New Document
 |
May 2012 - Issue 2056 The Newsletter Is Also Available HERE!
|
|
Our mission in this newsletter is to inform everyone on the Wiley Protocol about issues and concerns pertaining to our collective future!
WP Articles
|
What are they Telling you Can Happen with Long Term Estrogen Use? T.S. Wiley notes, "Once again these studies continue to be done on synthetic, statically dosed “drugs” with hormone like effects. Sadly, they are still fishing in the same pond. Now it appears that the longer women are on these, the higher the risks. Just like in 2002 when the WHI (Woman’s Health Initiative) was cancelled, both women and their doctors were made to feel afraid of the concept of “hormone replacement”, when their hormones were never “replaced” in the first place.”
In a landmark study, researchers have linked the long-term use of estrogen plus progesterone and estrogen-only hormone therapy with a higher risk for developing breast cancer.
"It's already been confirmed that patients shouldn't be undergoing estrogen plus progesterone hormone therapy (HT) for the long term," said Wendy Y. Chen, M.D., M.P.H., associate physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital and assistant professor in medicine at the Breast Cancer Oncology Center at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Mass. "What we found is that people should also be careful about longer-term use of estrogen-alone HT."
In previous studies, she said, researchers only evaluated risks associated with less than 10 years of HT use. Chen presented the findings at the AACR Annual Meeting 2012, held in Chicago March 31 -- April 4... Read More Which Country Has The Worst Preventable Death Ranking? How much longer can the United States ignore the need of health care for all? We are failing our population.
(Reuters) - France, Japan and Australia rated best and the United States worst in new rankings focusing on preventable deaths due to treatable conditions in 19 leading industrialized nations, researchers said on Tuesday.
If the U.S. health care system performed as well as those of those top three countries, there would be 101,000 fewer deaths in the United States per year, according to researchers writing in the journal Health Affairs.
Researchers Ellen Nolte and Martin McKee of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine tracked deaths that they deemed could have been prevented by access to timely and effective health care, and ranked nations on how they did.
They called such deaths an important way to gauge the performance of a country's health care system... Read More What Can Cause Breast Cancer in Younger Women? The first large-scale U.S.-based study to evaluate the link between an injectable form of progestin-only birth control and breast cancer risk in young women has found that recent use of a year or more doubles the risk. The results of the study, led by breast cancer epidemiologist Christopher I. Li, M.D., Ph.D., of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, are published online ahead of the April 15 print issue of Cancer Research.
While the contraceptive, called depo-medroxyprogesterone acetate, or DMPA, contains the same kind of progestin as the menopausal hormone-therapy regimen found by a Women's Health Initiative clinical trial to increase breast cancer risk among postmenopausal women, few studies have evaluated the link between DMPA use and breast cancer risk in younger women.
"While DMPA is widely used by women throughout the world, there are limited data on the association between DMPA and breast cancer incidence," said Li, a member of the Hutchinson Center's Public Health Sciences Division. "Our study adds to the body of knowledge from international studies conducted in a diverse group of countries -- Kenya, New Zealand, Thailand, Mexico and Costa Rica -- which have shown that one of the risks associated with DMPA use may be an increased risk of breast cancer," he said... Read More
Did you know that this Hormone is an Anti-Depressant? Testosterone, the primary male sex hormone, appears to have antidepressant properties, but the exact mechanisms underlying its effects have remained unclear. Nicole Carrier and Mohamed Kabbaj, scientists at Florida State University, are actively working to elucidate these mechanisms.
They've discovered that a specific pathway in the hippocampus, a brain region involved in memory formation and regulation of stress responses, plays a major role in mediating testosterone's effects, according to their new report in Biological Psychiatry.
Compared to men, women are twice as likely to suffer from an affective disorder like depression. Men with hypogonadism, a condition where the body produces no or low testosterone, also suffer increased levels of depression and anxiety. Testosterone replacement therapy has been shown to effectively improve mood.
Although it may seem that much is already known, it is of vital importance to fully characterize how and where these effects are occurring so that scientists can better target the development of future antidepressant therapies
To advance this goal, the scientists performed multiple experiments in neutered adult male rats. The rats developed depressive-like behaviors that were reversed with testosterone replacement. ... Read More
argaiv1129
What's Some New Advice on Steroid Use? Glucocorticoids -- a type of steroid hormone -- are widely used in a number of medical disorders. Worldwide, it is estimated that almost 5% of postmenopausal women take glucocorticoids. As well as having specific benefits, Glucocorticoids have side effects. One of the potentially most important is that glucocorticoid use is associated with bone loss, which is most rapid in the first 3-6 months of treatment, potentially leading to serious complications and osteoporosis in many postmenopausal women.
