Saturday, February 03, 2007

Radionics and Energy Healing

Radionics is an extension of homeopathy. It started out in the 1920's by measuring the response of an electric instrument when the patient and the homeopathic remedy were connected to it.

It turned out that every remedy, every organ in the body, and just about everything else in the universe has its own vibration. The vibration of a healthy liver in two or more different people is always the same. So, if you detect some other vibration in the liver of your patient, it will mean that his or her liver is not functioning in the best possible manner. If you want to, you can compare the rates for healthy organs in the body with the organs in the patient and you will immediately have his full diagnosis! It gets even better: you can do all of that on your own, there is no need for going to this or that medical center, to pay and/or to wait for the well-known specialist to have a look at you and so on.

You can see the rest of the article here.

Online support for endometrial stromal sarcoma

Someone commented on links for online support for endometrial stromal sarcoma. There were two links only, and I have examined them.

The first is

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/Endometrialstromalsarcoma/

and is Yahoo group devoted to the topic. The membership has to be approved, which is only normal considering the delicate position these women are in. If they approve me, I'll tell you more about what is inside, and what other resources are in there to help the patients with this catastrophic condition.

The other link is

http://www.acor.org/

but once over there, they say:

Please Note: On January 17, 2007 ACOR experienced a catastrophic hardware failure. Most of the site is currently unavailable as a result.

so there isn't much to be seen.

I'll keep you posted on this. In the meantime, if you know other online resources for gynecological problems, especially those possibly leading to hysterectomy, please add them by commenting on this blog.

The original page for endometrial stromal sarcoma on my site www.how-to-avoid-hysterectomy.com is

http://www.how-to-avoid-hysterectomy.com/uterine-sarcoma.html

Friday, February 02, 2007

Testing Technorati faves

This post is just to test Technorati Faves, to see what will happen when a blog post comes out.

Claiming this blog to Technorati

This post is just to claim the blog for Technorati

Technorati Profile

Uterine Sarcoma

Uterine sarcoma is cancerous growth of soft tissues of the uterus and is fairly rare. Only about 4% of all malignancies of the uterine body are uterine sarcomas (the rest is endometrial cancer). In classical medicine the cause of the lesion is not known, however, in the case of endometrial stromal sarcoma described on this page, astrologically, the cause of this particular uterine cancer is 5 years long transit to the natal Moon, in the house of surgery and terminal illnesses.

In general, you will be more susceptible to this rare type of uterine cancer if the following conditions are met:

-- you have already had a history of pelvic radiation;

-- if the menopause has already started;

-- if you were taking tamoxifen long-term.

The Signs and Symptoms of Uterine Sarcoma

-- Unusual or postmenopausal bleeding.

-- Pelvic pain, pressure, and unusual discharge.

-- A nonpregnant uterus that enlarges quickly.

Diagnosing Uterine Sarcoma

To diagnose uterine sarcoma, several procedures may be needed:

-- physical examination by your doctor,

-- medical imaging such as ultrasound, CAT scan, MRI,

-- tissue diagnosis by biopsy, hysteroscopy, or D&C.

Please note that Pap smear is a screening test for cervical cancer, not for detection of uterine sarcoma.

Staging

Uterine sarcoma is staged like endometrial carcinoma at time of surgery, using the FIGO cancer staging system.

Stage IA

tumor is limited to the endometrium.

Stage IB

invasion of less than half the myometrium.

Stage IC

invasion of more than half the myometrium.

Stage IIA

endocervical glandular involvement only.

Stage IIB

cervical stromal invasion.

Stage IIIA

tumor invades serosa or adnexa, or malignant peritoneal cytology.

Stage IIIB

vaginal metastasis.

Stage IIIC

metastasis to pelvic or para-aortic lymph nodes.

Stage IVA

invasion of the bladder or bowel.

Stage IVB

distant metastasis, including intraabdominal or inguinal lymph nodes.


Therapy for the Uterine Sarcoma

The following kinds of therapy are used in classical medicine, alone or in combination:

Surgery

if feasible, involving total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy.

Radiation therapy

using high-dose x-rays or other high-energy rays to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors.

Chemotherapy

using drugs to kill cancer cells.

Hormonal therapy



using female hormones to kill cancer cells.


The Astrological Case of Uterine Sarcoma

When this lady's husband first contacted me in September 2003, it was with the purpose of finding a suitable job perspective for him. For live delineations, I insist on having the charts of spouses, kids and other people that one lives with, since it sheds more light compared to the isolated natal chart.

I glanced at his wife's chart and she asked me what will happen within a year or two to her. Her chart was not rectified at that time, so the positions of the Sun, Moon, and Mars in the first decade of Pisces fell into her seventh house. Seeing the transit of Uranus during 2003-2006 over those planets, I just told her she would feel like "Alice in the Wonderland".

-- What do you mean by that!? she asked.

