By J.E. Block M.D., PhD, FACP
Over the almost half
century of doctoring, I have injected thousands of patients with local
pain syndromes, using dozens of medications. These were in nerve roots,
trigger/tender points, joints, tendon insertions and even into the
spinal canal. In the last twenty-five years, I have used SarapinR
as part of a healing, pain relieving cocktail. Although there are
other specialists that do similar injections such as pain specialists,
orthopedists, rheumatologists and prolotherapists, my medicines and or
technique seem to work better.
Prolotherapy that has
been used for over 60 years heals tendons, joints, and muscles by
injection of curative substances of which an irritant initiates the
therapeutic process by proliferation of new cells. It is also called
sclerotherapy, because it hardens limp tissue. Proliferants used in
Prolotherapy are basically substances that lead to new collagen
formation. Collagen is the naturally occurring protein in the body that
makes up ligaments and tendons. Prolotherapy solutions help strengthen
these structures by initiating the first step in the wound-healing
cascade, which is local inflammation. Once the inflammation has begun,
fibroblasts are stimulated. These are the cells that make the collagen.
New collagen is produced, making the ligaments and tendons stronger and
tighter. The solution I now employ contains Serapin from the pitcher
plant and 50% glucose as the proliferant. No cortisone is used in that
the inflammatory process is therapeutic and the steroid is
anti-inflammatory.
The Pitcher plant
(Sarracenia purpurea) is also known as Eve’s Cup, Fly Catcher,
Huntsman’s Cup, and Water Cup. It looks like a pitcher or water jug.
Like the Venus flytrap, it catches and “eats” small bugs. The Pitcher
plant has been used for stomach and digestive problems, for urinary
tract disorders, and formerly as a cure for smallpox.
Since it
medicinally has been used for several millennia, it has not been
evaluated by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or purity. All potential
risks and/or advantages of pitcher plant may not be known, but I have
found this to be an excellent and extremely safe medicine. SarapinR
is a biological medicine – which means it is derived from that is
naturally occurring (the Pitcher plant). It works by stopping pain
signals and initiate healing in the nerves. It does not affect any
other nerve functions or motor functions like local anesthesia such as
lidocaine.
Research published by
Bernard Judovich MD in 1935, who did not only original in vitro
research, but used this preparation in over 5,000 patients, found it
almost as a miracle drug. He was chief of the Intercostal Neuralgia
Clinic at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate Hospital. Later, he
taught C. Hollander, the father of modern day Rheumatology, who in the
late 1960s mentored my best friend Dr. Chuck Kahn. Dr. Hollander was
Chief of Rheumatology at the University of Penn Medical School for 3
decades and published the definitive textbook on joint injections. It
was Dr Kahn who taught me the science and the art of this technique 35
years ago. Toxicity tests on Serapin, published by William Bates MD in
the Ohio State Medical Journal in 1942, revealed that it was harmless
and no evidence of tissue coagulation or sclerosis could be found. In
that it is an alkaline extract, which releases an ammonium ion from the
organic matrix, it was theorized that this was the active ingredient in
the solution. It is known that this ion does affect nerve conduction,
but SarapinR does more.
Perhaps the plants special amino acid
content, because of the organisms it ingests, it was postulated that
there was another yet unidentified biological fraction of the plant that
is in the mix that is the active ingredient along with the ammonium
molecule. We know the C fibers in the nerve carries the pain sensation
and this chemical tells them not to. Acute pain is a useful mechanism
for us to know that there is something wrong that must be remedied. But
once it has been identified and there is no easy fix, then to quiet
these C fibers makes sense. SerapinR does not only that, but also initiates the healing process.
Science probably will never know the true mechanism of action because SarapinR lacks profitability and marketing. As a biological medicine that has been in use for over 70 years, SarapinR
cannot be patented. As a result, it can be made and sold on the open
market without the huge price mark-up that are afforded to patent
protected medicines. (Patent protection is the same reasons why branded
drugs are so much more expensive that generic drugs that have the same
chemical composition.) Not surprisingly, SarapinR has never
had the financial sponsorship of a large pharmaceutical company to pitch
it to doctors via the pharmaceutical company’s national network of drug
representatives. In that I never question success and my patients have
had much of that, despite the fact that more research is needed,
empirically, I use lots of it. Thank God there is a manufacturer. It
can be obtained from the High Chemical.
source:
http://docblock.com
http://www.sarapin.com/inj_clinical.html
http://docblock.com
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