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FACT, FICTION & FRAUD
in Modern Medicine |
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FACT, FICTION & FRAUD in Modern Medicine..
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By Thomas Dorman,M.D.
Exploring Issues of Philosophy and Conscience
in Contemporary Health Care
August 2000 - Vol. 5, Issue |
COLONICS
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ANCIENT ORIGINS |
Colonic irrigation is an ancient method of healing and it would never have survived
until the present scientific age if it were without value. It is a curious fact
that medical practitioners seem to be either in favour of this treatment (and usually
quiet about it) or vehemently opposed to its use. The objectors never have any experience
of it. Every grown creature probably has an instinctive dislike of its own waste
products, and this may explain why the physician is generally so remiss in examining
the faeces of his patients. There are indications from ancient documents that the
Egyptians and the Greeks practiced colon irrigation therapeutically, although their
ideas and the benefit to their patients are unknown to us. Hollow reeds and gourds
were used to introduce water through the rectum. |
The Reputation of Colonics |
I first heard the term colonics as a young doctor practicing
in
California. Immediately, I knew that it was a form of quackery. 1 It is self-evident that the
bowel excretes the waste products of digestion regularly, naturally and automatically.
There is no need to interfere with nature.
This pre-formed opinion (and I am uncertain how it came to be so firmly formed in
my mind) was reinforced when I read comments from an official source, that I can
no longer identify, condemning the use of colonics by lay practitioners in the state
of California and, in due course, the medical association lobbied for its banning
through the legislature.
This surprised me a little. If something is useless and harmful, why is it necessary
to make laws about it? We don't have laws against swimming in sewage nor do we lobby
our legislators to make such laws. The only sensible thing any person would do with
sewage is dispose of it as hygienically as practical. This dilemma hung in my mind
for a number of years. Since then, I have assiduously prescribed diuretics to my
patients who retain water, laxative to those who were constipated and, personally,
I brush my teeth every day.
Think about it for a moment. Which is the cleaner part of your alimentary canal
(The alimentary canal is the pipe through which the food passes in your body from
mouth to anus). The mouth is cleaner than the rectum, and yet it is the mouth that
I clean with a toothbrush, with paste, and even flossing. Why clean the clean end?
I think, in final analysis, the answer is that it is aesthetic. The dirty end
should be beneath our dignity; or should it? |
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My Own Experience
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As I have explained in previous newsletters that much
of my learning about alternative medicine has come from my patients. To them, I
shall be eternally grateful. Learning about colonics is no exception. Patients have
told me how their health, their malaise, their fatigue, their abdominal distension,
their chronic bowel disturbances, and their dermatitis cleared up through the use
of colonics. The first few times I heard the story I knew that the patients were
either crazy or the improvement was coincidental. How many times can you hear of
such an account and continue to avoid the obvious out of sheer obstinacy? In my
case, it was about half a dozen times. My resistance to quackery was diminishing
through my experience with chelation, nutrition and, of course, mostly through my
experience with orthopaedic medicine. Was it conceivable, was it perhaps even possible,
that this rather unsavoury business with the dirty end of the bowel had something
to do with health? I think I resisted recognizing the benefit of colonics longer
than my resistance to recognizing other alternative medicine as therapeutic tools
because of what I would like to call the sewage aspect of the bowel. It is strange
to have to admit that the conversion and the prejudice occurred when I read a non-medical
book. Erewhon, by Samuel Butler 1898, describes a topsy-turvy world where people
are ashamed to eat, and do so in privacy, while they deal with and discuss their
financial matters in public; the exact opposite of our own habits. Even Samuel Butler
did not deal with the sewage aspects, but he did point out that the habits we have
are not always quite logical. Once one overcomes the sewage aspect, or what I should
really call the sewage prejudice, it actually is rather obvious that just as we
clean our skin in bathing, our teeth with brushing, our nails with clipping, our
hair with shampooing and combing, it is perfectly logical to clean our colon with
irrigation.
One might argue that it is not natural in some Wordsworthian
or mystical primitive sense, but the same can be said for bathing with soap or using
a toothbrush. Having dispensed, therefore, with the prejudicial aspects of this
issue, we now need to ask more seriously what do colonics do, when should they be
used, what is the evidence that they are effective, if any, and if there is a benefit,
how might it be useful? Dentists will tell us that keeping the teeth clean protects
the hygiene of the mouth and reduces the incidence of cavities. I think they are
probably right. I do know that in people with certain illnesses, enhancing excretion
of water and electrolytes through the kidneys can improve their health. The most
important example of that is when dealing with fluid accumulation, anasarca or edema,
for instance in heart failure.
