We can Measure Vascular Stiffness and streamline our practice, aid in treating and help most vascular conditions, including Peripheral Neuropathy (PN).
To compliment my fellow homecoming speaker Dr Jonathan Walker with peripheral neuropathy (PN), we are going to discuss today and at homecoming how to measure and treat cardiovascular dysfunction.
Cardiovascular disease is the # 1 killer in America. We should be able to reduce the risk considerably by measuring vascular stiffness using pulse wave velocity. The ability to measure vascular health has been present for many years, but the measurement was primarily invasive. Now, with the AngioScan, we can non-invasively measure arterial stiffness with great accuracy, reproducibility and speed.
We now use Pulsed Wave Velocity (PWV) to measure circulatory physiology. We will show you how easy and effective this is. The incorporation of this method has been proven by longitudinal, coherent studies spanning a variety of clinical populations. These studies include those of extreme cardiovascular risk patients on dialysis and those with comorbidities such as diabetes mellitus, hypertension, healthy elders and general populations. I use this technology to screen all my patients and monitor them regularly. I also use the HeartQuest heart rate variability system, combined with muscle testing and lab work to give me a quick, streamlined practice that minimizes most of the causal factors that can slip through the cracks.
At the Homecoming, January 29-31, 2016, Global Health Solutions will have a kiosk for all the doctors present to check their arterial health. As an example, a patient was checked using the AngioScan with a history of smoking since 5 years old and now at 65 was having angina. Stents were put in and she was placed on Coumadin and other medications. The patient refused to continue on the medications due to the way it made her feel and she wanted a complete wellness program. The AngioScan showed extreme vascular stiffness of her big arteries and the age of her small vessels was much greater than her age. After putting her on the OHS Fruit and Veggie Plus and Opti- Nitric, her scores on the AngioScan are improving significantly. She was so excited to report, within a week, her chest pain was gone.
The bottom line is that endothelial health is a priority. Endothelial dysfunction means that the endothelial lining is not working correctly. When this is not working, it sets off a whole cascade of events. The problem is that we are not picking up this dysfunction early enough with the current testing and we wait until we have clinical problems such as a heart attack, stroke, or heart failure. Endothelial dysfunction precedes clinical vascular disease by decades. Endothelial dysfunction starts in the teenage years and probably starts earlier according to vascular biology expert Mark Houston, MD. We have multiple strategies at our disposal to improve endothelial health by improving vascular Nitric Oxide through the OHS’s Fruit and Veggie Plus and Opti-Nitric. If you have the Bemer as well, you can enhance this effect. At Homecoming 2016, we will test you before and after using the OHS products on the AngioScan. You will see for yourself the difference in your AngioScan scores.
Another new adjunct would be training with Kaatsu. We will demonstrate on you at homecoming if you like. This is a revolutionary exercise technology to improve vascular health and strength.
If you have any questions you can call Dr Kessler at 415-646-6112.
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