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Origin of Chronic Diseases

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The Origin of Chronic Diseases, also known as the Cause of Chronic Internal Health Conditions, describes functional changes that occur in the tissue at the vascular level of the organ leading to its malfunction and illness. Disruption of blood flow leads to the development of pressure in the tissue, which can cause pain and disease.

Various factors can interfere with blood circulation but all of them start at the smallest blood vessels, namely, capillaries or the capillary net. Microcirculation of blood in the tissues of all internal organs is the same. Hence, chronic internal diseases in different organs of the body have the same root, namely the impairment of microcirculation. It creates focal pressure in the affected tissue. Thus, the physical factor is responsible for the development of chronic internal disease.

A disease is a condition that disrupts the normal functioning of the body, and an internal disease refers to a problem that develops in an organ or area of the body, causing pain and dysfunction, then becoming chronic, thus leading to disability and death. The Origin of Internal Diseases explains a range of pathophysiologic changes in the tissue of the organ or area of the body that leads to the development of pain or disease. A literature search reveals a publication by Dr Simon Allen in the medical journal: Diseases, which states that pain and chronic internal disease have the same root – specifically, a pathological activity of capillaries.[1]

Background[edit]

According to the National Health Interview Survey of the National Center for Health Statistics, a chronic disease is defined as a condition lasting 3 months or longer.[2] Goodman RA, et al described a few meanings of chronic problems. McKenna and Collins determined that chronic conditions are characterized by uncertain etiology, multiple risk factors, and a long latency period.

The World Health Organization demarcated chronic diseases as having long duration and generally slow progression and the Florida Department of Health stated that chronic diseases have a long course of illness which rarely resolves spontaneously, and they are generally not cured by medication or prevented by vaccine.[3] This uncertainty in etiology leads to the absence of effective therapy, therefore a variety of personal, social, and health care resource strategies are used in patients with chronic health problems.[4] Many studies confirm that disturbance of blood circulation in the affected organ leads to ischemia of the tissue, causing its dysfunction and disease.[5][6]

The understanding of the causes of chronic illness would lead to its effective prevention and treatment. Publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals by Dr Simon Allen, which are focused on the etiology and pathophysiology of chronic prostate diseases, explain step by step that the physical factor is responsible for chronic disease due to spontaneous angiogenesis in response to ischemia in the tissue of the affected organ.[7][8][9]

Pathophysiology[edit]

All tissues of the body receive nutrients and warmth in the same way, i.e. through the blood vessels forming the capillary net that covers the whole body.[10] These capillaries are the same in all organs of the body (in the brain, heart, liver, kidneys, prostate, etc.). The development of a pathological activity of capillaries in these organs can lead to their chronic internal disease.

Two functions of small blood vessels, which are not controlled by the central nervous system, are termed by physiologists as constriction of capillaries and spontaneous expansion of capillaries.[11] Dr Allen concludes that these pathophysiological capillary functions are responsible for the development of the pathological activity of capillaries.[12]

First, the constriction of capillaries occurs in response to different triggers, such as infection, cold, excessive elements in blood, pain, stress, and others.

  • It creates the micro-focus of hypothermia in the affected tissue.
  • When the initial trigger and constriction of capillaries repeats again and again, the focus of hypothermia becomes a trigger itself, irritating the affected tissue.

The second function responsible for the development of the pathological activity of capillaries is the spontaneous expansion of a capillary net.

  • It occurs in order to improve blood circulation in this affected tissue.
  • The nervous system does not regulate the spontaneous expansion of capillaries, so the expansion can continue and continue.

The expanded capillaries form extra tissue that creates pressure in this area. Gradually, this pressure inside the organ, i.e. a physical factor, leads to its malfunction. The conclusion is that the pressure resulting from spontaneous angiogenesis in response to focal hypothermia is responsible for the origin and development of chronic internal disease.[1]

Thermobalancing treatment[edit]

The findings of an underlying cause of chronic internal conditions have led to the development of a therapy that can stabilise the temperature in the affected organ locally, and thus treat the reason for the problem, not just the symptoms. It is called Thermobalancing therapy. The wearable therapeutic Dr Allen’s Device has been designed as a non-invasive treatment implement of this therapy.