It is also quite obvious that if a person is unable to
move his bowels, flushing the inspissated (dry and hardened) contents can open the
passage so, here, we have a clear indication. If the person's bowels are blocked
due to dried up faeces, flushing them out will obviously restore the ability of
the bowels to move; and, it goes without saying that without bowel movements, obstruction
and illness will ensue.
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Subtle Conditions
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There are many cases where alternative medicine looks at mild degrees of conditions
generally accepted in medicine and enhances the public health through catering to them - what in a sophisticated way one might call a forme fruste of an illness, and
I have alluded to, in previous newsletters, many such examples. Is constipation good
for you? Well, obviously not. How often should the bowels move? In medical school
I was taught that there is no rule on this matter; that if the bowels move once
a week, that is sufficient for some and normal; contrariwise, two bowel movements
a day might be normal for others. I now know better.
Most people are better off if their bowels move two to three times a day. How do
I know? Having developed an interest in nutrition and the function of the bowel,
I have developed the habit of asking my patients about the frequency of their bowel movements
and can assure the reader that in general those whose bowels move two-three times
a day fare better in their health and nutrition than those who are more constipated.
I do admit, however, that there is no absolutely hard rule on the matter. In the next section of this
newsletter, I would like to discuss some theoretical considerations regarding what
I propose to you are the benefits of colonics in certain situations. How might it
work?
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Effluent Enhancement |
Which organ of our bodies is most responsible for waste disposal? It goes without
saying that it is the bowel. Yes, in some ways, waste products are excreted by the
lungs (carbon dioxide), by the skin, (scaling), sweat, by the kidneys (water and
chemicals). The vast majority of waste products of life, however, are passed through
the bowel. Some of this waste product is what I call pass through. Frankly, however,
the majority of what appears in your stool is excreted, or altered, and therefore
not simply a passive 'pass through' product; but, for the purpose of the 'pass through'
products, we can reasonably think of the bowel as a pipe, for a first approximation.
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The Bowel as an Excretory Organ
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The large bowel itself serves to concentrate the contents passed into it from the
small intestine, through the resorption of water into the circulation.
Bacterial fermentation occurs in the colon. Several products of fermentation, some
of which are only slightly understood, probably serve as useful nutrients when reabsorbed.
I phrased this concept in a negative way because it is clear to me that, even in
these days of know-all science, a great deal of information is lacking regarding
the details of this process. We do, however, know from respectable physiological studies,
that many products are excreted into the lumen of the intestines and reabsorbed
therefrom to circulate back-and-forth, usually through the liver via the venous
blood system from the intestines to the liver, called the portal circulation. This
enterohepatic circulation, as it is called, plays a very important role in balancing
products between the bowel and the liver. An excess of these products in the bowel, for instance
bile salts, can provoke diarrhoea and, contrariwise, failure of adequate excretion
can lead to the retention of toxicants which, in turn, are dammed back into the
circulation and can be associated with disease.
In this context, we often speak of liver or hepatic failure.
We should remember that the liver is the major detoxifying biochemical factory in
our bodies and that its waste
products are passed through the bile passages (and
sometimes with temporary storage in the gallbladder) into the duodenum, thence into
the small intestine and colon.
You see, now, how there is an inherent relationship between
the excretory function of the bowel in general, including the colon, and the biochemical
excretory factory, the liver. It is not at all surprising, therefore, that by enhancing
excretion through the bowel we can indirectly enhance excretion by the liver, the
main detoxifying factory of the body. On thinking this over, these observations
make such plain common sense, based on simple knowledge of anatomy and physiology
of the gastrointestinal and hepatic tracts, that in retrospect, I am amazed at my own stupidity of not working these things
out for myself many years ago. It was, therefore, a salutary experience to read
references about this in some books lent to me by a colon therapist friend,
Dirk Yow, CCT, GOK, that
these ideas are by no means new. 2, 3, 4. We might next
ask how might colonic therapy increase the excretion of waste products through the
pipe we call our colon?
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Increase in
Peristalsis
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We know that a lot of movement in the pipe the body occurs through peristalsis.