The International Osteoporosis Foundation, along with the European Society for Calcified Tissue, launched new guidance on glucocorticoid use at the European Congress on Osteoporosis and Osteoarthritis (which took place in Bordeaux from March 21 -- 24, 2012). Given the special relevance to postmenopausal women, the International Menopause Society (IMS) is supporting the publication of the guidance
Dr Tobie de Villiers, President of the International Menopause Society (IMS), commented, "Bone loss is a concern for all women around the age of menopause, and especially for the almost 5% of postmenopausal women worldwide who take oral glucocorticoid therapy. The IMS encourages women to be aware of this potentially dangerous side-effect of therapy and to discuss what precautions can be taken with their doctors." ... Read More Doctors Change Names of Diseases When Vaccines Do Not Work Although this newsletter is not the correct forum for an in depth vaccination discussion, we believe the following article merits posting. We’re living in a world where it is extremely important for parents to get educated in order to make proper choices for their babies. Please share accordingly.
Doctors around the world are being faced with children catching the diseases they have been vaccinated against. Rather than diagnosing these children correctly, professionals have discovered that the doctors are giving the diseases new names. This suggests a cover up is going on and the vaccinations we are all being told are safe and effective are in fact completely useless.
Vaccinations are now being given to children to keep them safe from every disease known to man. There appears to be a vaccination for everything from polio to a broken finger nail. However, many professionals now believe that the vaccinations are actually causing the diseases they are supposed to prevent ... Read More The Wiley Protocol In Four Continents! The Wiley Protocols are now available on four continents, North America, Asia, Australia and Europe, including 24 states.
What Are Your Questions? This is your newsletter and we want to hear from you. Tell us what questions and answers you would like to see addressed in the Wiley Protocol Newsletters. Write to
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
|
 “When you lose your instincts you go extinct”. TS Wiley
T.S. Wiley newly published paper in the AIP Physics Journal AIP Advances (Vol. 2, Issue 1) "The theory of modulated hormone therapy for the treatment of breast cancer in pre- and post-menopausal women", has been published online on March 29, 2012 Read the abstract Read the Paper
New! Bianca Tyler interviews TS Wiley
TS Wiley on Holy Hormones
Autism up 78% in a Single Decade
Aspartame, Brain Cancer & the FDA Approval Process (Nutrasweet AminoSweet Sucralose Diet Coke Zero)
Dr. Russell Blaylock Interview on MSG and Brain-Damaging Excito-toxins MSG
Food Matters
Questioning Organic Egg Labeling Standards
Click for larger image
Click for larger image
Click for larger image
Please visit our new Face Book page with many new pictures. Please like and share with others and we will reciprocate. Thanks.
|
| |
Wiley Protocol for Men™ – Biomimetic DHEA and Testosterone Restoration. As men get older they often notice a decline in their competitive interests, sex drive and overall enthusiasm for life. Most men experience androgen and testosterone deficiency that goes unrecognized. Medical research has shown that restoring androgens, to optimum levels can provide significant improvement in mood, increased energy and sexual function. Restoring the body's normal balance of hormones can make a man feel strong, healthy, energized and happy again. Wiley Protocol Testosterone™ for Women – Biomimetic Testosterone Restoration. As a women ages her libido and desire for sex often diminishes. Testosterone can plays a key role in libido, energy, and immune function in women. Produced by the ovaries, testosterone, over the course of the menstrual cycle, has a rhythm in women. Testosterone levels are highest for a woman in the early twenties, but by the time she approaches and enters menopause there may be a testosterone deficiency. The replacement of estrogen alone may not correct loss of muscle tone, absent sex drive, or general lack of mental function. The Wiley Protocol Testosterone cream for women is biomimetic and replicates feminine testosterone hormone rhythms. Wiley Protocol Thyroid™ – Biomimetic Thyroid Hormone Restoration. If you require thyroid medication, you may now choose rhythmic dosing using Wiley Protocol Thyroid instead of your static dosing in pill form. Wiley believes that the traditional dosing of thyroid formulas may interfere with the rhythms of the original Wiley Protocol Wiley Protocol Thyroid is the only Biomimetic thyroid therapy on the market today. It uses the rhythms of nature to mimic the manner in which thyroid hormone occurs in a healthy body. It will not interfere with the original Wiley Protocol.
|
|
|
|
|
|
WP Testimonials For More Information Call 1-800-929-WILEY Carl and Jenny Youngblood Carl and I have been married for almost 31 years. He is 68 and I am 55 years. I got hit hard by menopause when I was 51 - was really, really miserable with hot flashes, depression, couldn't sleep, sudden anger at little things, itching, sore muscles - just really didn't want to get out of bed in the mornings. I couldn't figure out what was wrong with me; I had always been so happy, smiling all the time.
