Originally posted by: iliopsoas
Originally posted by: Mo0o
Onc: Prolactinoma --> give bromocriptine
Cardio: PDA --> give indomethacin
GI: Rectal polyp --> endoscopic removal (which gastroenterologists can do, not surgeons)
So, what chiro treatments would you prescribe for those?
Dude, that's weak. Use some real examples.
Early stage lymphoma 90% cure rate
Testicular carcinoma 90% cure rate, approaches 100% if not metastasized at time of detection. Treated with combo of surgery and radiation.
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia 90% cure rate
Internal bleeding treated with coil embolization by an interventional radiologist
Renal cell carcinoma. Patient too sick for surgery? Fry it with radiofrequency ablation, performed by a radiologist.
HIV. NO cure but they ain't dropping like flies either with the HAART combo drugs. Guys like Magic Johnson are surviving several decades after diagnosis.
...and on and on...
Sure, a lot of the current treatment is aimed at controlling the disease and there are no cures in sight. But all you have to do is look at the quality of life and life expectancy that have improved with modern medicine.
i completely agree.
i'm not going to claim that a chiropractor can affect any of those diseases, because they can't whatsoever. that's something medical doctors do... they treat diseases that can be treated and they keep the ones that can't at bey as best they can. but i honestly wouldn't go as far as to say that you CURE the diseases, because most of the time, they come right back later on.
chiropractic care is mainly based on the premise that disease happens whenever you don't keep the body healthy. medicine, from what i gather, believes that health is achieved by removing the disease... i have a little bit of a problem with that and i think that's why health care is in the bind that it finds itself in right now.