Faith,

Your email blew me away.  You are a true survivor and inspiration.  My husband 
is one month out from the by pass surgery.  I shouldn't say open heart because 
they didn't open his heart but his chest to get to the arteries.  The surgeon 
today, who I believe saved his life, said he thought he should stay on 
cholesterol meds for life due to the surgery.  He said he could have the same 
in his brain and elsewhere that we don't know about.  Everything appeared well 
today and the doctor thinks he is coming along well.  He is going to start 
physical therapy which I think will help him regain his strength.

He has minerals and a multiple vitamin he used to take but I don't know where 
he's put them.  He hasn't wanted to take all these pills but I thought some of 
them very important to his recovery.  I will search out and get him back on 
those.  Thanks for the reminder.

I'm just thankful my husband has come thru this and looks like he will 
eventually get back to normal.

Thanks for the information,
Dianne


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Faith Gagne<mailto:jitte...@gis.net> 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com<mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com> 
  Sent: Wednesday, July 23, 2008 9:14 AM
  Subject: Re: CS>endomorphins


  Dear Dianne:  Wow, your husband has been through a lot.  You said it has now 
been one month, but  if the horse accident was a few years ago, one month since 
what?  You mention certain supplementsbut I didn't hear any mention of a good 
basic multi vitamin and mineral supplement to begin with.  I could suggest the 
NOW brand "EcoGreen Multi, iron-free with green superfoods" (don't need iron 
unless he is anemic) as a base, adding other supplements as desired or needed.  
Additionally I take Policosanol, Vitamin D, ProBiotic, Pangestyme, chlorophyll 
tablets 100 mg x2/day, cod fish oil, 1000mg 3 x?day (MUST BE molecularly 
distilled), B-complex, l-lysine, coq-10, garlic, and bromelain.  I have taken 
supplements for years and will continue to take them forever.

  When you say endomorphins perhaps you mean endorphins: any of a group of 
endogenous peptides (as enkephalin) found especially in the brain that bind 
chiefly to opiate receptors and produce some pharmacological effects (as pain 
relief) like those of opiates; specifically : 
beta-endorphin<http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/beta-endorphin>    I 
don't know anything about them but I would a) Ask my doctor about them, B) Ask 
at the health store about them, and C) search the internet for information 
about them. 

  I don't know how long it has been since your husband's horrific accident, but 
having endured a few accidents, broken bones and whiplash injuries myself plus 
major surgeries like Peritonitis (appendix exloded, temperature of 107),  a 
Spinal Hemorrhage which was hands down the most excruciating thing that has 
ever happened to me, Open Heart Surgery for single bi-pass and aortic valve 
replacement, and a Lumpectomy right breast  (just to touch upon a few of the 
high points), I can attest to the fact that it takes time to recover from such 
things, even years.  Many of the other tests I've undergone were more like 
surgeries, some of them requiring morphine.  I've broken my right foot and my 
right hand.  I've had cancerous cells removed from my cervix and my upper left 
arm.  I had a cataract removal which left me with a stigma requiring 4 Visudyne 
laser surgeries.   I have migraine and occular migraine, both of which are 
pretty much under control plus very painful neuralgia in temples and earaches.  
I've had Epstein Bar Virus and Cytomagaovirus.  I've had problems with eczema, 
including both ear canals.  I've had gastroscopies and colonoscopies and 
you-name-it.  And there's plenty more yet, which is why I just get totally 
disgusted when I hear about people complaining about doctors becasue if it were 
not for those lousy doctors I wouldn't be typing this right now.  Many many 
many many doctors have saved my life and put me back on my feet over and over 
again.  They never thought I would walk again when I had that hideous Spinal 
Hemhorrage.....they even told my son that I would emerge from the hospital a 
parapalegic in a wheel chair.  But they pulled me through and I walked out of 
there on my own two feet with the doctors shaking their heads and calling me a 
walking miracle.  I am 100% normal except for lingering back pain which lessens 
all the time.  

  I look a bit younger than my age and no one would ever, ever guess my medical 
background.  So chin up and take your vitamins and minerals.  They count big 
time.  Faith G.



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: "Tony Moody" <a...@new.co.za<mailto:a...@new.co.za>>
  To: <silver-list@eskimo.com<mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com>>
  Sent: Wednesday, July 23, 2008 1:22 AM
  Subject: Re: CS>endomorphins


  > On 21 Jul 2008 at 23:59, Dianne France wrote about :
  > Subject : CS>endomorphins
  > 
  >> Dear Group,
  >> 
  >> I have a question about surgeries and endomorphins.  My husband has always 
been extremely strong and had a high pain tolerance but since his open heart 
surgery aches and pains bother him terribly.  Does surgery use up your 
endomorphins and you have to build them back up?  My dad had this same reaction 
after heart surgery and never seemed to get his pain tolerance back.
  >> Thanks,
  >> Dianne