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Who is
Majid Ali, M.D.
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Dr. Ali's CV
Majid Ali is a
pioneer who is changing the face of medicine with his
innovative and spirited approach.
His credentials are
impeccable
Complementary Medicine Journal
"I stand in awe of Ali's
superb scientific knowledge, his insights into the nature of
the the healing process and his ability to explain hard
science."
Aubrey Worrell, MD
Past President, the American Academy of
Environmental Medicine
Majid Ali,
M.D.
Editor,
The Journal of Integrative Medicine
Formerly, Associate Professor of Pathology (adj.), College
of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, NY
Formerly, President of Staff and
Chief Pathologist, Holy Name Hospital, Teaneck, NJ
Fellow, Royal College of Surgeons of England
- Diplomate,
American Board of Anatomic and Clinical Pathology
Diplomate, American Boards of Environmental Medicine
Past President Capital University of Integrative
Medicine
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I Don't Want Dialysis
Majid Ali, M.D.
America now is a land of terror cells. I see the biological
effects of terror toxicity with increasing frequency.
Following is a conversation with a 67-year-old woman who was
hospitalized in a New York University hospital for five days
after collapsing in a subway station. It unmasks one ugly
face of our land of terror toxicity.
"I don’t want dialysis," she spoke tearfully as I entered
the room.
"Why do you think you need dialysis?" I asked.
"The doctor in the emergency room told me I will need it."
"Why did you have to go to the emergency room?"
"I collapsed going up the stairs in a subway station."
"Did you have a cold or a sinus attack?"
"Yes. I don’t want dialysis," she repeated excitedly.
Creatinine Test for Kidney Health
I had first seen her nearly three years earlier. She
suffered from diabetes, high blood pressure, asthma,
arthralgia (joint pain), enlarged lymph nodes, chronic
fatigue, anxiety, and a history of panic attacks. She had
responded well to our program. I eyed the gold-colored lab
log in her chart and saw the blood creatinine values of 1.3,
1.2, and 1.2 done several months apart. The normal
laboratory range is 1.3 mg/dl. Why would the doctor tell her
she needs dialysis? I wondered. I looked up. Her 190-pound
frame heaved breathlessly. With unsteady hands, she gave me
the hospital records. Quickly I scanned the papers for the
lab report and found a creatinine value of 1.8.
"Tell me about how you felt before you collapsed?" I looked
up and asked.
"The doctor said my GFR kidney test result was very low and
I will need dialysis." She ignored my question.
"No, you don’t need dialysis. Tell me about what happened
before you collapsed?" I repeated my question.
"Did you see my GFR test?’ she persisted.
GFR is short for glomerular filtration rate. As reported in
routine tests, it is a calculated value, so it is not a real
test. Her value was 26. With a creatinine value of 1.8, the
calculated GFR value of 26 is insignificant.
"Your GFR value is 26 and it does not mean you need
dialysis. How did you feel before you collapsed?"
"Under stress, weak, lightheaded."
"How long were you in the hospital?"
"Five days."
"What did they find in the hospital?’
"They did a lot of tests. One good thing is that they did
not find the coronary blockages which they had before I
first saw you." She smiled a little.
"Good. That’s wonderful. Did you ever have a heart scan?’
"Yes. Look at this report." She pushed a pile of papers. "It
says there was no coronary stenosis. Doesn’t it mean my
heart arteries are clear now?"
"Yes."
"How do you know I won’t need dialysis?" she asked, her
anxiety subsiding.
"None of our patients with creatinine number of less than
four ever went to dialysis as long as our program was
followed. We will give you some treatment and check your
blood again. You will see the creatinine level will fall,
perhaps down to 1.3 or 1.4, and your GFR value will rise. We
will be back where we were three years ago." I reassured
her.
"What does GFR mean?"
"It is an indicator of blood supply to the kidney and the
status of the kidney function. Its value can change rapidly
in times of severe stress," I explained.
"So I don’t need dialysis."
"No."
She look at me for several moments, then chirped, "I knew I
was coming to the right place."