There was no time to answer that fully, and we parted. In June 2005 the phone rang again and it was her husband:

-- My wife has had hysterectomy in May, and is fine now. She had cancer, a sarcoma of endometrium, which spread to the other parts of the body, and now the doctors would like to perform another surgery to clear the cancer cells from the liver. Can we meet?

Her mother never knew exactly when the labor finished, but thought it was around noon, with a possible error of a few hours on both sides. Now that I knew that she had surgery, I rectified the chart so that the Ascendant was on 29 Cancer instead of the previous mid-Leo. The stellium of Sun, Moon, and Mars then fell into the VIII house -- the house of surgery, mechanical injuries, terminal states, cancer... clearly aligning itself with the events in real life. Here is her rectified natal chart.

Read the rest of story here

Monday, January 22, 2007

Polycystic Ovarian Disease

It is estimated that 10% of women in the reproductive age have Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOS for short). They usually have high level of androgens, which are male hormones, and have an irregular or don't have menstrual cycle at all.

Other symptoms of PCOS are:

infrequent menstrual periods,

no menstrual periods, and/or


irregular bleeding

infertility or inability to get pregnant because of not ovulating

increased growth of hair on the face, chest, stomach, back, thumbs, or toes

acne, oily skin, or dandruff

pelvic pain weight gain or obesity, usually carrying extra weight around the waist

type 2 diabetes


high cholesterol

high blood pressure male-pattern baldness or thinning hair


patches of thickened and dark brown or black skin on the neck, arms, breasts, or thighs

skin tags, or tiny excess flaps of skin in the armpits or neck area

sleep apnea ? excessive snoring and breathing stops at times while asleep

Polycystic Ovarian Disease Laparoscopy Video

This polycystic ovarian disease laparoscopy video shows a procedure called ovarian drilling. In the video, the right side ovary is being held by a forceps, while the instrument with a very fine needle is being brought to the ovary. The needle carries electric current, which destroys small portions of the ovary. It must be done with precision and it takes a skilled laparoscopic surgeon to do that. To be a good candidate for the procedure, the woman must have a bit larger ovaries.

There is an excellent video at this page, go and see it.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

How to Avoid Hysterectomy

Added an Eurekster Swicki for the word "hysterectomy" in the footer of all pages.

Reiki Healing in Gynecology

We sometimes tend to think of Reiki as of unspecific energy, kind of a broad wave that engulfs and permeats all levels of one's being and thus, works in the fundamentals -- slowly. But here are the links to several concrete examples how Reiki can be the only type of energy that is needed for healing cancer, nods in the breasts, heavy bleedings, cervical problems and -- as they in ads -- much more!

This page will just contain links and short stories of Reiki healings in gynecology. The examples are from the most visited site on Reiki in the entire Internet, www.reiki.org.


Reiki and Uterine Cancer
A woman with distended lower abdomen, a scan showing a large tumor in the uterus, probably cancerous. She was scheduled for the operation and in the mean time she was give three Reiki treatments one hour long, by a three Reiki practitioners at the same time. When she went to the hospital, no tumor could be found.

There is much more on this page, if you like Reiki or must get rid of the fibroids, read the entire page on Reiki healing in gynecology.

Hysteroscopy Of Intramural Fibroids Video

This is a hysteroscopy of intramural fibroids video, of a 48 year old woman with extremely heavy periods and two intramural fibroids. "Intramural" here means "inside the walls" -- the fibroids are in the uterine wall and cannot be seen through a hysteroscopy like this. The endometrial cavity looks normal, slightly enlarged but otherwise nothing wrong with it. However, this patient has extreme menstrual bleedings and the ultrasound reveals that the cause of the bleeding is two intramural fibroids.

In this video you can also see the openings to the Fallopian tubes. Everything is normal, but the patient is heading to endometrial ablation anyway.


Endometrial Ablation For Submucous Leiomyoma Video

This is an endometrial ablation for submucous leiomyoma video, performed on a woman 41 of age. (Leiomyoma or myoma for short, is tumor of uterine muscle, usually called fibroid.) The woman was diagnosed with unresponsive menorrhagia; menorrhagia stands for "excessive bleeding", and unresponsive menorrhagia usually leads to a hysterectomy, because the doctors start thinking that nothing can save the day. Operative hysteroscopy enables one to avoid hysterectomy by controlling the conditions of uterine bleeding.

In this case, the method chosen was operative hysteroscopy, using an electrical loop. The electricity in the loop removes the segments of the fibroid.

Removing the fibroid is done in little steps, because the loop is small and can only cut away small parts one at a time. Once the largest part of the fibroid is removed, the surgeon proceeds with another instrument, GyneCare VersaPoint, which is a bipolar cuttery instrument to finish the cauterization and endometrial ablation of the uterine cavity.

In the end, the entire endometrium is removed and there will be no more bleeding for this patient.

