Review of Discovering the Nature of Longevity

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Kajenca1552+
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Latest Review: Discovering the Nature of Longevity by Douglas Mulhall

Review of Discovering the Nature of Longevity

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[Following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of "Discovering the Nature of Longevity" by Douglas Mulhall.]
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4 out of 5 stars
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If you are interested in heart disease, treatment history, and breakthrough innovations, this book will interest you. The author, Douglas Mulhall, takes a comprehensive look at the causes of heart disease, standard therapies, and the uphill battle new technologies and innovative thinkers have in getting procedures to market.

Discovering the Nature of Longevity discusses how mainstream Western medicine is driven by profit, pharmaceutical companies, and old-school treatment standards. The regulatory process in the USA is myopic in its approach to focusing on single medical conditions and not the broader scope of inter-relationships of multiple diagnoses, which stalls the advancement of new inventions and approaches to treatments. The process is further bogged down with expensive testing requirements for clinical trials that block the benefits of these new therapies for patients.

The book discusses the effectiveness of a new invention called NanobacTX in treating heart disease and how cardiologists report its effectiveness in improving heart health. It has proven effective with hardening of the arteries due to calcification, yet it is unavailable because of regulatory testing. There is an in-depth look at the damage heavy metal build-up in the body contributes to the calcification process. The book further discusses the connection of diabetes to heart health, the effect of chronic inflammation, and how prolonged stress causes oxidative stress. Many of these are environmentally linked to heart health and are direct causes of heart disease, yet overlooked by mainstream medical doctors.

The author states, “health care is set up for profit, not curing diseases,” and suggests that big pharma relies on a steady income from drugs and a “standard of care” has been set up by physicians to support that system. This system produces “Valley of Death” as a barrier to effective low-cost therapies like nanotargeting and intravenous chelation as effective options for heart patients.

The book further states that the calcification of arteries is not just related to heart disease but also linked to brain calcification. It discusses how calcium deposits in the pineal gland affect brain cancer, stroke and the possible connection to Alzheimer’s and dementia.

In summary, the book points out new ways of looking at heart disease, contributing factors, and new, innovative treatments. There are detailed case studies supporting these claims and the results of many doctors who have experienced success using them on cardiac patients. I rate this book 4 out of 5. The book is well-written, with supporting references embedded throughout the text. Although I appreciate the attention to detail, this became annoying, as every time I touched a page, it took me to a reference site and took me away from the content I was reading. I found only one grammatical error, and although it was clinical in context, it was an easily read book.

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Discovering the Nature of Longevity
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