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Home > Blog > October 2010 > After 17 Years of Bad Medicine - Jim Breaks Out of the Trap

After 17 Years of Bad Medicine - Jim Breaks Out of the Trap

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Mr. Jim Smith, 17 years a heart patient, was treated with VesCell stem cells in Bangkok in April, 2010. Three months later, Jim shows signs of improvement.  He says, “I feel more vital, with brighter eyes, mind, and spirit. I'm virtually rendered speechless to describe my new lease of life.”
His journey was a hard one – 17 years of ill-health, medical testing leading to questionable diagnoses and useless harmful drugs. “I have a long history of heart disease, which began noticeably in December 1993,” he confided.  “My condition is caused by a family history of vascular diseases, hypertension, hypercholesteremia, and severe sleep apnea. Unfortunately, I’d inherited all these risk factors and, had I known earlier, I wouldn’t have felt the compunction, much less the devastating effects of heart disease, had I not added 18 years of cigarette smoking to the deadly mix.” “Sadly, I was told by a heart specialist that even a perfectly healthy lifestyle wouldn’t have prevented me from having a heart attack somewhere in my 50s, but smoking had definitely accelerated the process.“ “Only a month after my 30th birthday, I was rushed to the local hospital’s emergency department twice in four days with severe, pulsating pain in my chest, arms, and shoulders.”
 
On this trip to the hospital, Jim was incorrectly diagnosed with esophageal reflux, but four years later, after suffering the same symptoms, he found out he’d really had two heart attacks, not acid reflux, and was now suffering another. “This time I was rushed to a different hospital, where I was correctly diagnosed with a severe heart attack caused by two completely blocked heart arteries and a third blocked at 90%. The attending cardiologist told me in exact terms, that I’d require emergency quadruple bypass surgery to restore blood flow to my heart, so obviously I agreed. In fact, I was ecstatic to hear that I would survive. “
 
“So, within a few hours on a very early Sunday morning, a medical team had congregated to perform the grueling five-hour procedure. Odd perhaps, but I was feeling happy and excited about the surgery.” “Unfortunately, bypass surgery couldn’t repair the severe scar left on my heart by the heart attacks and the damaged tissue had left me constantly fatigued and breathless for the next 12 years.” During those years, Jim reinvented himself. Following the surgery, he physically worked on his condition, working out, trying to lead a normal life. Jim enrolled as a full time student, graduated, and began private practice as a psychologist, hoping to share his knowledge on the subject of the humanities in a broader, refreshing manner.
 
But then his whole world was overturned. “In December 2008, I was playing cricket at a Jimtmas gathering with my university colleagues, when I suddenly collapsed in a heap. I’d eaten lunch and consumed two light beers on a warm summer’s day, shortly before running between the wickets and heading for the outfield. It was then that my colleagues noticed me “go down like a cowboy in a Western gun battle.”
 
“Amazingly, it seems the stars had aligned for me that day, when I was saved by a quick-thinking and skilled friend and colleague. She’d resuscitated me within seconds of going down and miraculously kept the blood flowing through my brain with ongoing CPR, until both the fire brigade and ambulance had arrived a few minutes later.“ “An hour of resuscitation onsite undoubtedly appears to have helped convince me to hold onto life, so once I was fully stabilized, the paramedics immediately transported me to a hospital’s intensive care unit. I remained there for 24 hours, covered by an ice blanket, which aimed to cool my body and reduce my heart’s function to a bare minimum. I remained in hospital for nine days and had a defibrillator fitted in my chest. “Having narrowly escaping this time, Jim had thought he was free and clear, but in 2009, he felt he had hit bottom.
 
“Following my last VF in December 2009, I’d become increasingly helpless and hopeless in the need to control both my heart’s predictability and overall quality of life. The sense of helplessness I experienced with taking drugs to curb one problem, only to have them cause others, had left me feeling claustrophobic and believing that perhaps my relatively young life at 46 had reached its tether. I began to feel as though my light was dimming slowly, but markedly.” After much personal introspection, years of pills, medical appointments, and treatments,  Jim’s internet search brought him to adult stem cells and their use in treatment of heart disease through VesCell, a process of using one’s own blood to create stem cells. He had a glimmer of hope.
 
Jim contacted VesCell in early 2010, seeking options for his heart condition. “I have a deep concern and personal interest in stem cell therapy because of my heart condition, so I wished to explore the possibilities the procedure may hold for me. “

Jim submitted his medical records, was approved and began to prepare for is journey to Bangkok for treatment. “Despite my knowledge of the hospital’s credentials, once I’d arrived there in mid April this year, I was almost stunned to find an amazingly modern hospital with ever-attending, pleasant, and courteous staff members. Just arriving at the Bangkok hospital had made me feel better, so I was sure that my up-lifted mood would play some role in improving my chances of optimal improvement after the long-awaited procedure.” Jim’s treatment was deemed a success, and he returned home to his everyday life to wait and see what happened.
 
“It was May 28th, exactly one month from the date of my ASC injection. I remember leaving the house that morning and, while heading for the train station, it had dawned on me that for the first time in maybe 15 years, I hadn’t propped myself on the bed for 10 minutes to meditate. Morning meditation was a ritual I’d developed to help me wade through the day.”
 
“I realized that I hadn’t sat down to meditate that morning, because I hadn’t needed to. As I noted in a few of the testimonials I’d read early this year, the patient had experienced symptom relief as early as a month from the day of his/her procedure. And now, exactly one month after my procedure, it had happened to me! You wouldn’t believe how the treatment just crept up on me, when, as if by magic, I was without fatigue for the first time in maybe 15 years. Not to mention, the palpitations had all but ceased at the same time, while the associated cough had disappeared, and some blood had come rushing back to my face.” “My breathlessness also seemed to have all but disappeared, and here I am at the end of September, 2010, still feeling the amazing effects of VesCell. There’s only one more detail, of course, and that’s whether or not my new stem cells will hone in and repair the problematical scar tissue that’s causing the VF’s. I suppose we’ll just have to wait and see in time and remain open to the possibilities, yet again.” Jim just had his six month checkup back in Bangkok and his stem cell cardiologist confirmed his results.
 
“This is a revolutionary treatment and I take this opportunity to congratulate you all for potentially making a profoundly positive impact on those with the greatest needs of hope and life, with “a deep concern and personal interest in stem cell therapy because of my heart condition.”
 
VesCell™ uses a patient’s own adult stem cells to treat Heart Disease and is a viable alternative for patients who either cannot undergo or choose not to undergo the standard treatment such as Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting (CABG), heart transplants, or receiving maximal therapy. The company focused on using stem cells from the patient’s own blood in order to treat a variety of disorders, especially cardiovascular diseases. The company has developed a proprietary stem cell technology called VesCell™ that is currently being used by hospitals in Thailand to treat patients with heart disease. The company has treatment centers in Latin America and Europe.

www.vescell.com
Posted: 10/27/2010 3:22:39 PM by Don Margolis | with 0 comments
Filed under: Brain, Research, Stem Cells, Therapy, Treatment, Vascular Diseases


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