Roller Ball Endometrial Ablation For Endometrial Polyp Video

This is an roller ball endometrial ablation for polyp video, performed on a woman 55 of age, with a diagnosis of unresponsive menorrhagia because of the presence of an endometrial polyp.

Menorrhagia stands for "excessive bleeding", and unresponsive menorrhagia usually leads to a hysterectomy, because the doctors start thinking that nothing can save the day.

The method of endometrial ablation chosen was operative hysteroscopy. The endometrial polyp is cut away with a roller ball. Most hysterectomies arise due to unresponsive uterine bleeding, but surgeries such as this help avoid hysterectomy by controlling the possible cause of it.

Endometrial Ablation For Fibroids Video

Endometrial Ablation For Fibroids Video

This is an endometrial ablation for fibroids video, performed on a woman of 350 lbs, with high risk of severe anemia, with a diagnosis of unresponsive menorrhagia.

Menorrhagia stands for "excessive bleeding", so this woman was not a candidate for a full hysterectomy. She had a fibroid in the uterus, several polyps, and a thickened endometrial tissue, which was the mechanical cause of bleeding.

The method of endometral ablation here used was operative hysteroscopy, the instrument chosen is GyneCare VersaPoint...

Sunday, December 31, 2006

Hysterectomy Alternatives

Hysterectomy alternatives is what first comes to mind when the initial shock starts wearing off. You may want to investigate into several different directions at once:

1) Instead of classical hysterectomy, is there any other kind of hysterectomy that might suit you better? In particular, if it needs to be hysterectomy after all, is there a less invasive variant of hysterectomy? For instance, vaginal laparoscopic hysterectomy.

Or, they may be a classical surgical procedure that eliminates the need for hysterectomy, such as abdominal myomectomy.

2) Is there another kind of surgery that might override the need for hysterectomy? If it can be a minimally invasive type of surgery, with short hospital stay and rapid recovery aftermath, so much the better. In this hysterectomy scenario, you trade one cumbersome surgery for another.

Laparoscopic and hysteroscopic procedures may fit the bill here perfectly, ditto for the many types of endometrial ablation.

3) Finally, how about healing yourself without any kind of surgery at all? This is what this site is all about.

Endometrial Ablation For Fibroids And Menorrhagia Video

This is another video that the visitors of How To Avoid Hysterectomy.com will much benefit from. It very clearly shows the process of endometrial ablation -- here, in a case in which hysterectomy was ruled out because of the general bad condition of the patient. She had severe anemia from excessive bleeding and from the video we see why she was bleeding, the endometrial tissue was so swollen up. Endometrial ablation, here performed through operative hysterescopy, saved the day. The patient will not bleed any more, and she will be taking oral iron to improve her blood count. After that, her state will be revised once again.

There are more gynecological videos on this site, check the hysterectomy video page.

Monday, December 25, 2006

My new site, www.astrodule.com

I have a new site, called www.astrodule.com. It is of no general interest to English speaking readers, since it is in Serbian, which is my mother's tongue, however, it is interesting to see how I harvest the power of video to explain to the visitor what astrology is all about.

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Laparoscopic Myomectomy Videos

Laparoscopic Myomectomy Videos is a series of four videos which very explicitely show how laparoscopy is done. Excellent!

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Uterus Model Video

Uterus Model Video is a small, only 59 seconds long shot, of the basic parts of the uterus. It is suitable for students as well as for patients who have yet to learn about the parts of the body that create them problems worthy of hysterectomy.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Vaginal Hysterectomy Video Treatment of Uterine Prolapse With Polypropylene Mesh

Vaginal Hysterectomy Video Treatment of Uterine Prolapse With Polypropylene Mesh

This is video of a triple surgery, all in one, a case of a prolapsed uterus, by Prof. Jose Augusto Machada from Buenos Aires, Brazil. It is 14 minutes long, with commentary in Portuguese.

You can have a look at other hysterectomy videos, such as

Cancer of the Cervix Video

Vaginal Hysterectomy Video

Vaginal Hysterectomy Video With Morcellation

Vaginal Hysterectomy Video Treatment of Uterine Prolapse With Polypropylene Mesh

If these video don't make you stand and struggle to avoid hysterectomy, then I don't know what will.

My suggestion is to subscribe to your personal healing plan, learn about energy healing and incorporate it into your daily life and procedures.

Sincerely, Dusko

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Vaginal Hysterectomy Video

Here is a detailed vaginal hysterectomy video from Google. The official name is vaginal hysterectomy with bilateral oophorectomy without uterine prolapse. Operation practiced at the Institute of Gynecology (Rio de Janeiro -- Brazil), practiced by Prof. Jose Augusto Machado.

Bilateral oophorectomy means that both ovaries were cut out. This woman will enter surgical menopause right after the operation, which add to the long list of her post op problems.

The video is 8 minutes long and is very detailed. There is no narration and the music could have been better, but it doesn't really matter, of course.