Lon
Well-known Member
- Location
- Central California
Many diseases and conditions can be caught and treated early before they develop into chronic & potentially fatal conditions or diseases.
There has been many times that I have equated the body and health issues to that of my automobile. So, using that mentality, this would be like hooking up the analyzer to my car to determine what the problem is and hoping that something shows up, so it can be repaired. Same with tests. For example, hypothetically speaking, if I have a severe pain in my lower left abdomen and it won't go away and I go see a doctor, he may order blood work and a CAT scan. If nothing shows up, he may progress to the next step by treating what he "thinks" it may be. Like maybe a kidney stone or diverticulitis, or whatever. After that, it becomes finding the problem by process of elimination. Same with a car. I have a knock in my engine. They put it on an analyzer and nothing shows up and there are no codes to check. The mechanic replaces a part that he "thinks" may be the issue. Even if replacing the part isn't the problem, the owner is still paying for the part and labor. If that doesn't fix it, he continues down the same road of replacing parts by process of elimination. If after a few or in some cases, several hundreds of dollars, he still can't find the problem, the owner pulls the plug and says, "That's enough already." Now, I have a $600.00 bill and I also still have the knock. So, I either put up with it, or unlike my body, I can trade it in for another car and this issue can become someone else's problem. Sounds dumb, I know, but it is in some ways comparable.
Many diseases and conditions can be caught and treated early before they develop into chronic & potentially fatal conditions or diseases.
May be a good time to ask those of you knowledgeable: I have had CBC work done by at least 4 different labs. Many of the "tolerance bands" ranges differ from lab to lab, by as much as 10% or more. To give examples, I'll have to dig out a few result sheets, but right now, what can be said about one lab's result indicating "out of range" by 5%, whereas the other lab allows a much broader range, and the same reading with them is WITHIN range? Whose do you use?
In my case, my doctor scheduled a bone marrow biopsy, 10 years ago. I refused it, based on what I said above. Would you have submitted to the big needle? (And, had to pay for it, no insurance). imp
Of course lab values are a huge part of diagnosing.. what do you want them to use.. telepathy?
ie production line medicine.
Not sure what you mean. How are MDs supposed to know if a person is diabetic, or what the glucose level of a diabetic IS without the Blood Glucose test? There was a time they tasted the urine of patients.. you aren't suggesting we go back to that are you?