I saw a book by Suzanne Somers, The Sexy Years, and was amazed that she was talking about all of my symptoms! After talking to a friend in our organic co-op, I made an appt with Dr. Ridley and began the Wiley Protocol. What a change! Within two weeks, I felt so much more like myself. And it has been getting better and better... Read More... Penny Basso Bio-identical hormones (the Wiley Protocol) changed my life. I had gained 30+ pounds, felt like hell and nothing I tried seemed to help. A couple years ago I heard about them from a friend. I made an appointment with Gretchen Jones and felt like a new person the very first month! Some of my symptoms had... Read More...
|

Patricia Diorio Talks About the Miracle of the Wiley Protocol

Melinda Renna Now has Peace of Mind on the Wiley Protocol
|
|
|
|
|
WP Providers Are Talking For More Information Call 1-800-929-WILEY A Talk With T.S. Wiley and Dr. Julie Taguchi on Bioidentical Hormones (circa 2009 and updated by Dr. Taguchi 2012) Hi welcome to Sustainable Health. My name is T.S. Wiley. We're going to find the experts and the people in control of your health and ask the hard inquiries. Dr. Taguchi is far more unique as an interview because of her cutting edge use of hormone in cancer patients after the standard of care treatment. Dr. Taguchi, welcome. Dr. Taguchi: Good morning T.S. thank you for having me on your program today. T.S Wiley: It is an exceptional occasion to be receiving an oncologist here on the program that is far more than prepared to share her insights about the part of hormone replacement or significantly, the bio-identical hormone replacement therapy. Share with us your knowledge and growth with regards to your practice as an oncologist. Dr. Taguchi: And for those who aren't aware, T.S. Wiley and I met because of a patient. I had a patient called Dr. Anyway, he was an 89 year old man that had just moved from New Orleans to be with his two daughters; he was a doctor himself. He had every medical problem known to man. He was dealing with numbness of his legs and hands, his muscles became weak, his heart muscles too. He was diagnosed with transitional cell cancer of the urethra or the tube that travels between the kidney and bladder. He had been treated two times before I met him and supposedly was in remission... Read More Interview with a Wiley Protocol Provider For More Information Call 1-800-929-WILEY We asked Dr. Ching Chen, MD who practices in Capitola, CA how she found out about the Wiley Protocol and why she has chosen the Wiley Protocol for her patients, which she has been prescribing for over seven years. In addition she shared with us two of her most successful Wiley stories. “In 2005 one of my patients who owned a local book store came to me with TS Wiley’s books and said, “I want this.” I proceeded to read her books and thought, I had never heard of a BHRT protocol with such high doses. Shortly after this I heard TS Wiley speak in San Francisco. I began calling her every few weeks to ask her how to manage symptoms that patients presented at different times of their cycles, and would always come away with an approach that felt like thinking outside the box. I had never met anyone who thought like she did. I was quite intrigued, but it was when she explained “rhythm” that I had an “aha” moment. It was all about the communication signals, and I then became one of the first doctors to regularly prescribe the Wiley Protocol. I helped my pharmacist, Rey Reyhani, of Lauden’s Pharmacy to hold a Wiley lecture for the local women, and then in 2006 he became the first and only Wiley registered pharmacy in the Santa Cruz, CA area. Currently I work part-time practicing functional and regenerative medicine, and do not accept insurance. When it comes to HRT, I only prescribe bio-identicals hormones, and over the years I’ve maintained over 100 women on the protocol. The patients who come to me have already usually seen several physicians within their health insurance network, and feel increasingly stressed and frustrated that no one is listening to them.
I have a couple of great Wiley stories and have many other case studies on my website, www.balancedapproaches.com. One of my patients, an artist, came down with severe vertigo when she went into menopause that literally stopped her from working for over 2 years. She came to me prior to the Wiley Protocol and I had put her on an estrogen patch which actually triggered the vertigo within minutes. We used static dosing until I became familiar with the Wiley Protocol and recommended that she consider giving it a try. That was 7 years ago! At our visit last year, she told me that "this protocol has made all the difference in the world...I could not survive if someone took it away from me". She has had dramatic improvement in her vertigo attacks on the Wiley Protocol. She still experiences very minor dizziness periodically when she is stressed, eating excess sugars/junk food, and/or there is a barometric pressure change, but told me that it's not anywhere to the degree of what she experienced prior to starting the Wiley Protocol. She wishes to stay on the protocol indefinitely. In fact, she recently accidentally got off track with her protocol and used the wrong doses for several days, and noticed immediate flares of vertigo. They resolved just as suddenly, when she realized her dosing error and corrected it. Another patient came to me at 44 years of age with severe migraines, heavy, erratic menstrual bleeds, severe low back pain due to a herniated disc in the lumbosacral region, and perimenopausal symptoms. She had already been experiencing night sweats since the age of 39, and over the past few years, also began to experience recurrent bladder infections, achy joints, hair loss, palpitations, and dry vagina. Her back pain was of great concern to her, especially given that she had already undergone a previous anterior cervical fusion at the age of 42 for a herniated disc in her neck due to a skiing accident. She was now in chronic pain due to her lower back herniated disc, despite taking multiple narcotic pain medications, along with muscle relaxants, anti-inflammatory medications, and a physical therapy program. In fact, her lower back pain was so pronounced that her neurosurgeon recommended surgery again.