The acts of the muscle of the heart are one such example although, of course, the
blood does not go backwards into the chambers because of the action of the valves.
These valves are flaps of fibrous tissue that come together and stop return flow.
Valves are present in the veins, as well, directing the blood in the appropriate
direction. The lymphatic system has valves, and the term valves is also used in
reference to the pipe we call our gastrointestinal tract, or gut.
Muscles contract in a rhythmic manner,
causing a wave of contraction down the pipe. This is
seen be on inspecting the movements of the oesophagus
and the small intestine; but as these organs do not have
one-way valves, like those in the heart, fluid can
travel back-and-forth in spite of these peristaltic
waves. Indeed, the digestive processes in the gut are
dependent on slushing the fluid, the digestive juices,
mixing them and churning them and, therefore, this
peristaltic phenomenon is not exclusively
unidirectional. Peristalsis as such, however, is not a
prime feature of the large
bowel.
where the dehydrating process begins and
the site where bacterial fermentation begins and occurs
predominantly. The caecum is, to a certain extent, a
dead end; and its appendage, the appendix, is a complete
dead end. It is here, of course, that chronic
inflammation and infection occurs most frequently, hence
the disease of appendicitis. It is interesting that
there are accounts of instances in which casts of the
lining of a colon are reputed to be excreted en masse;
almost certainly these represent mostly a combination of
shed lining from the caecum with contents which had
become inspissated and adherent to the lining of the
caecum, the continuous flow of contents from the small
intestine into the bowel beyond the caecum, passing
through these concretions. There are multiple, though
infrequent, accounts of people passing contents from
their bowels that are recognized to have been ingested a
long time earlier. Almost certainly these concretions
are held, therefore, in the periphery of the caecum
while the otherwise continuous flow of contents passes
through the centre of the caecum into the ascending
colon. It is also not unlikely that some of this
phenomenon of sluggishness, of stasis, at the bowel
surface can occur in the ascending and transverse
colons, as well, with the contents merely going through
the centre and being propelled through the phenomenon of
mass action. Is it an advantage for a person to have
longstanding concretions in this organ? Of course, it is
not. I must report, however, that in the process of
inspecting the lining of this organ with a colonoscope,
a procedure that I have had occasion to perform many
times, one does not ordinarily see large residues in
this site. How might this be? How can it be that there
are reliable accounts of these casts that are not seen
by the endoscopist? I have come to the conclusion that
the answer is that, in preparation for endoscopy, the
patient invariably is asked to take a strong purgative
to clean out the contents of the bowel so the
endoscopist can indeed inspect the lining. Almost
certainly these purgation's remove any material that
might have been static in this situation and therefore
not observed when the endoscopic inspection is
performed.
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Stimulation of the Lining |
The process of irrigating the bowel can, almost certainly
in many instances, have a stimulatory effect on the cells lining this organ. As
the business of these cells is to provide mucus and facilitate much of the excretion,
it is not surprising that stimulating enhances this effect. Can they be stimulated
merely by contact with water? Probably to a slight degree; but it is more likely
that bringing them in contact with certain herbal, and possibly chemical agents,
enhances this effect. For instance, it is well known in conventional medicine that
the addition of magnesium sulphate to the contents of the bowel causes the lining
to pass more water into the lumen, and the patient develops diarrhoea. This is a
purgative effect. A number of herbal agents are known to have other effects on the
linings. Terms such as carminative, mucus enhancing, relaxing, stimulating, and
enhancing excretion, are all used, and a number of specific herbs have a number
of specific actions on these lines, This is not mysterious. If you were to drop
some lemon juice into your mouth, would you not experience an increased flow of
saliva? Does peppermint not clear the passages by causing shrinkage of swollen lining?
Why should these botanical preparations not have a similar effect on the lining
at the other end of our gut? They, of course, do. Experience in colonic circles
is growing with the use of a number of
specific herbal agents that can be mixed gently into the warm water passed into
the colon for irrigation; so that individuals with a tendency to spasm are given relaxing agents. Contrariwise, individuals whose bowels are too relaxed might benefit
from a mild contractile stimulant. You see that none of these considerations are
particularly mysterious. The skill and experience of using the right herbs in combination is, however, still something of an art and not all individuals respond equally to
all herbal stimulants. The skilful colon therapist will, therefore, introduce small
quantities of proposed remedies at a time and evaluate the response before proceeding
with more.
