I know I’m rather blunt when it comes to the alternative treatments like Rife, Aroma Therapy, Reflexology, Magnetic Therapy, and a host of others. Let me explain my general findings on 99.9% of the things I’ve personally investigated, and I've looked into dozens. In fact, my change in diet is one such investigation which has had good results in most areas but alas no effect on BPH.
Most of the practitioners tout the wonderful benefits and what they call “cure rate” of their particular discipline. I always ask pointed questions and request specifics both from the practitioners as well whatever patients are willing to talk with me. Here’s what I’ve found:
In most cases the patients have no diagnosed pathology. They have only vague symptoms and they credit the easing of these symptoms to whatever treatment they are currently pursuing. Most of the time the patients I’ve talked to have tried many different treatments, each having a positive effect for the short term but the symptoms inevitably return and the patient seeks the next new type of treatment. In today’s vernacular this is often called the placebo effect. Since in the vast majority of cases there is no organic pathology, there is no way to objectively evaluate the effectiveness of these treatments.
There are times when real pathology exists. Again, many patients get immediate but temporary relief of symptoms(placebo effect), but there is no measurable or significant change to the good in the actual pathology.
On rare occasions when real pathology exists, there is a spontaneous remission of the pathology which is measurable. This happens with any treatment protocol and at times with no treatment at all. In my investigations of the alternative treatments I’ve looked into, the occurrence of spontaneous remission is at the same rate as for any other type of treatment or not treatment at all.
In many cases I’ve tried the alternative treatment myself but unlike most people, I have a real pathology and real indicators that I can measure to determine the effectiveness of the treatment. Of all the things I’ve tried, the only one that has had any effect at all is the iodine protocol which has dropped my PSA by 0.6 points in 12 months. Up to this point PSA had been climbing 0.5 points every 12 months for 5 years so the drop is encouraging, but based on the possibility of spontaneous remission (even though slight) is not conclusive. An interesting point is that the decrease in PSA is not accompanied by a decrease in BPH symptoms. If the iodine is doing anything, it might be affecting cancer cells, but it is not affecting the continued growth of the prostate.
Because I have gotten a long term positive result from the iodine protocol, I will continue with it to see how it plays out over the long term. I’ll also continue to investigate other alternative treatments as I run across them but at this point I've pretty much researched what's out there. If anything else shows promise, I’ll bring it up in this journal.
Lex