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RE: Animal stress vs human stress - cortisone and radiation
Howard,
I, also, heard about x-ray exposures to treat bursitis. However, even you
would have to admit the current treatment regimes work very well, are
cheaper, and easier for the patient to manage. Of course, I have heard that
magnets and bee honey work also.
All medical conditions cannot be fixed by irradiation.
-- John
John Jacobus, MS
Certified Health Physicist
3050 Traymore Lane
Bowie, MD 20715-2024
E-mail: jenday1@email.msn.com (H)
-----Original Message-----
From: hflong@postoffice.pacbell.net [mailto:hflong@postoffice.pacbell.net]
Sent: Friday, May 10, 2002 11:56 PM
To: Paul lavely
Cc: RuthWeiner@AOL.COM; radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu; sandyfl@EARTHLINK.NET;
Rod Warren; Deborah Loeser
Subject: Re: Animal stress vs human stress - cortisone and radiation
Bursitis relief from cortisone was enabled by Hans Selye who subjected rats
to unpredictable shocks and tracing the source of their calcium coating.
Torture.
Every day I see patients greatly relieved because of that animal sacrifice.
Bursitis was relieved by my preceptor 53 years ago, with X ray to the
shoulder.
I was puzzled. The patient was happy. Radiation fears in the Bomb Era
stopped that treatment, as animal activists would stop animal
experimentation.
. . .
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