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Other
Bacteriologic Consideration |
I have alluded to the nature of the bacterial contents
of the bowel. Ordinarily we carry an enormous load of bacterial species, both quantitatively
and in the multitude of varieties. The fermentative process that occurs in the bowel
bears a relationship to health and disease. The contemporary habit of using large
quantities of pharmaceutical agents that alter the nature of the bacterial contents,
antibiotics in particular, has a strong effect in changing the composition of these
internal residents. It was believed, and in certain circles is still believed that,
with the exception of the bowel, the inside of the body is entirely sterile. From
Enderlein's research, and that of others, we have come to recognize that the endobiontic
relationship in the cells is more complex and that almost certainly life forms (microzyma's
in Bechamp's terminology) are present in fact in most living cells. They are, however,
in a form (or valency, to use Enderlein's term) that does not encourage independent
proliferation. That is why, when cultures of cells (for instance, of the blood)
are taken from healthy people bacteria do not ordinarily grow out on the culture
medium, or the plate. This contrasts with culturing the contents of the bowel. It
is, however, believed that in certain circles - those that I might reasonably call
the pleomorphic medical subculture - that there is a relationship between the bacterial
forms overtly present in the intestine and those covertly present in the intracellular
milieu. This is one of the reasons that the use of antibiotics, particularly when
they are taken by mouth, is considered to be deleterious. It changes the composition
of the bacteria in the intestine, probably encouraging the development of cell-deficient
forms that probably interact, or penetrate, into the intracellular environment with
greater facility and thereby probably accelerate the degenerative process, in Enderlein's
terminology raising the valency of the endobionts. There is little conventional
hard research on the detailed composition of the bacterial contents of the bowel.
The problems relate to the difficulty in culturing the bacteria and separating the
species in an artificial environment and quantifying them on culture plates, etc.
The anaerobic bacteria (those that thrive without oxygen, are fastidious organisms
in the laboratory environment, but the culture of the aerobic bacteria sometimes
give us useful clues about unfavourable changes in the composition. This, incidentally,
is one reason why nutritionally oriented physicians often ask for bacterial cultures
on specimens of stool. What effect do you think irrigation might have on this zoo
of organisms? Almost certainly it dilutes them, removes concretions of residual
material, and probably facilitates a freshening up of the fermentative process and
participants. The introduction of the bacteria that we ordinarily regard as favorable
to the intestine, such as the Lactobacillus, is best done at this time, and some
clinics afford the colon therapist an opportunity to introduce appropriate instillation
of bacteria, particularly in this category, at the end of treatment.
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Other Ways of Manipulating the Colonics
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Changes in the volume of fluid, the pH and salinity can,
of course, have an effect on the bowel. The colon therapist can also judge the temperature
of the irrigating fluid, to a small extent, further altering the behaviour and reaction
of the cells of the lining of the bowel.
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Stretching |
When fluid is passed into the colon, and particularly when it is passed in skillfully,
without introducing any gas, such as air, there is a gradual distension of the organ.
It should be remembered that the colon is a flexible, irregular tube contained within
the flexible, irregularly structured abdominal cavity. An increase in the pressure
of the lumen of the bowel has an instantaneous effect on the pressure of the rest
of the abdominal contents. From this point of view, the relationship to each other
is like that of fluid in a hot water bottle. Is stretching the colon a good idea?
My answer is a clear yes. And here, I take the liberty of making a comparison with
stretching the fascial layers of the body elsewhere. After all, what is the colon?
It is a fascial bag with an outside lining called the 'serosa' and an inside lining
called the 'mucosa'. There are some muscular thickenings within the fascial bag
called 'circular' and 'longitudinal' muscles, (tenia) the action of which we have
already discussed when reviewing the weak peristalsis of the colon and the strong
mass action (longitudinal bands) earlier. When we stretch the body itself, the fascial
layers of the trunk and the limbs, and those around the axial skeleton improve the
alignment of the contents. The stretching evens out tensions and restores function.
We sometimes speak of the tensegrity model, when discussing this, because there
is a relationship amongst the tension of all the components of the system to all
others. Does this consideration apply to the internal organs? Of course, it does.