The Sparrow in a Terror Cell
Once a sparrow flew into a large room with a cathedral
ceiling and one full-wall window. It flew in all directions,
evidently to find its way out of the room. The glass wall
was the source of its confusion. Two boys in the room and I
watched the bird with amusement. It needed to fly down,
through an open sliding door and then up and out, but could
not figure out the flying-down part. After a while the boys
asked me if they could wave towels at it to direct it down
and out through the door. That seemed to make sense and I
agreed. As they waved large towels at it, the sparrow became
frightened and frenetically flew faster in all directions
except to the door. The boys doubled their efforts, and so
seemed the sparrow. It began to hit the glass wall,
something that it was able to avoid before. The boys moved
faster and swung the towels wildly at the sparrow. And then
it happened suddenly and I never forgot it. The sparrow flew
erratically, just as planes do before crashing in video
clips, smashed into the glass wall, and dropped dead.
Disturbed by the scene, I understood what adrenaline bursts
can do to sparrows—and to human sparrows as they are hurdled
to emergency rooms—in panic, hyperventilating, their hearts
palpitating, struggling to escape the "glass prisons" of our
star wars medical technology.
The images of the sparrow have returned to me hundreds of
time when I see people frightened out of their wits by what
may be designated as "medical towels"—the weapons of our
star wars medical technology which frightens and unnerves
people in crisis.
What Would Have I Done?
I returned from the images of the sparrow, smiled at her,
and asked,
"What do you think I would have done if I were with you at
the subway station?"
"Oh God! I wish you were." She became animated.
"Tell me what I would have done then."
"You would have told me to breathe slowly. You would have
asked me to take coenzyme Q 10 lozenge if I was carrying
one. You would ask someone to bring some water to me drink
and put some of it on my forehead. Also you would give me a
touch of salt to put under the tongue."
"How do you know all that?"
"Because I remember what your nurse taught me about Feather
breathing. And because I read the instruction sheet for
palpitations and panic attacks which you gave me."
"Do you know what else I would have done?’
"What?’
"I would have also called 911 for am ambulance."
I anticipate the reader’s question: Why would I call 911 if
I am so convinced of the value of the above natural
measures? Answer: I would have wanted her to be in
equilibrium—and in charge of herself before being taken to
the hospital for examination and safety testing to assure
that she did not need additional treatment.
I return to the matter of terror toxicity. A doctor’s
pointing out the risks of neglected early signs of kidney
damage in this case was judicious and laudable. Telling
bluntly an individual who collapsed in a subway station and
was rushed to a hospital that she would need dialysis was
heartless. Telling a person with creatinine level of 1.8 and
a GFR number of 26—not a number based on a test actually
performed—was medically unjustified. Finally, and this is
what frustrated me most and prompted me to write this
article, the mainstream doctors have no program to reverse
kidney failure. They think this is not possible. Then why
terrorize a person in crisis!
P.S.
The table below compares the lab test done at the hospital
and those done later at our Institute. The results show
restoration of her kidney function as evidenced by a normal
blood creatinine level at our Institute.
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Laboratory
Tests for Kidneys Showing Reversal of Kidney Damage
in a 67-year-woman |
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Location |
Creatinine |
GFR |
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New York
University Hospital |
1.8 |
26 |
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Institute of
Integrative Medicine |
1.2 |
45 |
For readers interested in
reversing kidney failure, I refer thge readers to my video
seminar entitled "Reversing
Kidney Failure" and to my tutorial on the
subject.
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Now Available as
Instant Download

Integrative Protocols -
Vol 12 Principles and
Practices
of Integrative Medicine
Includes
Dr. Ali's
IV and IM formulations
E-Book price $35
Book price $95

Integrative Protocols -
Vol 11 Principles and
Practices
of Integrative Medicine
E-Book price $35
Book price $95
Dr.
Ali discusses Dysoxygenosis and varying
chronic diseases.
Chapter 1 Under Darwin’s Glow
Chapter 2 Energy Deficit States
Chapter 3 Integration
Chapter 4 The Oxygen Order of Life
Chapter 5 Oxygen
Chapter 6 Aging
Chapter 7 Inflammation
Chapter 8 Pain
Chapter 9 Heart Disease
Chapter 10 Asthma
Chapter 11 Renal Insufficiency
Chapter 12 Osteoporosis
Chapter 13 Metalicised Mouths
Chapter 14 Hormone Disorders
Chapter 15 Arrested Growth |
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