An article published in the International Journal of Quality Innovation, titled Thermobalancing therapy and Dr. Allen's Device for the first time employs body energy to treat chronic prostatic diseases effectively, explores that a stable normal body temperature in the affected organ facilitates blood flow in the tissue, helping to alleviate the problem.[13]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Allen S 2017 The Vascular Factor Plays the Main Role in the Cause of Pain in Men with Chronic Prostatitis and Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome: The Results of Clinical Trial on Thermobalancing Therapy. Diseases, 5(4), 25; doi:10.3390/diseases5040025
  2. MedicineNet 2016 Definition of Chronic Disease [updated 5/13/2016; cited 2016 5/30/2016]. Available from: http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=33490
  3. Goodman RA, Posner SF et al 2013 Defining and Measuring Chronic Conditions: Imperatives for Research, Policy, Program, and Practice. Prev Chronic Dis; 10:120239.
  4. Ridgeway JL, Egginton JS, Tiedje K et al 2014 Factors that lessen the burden of treatment in complex patients with chronic conditions: a qualitative study, Patient Prefer Adherence, 19;8:339-51
  5. Vlodaver Z 2017 Pathology of Ischemic Heart Disease. In: Garry D., Wilson R., Vlodaver Z. (eds) Congestive Heart Failure and Cardiac Transplantation. Springer, Cham.
  6. Fujii S 2019 Phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor attenuates chronic ischemia‐induced prostatic hyperplasia in a rat model. Prostate. 79:5:536-543. doi: 10.1002/pros.23759
  7. Allen S 2016 Use of thermobalancing therapy in ageing male with benign prostatic hyperplasia with a focus on etiology and pathophysiology, Aging Male, 2016,1-5, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13685538.2016.1247151
  8. Aghajanyan IG 2016 Positive Response to Thermobalancing Therapy Enabled by Therapeutic Device in Men with Non-Malignant Prostate Diseases: BPH and Chronic Prostatitis, Diseases, 4, 18. doi:10.3390/diseases4020018
  9. Allen S 2019 The cause of chronic prostatitis and prostate enlargement is a change in the vascular level and requires similar treatment: innovative Thermobalancing therapy, IJMAS, 2019, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 290-293. http://innovativejournal.in/index.php/ijmhs/article/view/2453
  10. Anatomy and Physiology by Rice University, 131 20.1 Structure and function of blood vessels, https://opentextbc.ca/anatomyandphysiology/chapter/20-1-structure-and-function-of-blood-vessels
  11. Baldwin AL 2000 A brief history of capillaries and some examples of their apparently strange behaviour, Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology, vol. 27. no. 10, 821–825
  12. Hansen-Smith FM 2000 Capillary network patterning during angiogenesis, Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology, vol. 27. no. 10, pp. 830–835
  13. Allen S 2020 Innovative Thermobalancing therapy and Dr Allen's device for the first time employ body energy to treat chronic prostatic disease effectively, International Journal of Quality Innovation, 6, 2; https://jqualityinnovation.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40887-020-00035-0

External links[edit]

  • "WHO Director-General's opening remarks at the media briefing on COVID-19 - 11 March 2020". www.who.int.
  • Allen, Simon (1 July 2019). "Personalized care using thermobalancing therapy can help men with chronic prostatitis and chronic pelvic pain to recover". Personalized Medicine Universe. 8: 48–52. doi:10.1016/j.pmu.2019.04.002. ISSN 2186-4950.
  • Belingheri, Michael; Paladino, Maria Emilia; Riva, Michele Augusto (20 April 2020). "COVID-19: Health prevention and control in non-healthcare settings". Occupational Medicine. 70 (2): 82–83. doi:10.1093/occmed/kqaa048. ISSN 0962-7480. PMID 32311040 Check |pmid= value (help). Unknown parameter |s2cid= ignored (help)


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