One way to improve the overall function and integrated action of the colon is by
stretching the organ, and it is quite plain that the only available way for stretching
is through the installation of water gradually under slight-to-moderate pressure
through the anal canal. Almost certainly this is the reason why colon therapists
report that after these irritations they retrain the bowel.
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Retraining the Bowel |
An important benefit of colon therapy is this business of retraining the bowel.
In 'civilized' society there is a tendency to defer the urge to defecate for social
reasons. A person might be in a board meeting or any other assortment of social
engagements. The mass action that might have been initiated by the mid-morning coffee,
loading the rectum, is ignored. The contents might either stay in the rectum or
shift back into the descending colon. Further inspissation and toxic absorptions
are now likely to take place and, after ignoring the urge to stool repeatedly, the
phenomenon of a regular bowel evacuation occurs less frequently. The bowel is trained
in bad habits. It is true that the fermentation in the bowel is apt to lead to flatus
in the circumstance, but many civilized men ignore that stimulus, as well. Almost
certainly the phenomenon of rehydration and stretching the colon, particularly when
combined with education of the subject that a call to stool should not be ignored
and in fact solicited from the bowel, so to speak, two-three times a day at regular
intervals will restore normal colonic function and indirectly enhance the person's
health substantially. Accordingly, it is an important role of the colon therapist
to educate patients in combating constipation and generally improving bowel habits.
Many of these benefits can be permanent after a series of, say, 10 treatments at,
say, one-two treatments a week. It is up to the physician, in my opinion, to select
the patients in whose cases this treatment should be recommended.
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Colonic
Illnesses
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Is there a place for the use of colon irrigation (colonics) in patients who have
illnesses such as ulcerative colitis, chronic diarrhoea, chronic dilatation of the
bowel (such as Hirschprung's disease), a tendency to spasms (often called irritable
bowel syndrome) and diverticulitis? My answer to these is affirmative in all the
cases. It is, however, true that the colon therapist needs to be skilled. Excessive
distension, in the case of diverticulitis or ulcerative colitis, may theoretically
pose the risk of leakage, although one has never encountered such a case. The use
of remedies in the contents of the bowel needs to be practiced with skill and experience.
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Conclusion
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In summary, I have come to the conclusion that colon therapy is not mysterious,
is a useful adjunct to detoxification in a variety of illnesses in which the accumulation
of toxins plays a major or contributory role to a person's ill health; therefore,
washing the lining of the bowel is just as sensible as maintaining cleanliness in
other parts of ourselves and, in the modern living environment, there is a tendency
for the accumulation of toxins, increased constipation, increased concentration
of the residue in the bowel because of a shortage of roughage in the diet; thus
cleaning and irrigation is an advantage.
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Technique |
Before concluding this article, a comment about technique. The modern colon therapist
will use an instrument that allows a continuous exchange of fluid in and out of
the bowel, and irrigation. It will allow the therapist to have continuous inspection,
through a glass component of the outflow pipe, to inspect the contents of the effluent,
and the experienced therapist will learn to recognize when the effluent indicates
enhanced excretion from the bowel proper, from the liver indirectly through the
bowel, or merely when particles of stool are washed out. With modern technology,
the procedure is both comfortable and entirely hygienic without unpleasant aromas
or any spillage. The practical details vary little between therapists, but essentially
a small tube is passed, with the individual in side-lying position, into the individual's
rectum. Most colon therapists then choose to place the patient on his back, and
the irrigation takes place in this position. Typically 10 colonic treatments, perhaps,
at four-six day intervals are recommended for most conditions, and many people who
have significant but not inherently destructive disease, such as the examples given
above, can obtain life-long benefit from a series of colon therapies without the
necessity to follow-up, although certain individuals do benefit from infrequent
follow-up long term.
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References:
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1. Gastrointestinal Quackery: Colonics, laxatives
and more. Stephen Barrett, M.D. at http://wwwquackwatch.com/01quackaryrelatedtopics/gastro.html.
2. ColonColonTheorapy
Therapy. J.E.G. Waddington, August 1940.
3. The pH in Colonic Therapy. B.R. LeRoy, Jr.,
A.B., D.O. Pub. Fidelity Pub.
Co.
; Fidelity Bldg.,
Tacoma, WA
1933.
4. Chronic intestinal toxemia and
its treatment with special reference to colonic therapy
James W. Wiltsie, A.B., M.D. Wm. Wood & Co. Baltimore 1938.
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