|
"Disease" means poisoning. All so-called "disease" gives evidence of being
caused by toxins. Trall said: "There are aside from accidents - mechanical
injuries - but two sources of disease in the world, viz, poisons or
impurities taken into the system from without, and effete or waste matters
retained." All the causes of "disease," he said, "may be summed up under
the heads of impure or obstructing materials (toxemias), and exhausted
nervous power" (enervation), due to "unphysiological voluntary habits."
Thus, we see that he, along with Graham and Jennings, recognized the
office of enervation and toxemia in producing pathology and in occasioning
biogony. The chief difference between our present conception of cause and
those entertained by these men is the greater emphasis which we place upon
endogenous toxins, an emphasis credit for which justly belongs to Tilden.
In the following elaboration of the development of enervation and toxemia
I shall follow Tilden very closely, quoting and borrowing freely from his
works.
Life is a master drama of nutrition and drainage under the control of the
nervous system. The blood and lymph, which constitute one grand
circulating medium of the body, carry food, water, oxygen and secretions
to every cell in the body and carry away the waste from these cells. This
ever-flowing river of life makes it possible for the cells to live and
function. They cannot live if separated from such a medium.
Just as a dead body, deprived of its circulating fluids and functions, is
no longer a body; so, an organ deprived of its nutritive medium no longer
exists. All living cells depend absolutely on the medium in which they are
immersed. They ceaselessly modify this medium and are, in turn, modified
by it.
Everything that combines to make ideal health rests on a basis of normal
blood and lymph and nerve-energy. As certainly as all the attributes of
health rest on one fundamental physiological basis - full nerve-energy and
pure blood - so, too, but conversely, all so-called "diseases" rest upon
one fundamental physiological impairment - enervation and toxemia.
If a piece of tissue is cultivated in a flask in the laboratory, it
requires a volume of liquid equal to two thousand times its own volume, if
it is not to be poisoned within a few days by its own waste. It requires,
also, a gaseous atmosphere at least ten times larger than its fluid
medium. The cells and tissues of the body have the same need for a fluid
medium and gaseous atmosphere if they are to live and function.
However, due to the marvelous efficiency of the heart and arteries in
circulating the body's fluids and gases, the lungs and digestive system in
replenishing its nutrients, and the kidneys, lungs, colon, liver and skin
in excreting its wastes, the body is able to live in a fluid medium of
only about six or seven quarts instead of the 52,S35 gallons which would
be required if it were reduced to small bits and cultivated in flasks. The
importance of efficient respiration, circulation, digestion, and
elimination--nutrition and drainage--are apparent; and, since we know
their efficiency depends upon the integrity of the nervous system, the
importance of maintaining normal nerve energy is doubly impressed upon us.
Waste products of the cells - catabolites - are set free by the tissues and
organs in the course of function. These wastes are poisonous. This means
that the normal functions of life give rise to toxic residues which poison
the body if not rapidly eliminated. A normal human being develops enough
waste products in a few hours to kill him unless they are eliminated.
These wastes are constantly formed and constantly present, and, in normal
amounts, are necessary to health, acting as physiological stimulants. For
instance, carbon dioxide stimulates the respiratory center that regulates
breathing; oxygen has a depressing effect on this center.
When, due to impaired excretion, these ashes of the body are allowed to
accumulate beyond the normal amount they become foes of life. Their first
effect is that of overstimulation. The retained toxin becomes an ally of
enervating habits by overstimulating the organism. Overstimulation is
always followed by enervation. Thus there is established a vicious circle,
and the longer it runs the farther and farther the victim is carried from
the normal healthy standard. Finally there comes a time when the
intoxication overflows and resistance is crushed, natural immunities are
wiped out, and--death.
The blood stream is being continuously fed by a stream of toxic material
draining from the cells. It is true that poison is "never" found in it,
except in "harmless" quantities. If the blood is not toxic, it is because
the urine is; because the kidneys are incessantly removing toxins from it.
There is less toxic matter in the blood than in the organs. That the
urinary constituents are highly toxic has been shown experimentally.
Every twenty-four hours the blood receives from the cells half enough
material to kill the entire body. Wherever the processes of life are being
performed, toxins are found for they result from the normal or
physiological processes.
The products of life without oxygen are especially toxic. An increase in
oxygen, though it slightly increases the products of disassimilation (catabolites),
renders the products much less toxic, due to better oxidation. Muscular
work in the open air reduces the toxicity of the blood by three-tenths.
Due to more thorough oxidation of organic substances when exercising in
the open air, the blood is rendered less toxic and remains so during the
repose which follows.
It is as essential to body health that systemic drainage be perfect, as
civic drainage is essential to community health. So long as the bowels
drain the stomach, liver and mucous glands, and thereby cleanse the blood;
and the kidneys drain the blood in a direct manner, conveying the waste,
with all its toxins, directly to the outside world; and the skin and lungs
drain the blood of poisonous gases--so long as such drainage is adequate
the body will remain purified. There will be no self-poisoning.
The term toxemia carries its own meaning. It is from the Greek, toxicon,
'poison,' and haima, 'blood'; poison in the blood. There are many ways for
the blood to become poisoned and we do not employ the term, toxemia, to
blanket all of these forms of poisoning.
Despite their efforts to find such, medical men have not discovered a
specific etiology for most so-called "diseases." Even their so-called
specific causes must have an ally and hence are not specific--indeed, they
are not true causes at all. If a central cause can be found, to which all
other causes are subsidiary, the confusion existing in the fields of
etiology and pathology, and which now perplexes and leads into blind
pockets, the best men in the profession, would end and order would be
brought out of the present chaos. It is this central cause which we claim
to have found and to which we apply the term, toxemia. Dr. Tilden's
opinion that the medical profession would long ago have discovered toxemia
had not Pasteur shunted them into the blind-alley of bacteriology may be
correct; for, the germ theory has certainly blinded the profession to many
important truths.
Toxemia - Part 2
This section is from the book "The Hygienic System:
Orthopathy", by Herbert M. Shelton.
Back To Top
|