibly sudden death....
Physicians
experience fear of life-threatening procedures, as does anybody
else, and this ear, nose, and throat specialist was no exception.
Dr. Frankel, chief of otolaryngology at two hospitals, was not anxious
to face major surgery on his heart, but there seemed to be no alternative.
His doctors offered nothing else. Consequently, he agreed to the
triple bypass.
While
waiting for his surgery to be scheduled, Dr. Frankel discussed his
condition with many of his colleagues and friends. One friend detailed
the case history of someone with a similar condition. The individual
underwent a treatment, previously unknown to Dr. Frankel, called
chelation, a medical therapy that was thought to reduce the amount
of calcium in the obstructing plaques of the coronary arteries and
in other areas of the vascular system.
Dr.
Frankel, eager to try any reasonable, safe, and painless avenue
that might avoid the very real potential of death offered by open
heart surgery, began to search for clinical literature on the subject
at the Los Angeles County Medical Association Library. He was amazed
to find numerous medical journal articles on chelation therapy.
After careful study of these many references in the Journal of the
American Medical Association, The Lancet, Angiology, Southern Medical
Journal, American Journal of Cardiology, and dozens of other medical
journals from around the world, the patient ventured on what he
hoped would be a journey to save his life. He entered an Alabama
hospital that was run by H. Ray Evers, M.D.
"l
saw people come in with diabetic ulcerative lesions and gangrenous
lesions that cleared up in a matter of ten or twelve days, and I
could not believe my eyes," said Dr. Frankel. "I saw one
patient who was admitted after being told elsewhere that his leg
would have to be amputated because of gangrene, and daily, after
chelation therapy, I watched with my mouth agape as the leg came
back to normal. I acted as a sort of assistant to Dr. Evers by making
rounds with him every day. He was a very determined man who worked
twenty of every twenty-four hours".
There
was something else that Dr. Frankel could hardly believe. Prior
to treatment, anginal pains had seared his chest when he walked
only ten or twelve steps. After he received only ten chelations,
the pain disappeared entirely. He decided to put off having the
heart surgery indefinitely. In the event he needed an operation
later, the patient knew, his chance of survival was considerably
enhanced by the remarkable clinical improvement he had experienced
from his chelation treatments.
The
physician-patient has since given himself over 100 more chelations
at home, with the help of a nurse-anesthetist for the intravenous
injections—a total of at least 128 treatments to date. "And
I want to tell you that I have not had an angina since early January
1972," says Dr. Frankel. "I carry a full work load. I
perform approximately ten to fifteen surgeries every week, and these
are microsurgeries of the ear. I carry a full practice. I play golf.
I swim twenty laps in my pool every day, and I cannot speak with
any but the greatest praise for the men who are attempting to make
chelation an accepted form of therapy"....
On
March 31, 1974, Lester Tavel, M.D., D.O., Ph.D., now of Bradenton,
Florida, suffered a heart attack and immediately developed a paroxysmal
atrial tachycardia (speeding heart with little pumping power) with
a pulse rate running at 200 beats per minute. It took three electric
shocks of 25, 50, and 100 volts to cardiovert (electrically countershock)
the victim back to a near-normal heart rhythm. An X-ray examination
of his chest showed the patient's heart was dangerously enlarged,
filling practically the whole chest cavity. He was brought to a
hospital's intensive care unit, where he remained. Because of the
risks that went with open heart surgery, such an operation was not
even considered by the patient, his attending physicians, or his
family.
As
soon as Dr. Tavel could be moved safely, his wife flew with him
to the office of his friend Harold W. Harper, M.D., a chelating
physician in Los Angeles. Because her husband was unable to take
more than three or four steps without experiencing dreadful shortness
of breath, Mrs. Tavel pushed him in a wheelchair. The patient's
ankles were badly swollen as a result of his failing hear ....
At
the end of three weeks, during which he received fifteen chelation
treatments, the patient's heart began to return to its usual size.
In another week, upon X-ray examination, it again appeared completely
normal.
"You
know, Los Angeles has a lot of streets with forty-five degree inclines,"
Dr. Tavel later said. "Well, by the time I received thirty
chelations in about six weeks, I was walking up the hill in front
of my hotel. I walked up steps, too. My resting pulse rate was 84
beats per minute, and by the time I reached the top of the hill,
it increased to 110. Then it dropped back to 84 upon my resting
within a minute afterwards."
"What
Lester didn't know at the time," said Dr. Harper, "is
that his electrocardiogram [EKG] and enzyme studies indicated he
had suffered an acute myocardial infarction [a local area of death]
in the heart muscle. I began to administer chelation therapy as
soon as my emergency medical workup for him was complete. After
about the first five treatment days his shortness of breath began
to go away. The ankle swelling was down. He was able to eat again.
His color changed from pasty white to something near his natural
ruddiness.
"I
took a second X-ray series after the patient had received about
ten chelations. His heart size showed close to normal, but not quite.
Lester's enzyme studies and blood sugar had returned to normal,
though, and his EKG returned to normal within a two-week period..
"Follow-through
at the end of thirty treatment days showed my patient's heart size
comparable to the way it had been when I saw him the previous November.
Comparison X-ray films attested to the heart sizes as being exactly
the same. There were no fluid levels in his lungs—no congestion—no
edema. Lester was able to go home at the end of six weeks,"
concluded Dr. Harper....
"I
checked myself quite cautiously," Dr. Tavel added. "I
ran a heck of a lot of BUNs [blood-urea-nitrogen tests for toxicity]
and creatinines [urine tests] after I got home, and I didn't have
any problems with those or any other toxic symptoms.
"I
did notice many things about myself improve—my prior dyspnea
[frequent rapid breathing] was relieved; my fatigue was relieved,
my limbs were warmer," Dr. Tavel said. "I had a regrowth
of hair on my legs, and I had an increased sex drive that my wife
enjoyed. I gave myself ten more chelation treatments at home, and
I've been taking six treatments a year since.
"About
thirty days ago I had another chest X-ray that showed my heart size
remaining normal. An independent group of cardiologists then evaluated
my EKGs and rechecked about thirty-five of my laboratory tests,
including the many heart enzyme tests and liver enzyme tests. All
the diagnostic findings were back to normal, as if I never had experienced
a heart attack," the physician said.
At
the time of our interview, Dr. Tavel was engaged in an exceedingly
active medical practice. It involved all the physical stress, emotional
trauma, and long hours usually required in medicine. Nonetheless,
since his heart attack in early 1974, he has vigorously worked sixty
hours a week"...