It was clear to me that many of her symptoms were related to peri-menopausal hormone fluctuations and/or deficiency. I placed her on the Wiley Protocol. At her first follow-up appointment several months later, she stated that she had been doing much better. Her monthly menses were now normal and occurring on-time. Her night sweats, vaginal dryness, achy joints, and recurrent bladder infections had all resolved, and her palpitations were only occasional now. Her migraines were much improved, and she was only experiencing them during low estrogen and/or high progesterone days. Her low back pain had also improved so much that she was able to taper off all of her pain medications! After a few adjustments at her next follow-up visit, she also reported a follow-up appointment with her neurosurgeon, and relayed to me that he was "absolutely shocked that I was able to avoid surgery, and to be able to get off all of my pain medications!" Her migraine headaches were now occurring no more than once per month, as opposed to previously, when she was experiencing 7-10 headaches per month prior to her hormone program. She was back at work as a teacher, and planned to have a follow-up pelvic ultrasound within the next few months to monitor for stability of her fibroid tumors.
It’s my professional opinion that her situation demonstrates that peri-menopausal symptoms can begin fairly early in some women, even in their late 30's, and that synthetic birth control hormone manipulation methods (which she had started on) do not always work. In fact, they can exacerbate certain symptoms, such as headaches, depending on their estrogen to progestin ratios. Her previous migraines were likely related to estrogen deficiency and/or fluctuation, which, in turn, affect the levels of multiple other neurotransmitters in the brain generated during a migraine inflammatory complex. The dramatic improvement in her low back pain was likely related to improved hydration status in her discs, along with anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective effects of the estrogen, coupled to progesterone's ability to facilitate myelination of her nerves.
I look forward to something being published or a study being completed so we would have much more credibility in the medical world.” Ask An Expert For More Information Call 1-800-929-WILEY Dr Courtney Ridley answers your question: Q: I've been on the Wiley Protocol for five or six years and this is the first time I've been moved to finally ask this question, simply because, with the onset of my period this month, I AM feeling a bit crabby. Can we expect to experience some normal "reasonable" measure of mood fluctuation on the Wiley Protocol, even though our hormones are so well-controlled? A: Mood fluctuation is geared into the cycle in some ways. Women are supposed to be a little edgy during progesterone but it should be mild. We get into trouble today because of all of the other diversions. Progesterone is quickly moved into cortisol as part of the stress response. Estrogen in reproductive women is blunted and curves flattened as a part of this response as well. This affects the overall progesterone response and the exaggerated movement of the hormonal fluctuation creates the syndromes we are all familiar with. I am excited that it has taken six years for you to feel any of this. This suggests your life has been fairly stable and that your hormone dosing has been well prescribed. You are correct when you say "reasonable". If it becomes unreasonable, dosing adjustments may be needed.
|
|
|
|
T.S. Wiley Books. For More Information Call 1-800-929-WILEY
 |
|
 |
|
Lights Out
This fascinating, thought-provoking study discusses the central role of sleep in our lives. After probing the scientific literature, T.S. Wiley and Formby, researchers at the Sansum Medical Research Institute, conclude that, "the disastrous slide in the health of the American people corresponds to the increase in light-generating night activities and the carbohydrate consumption that follows.
Read More...
|
|
Sex Lies and Menopause
Turning thirty years of medical and cultural wisdom on its head, Sex, Lies, and Menopause challenges both the medical establishment and modern feminists to prove that menopause does not have to be deadly. Read More...View Reader Reviews!
|
|
|
|
|
F.Y.I... We have been told that there are many pharmacies around the country claiming to make the Wiley Protocol. Unless your hormones come in our color coded packaging (green and purple for women, blue and burgundy for men), it says Wiley all over and the pharmacy has our sign in their window, they have not registered with us to make the authentic Wiley Protocol. You would be getting a generic product that will not stand up to federal scrutiny for scientific study.Please make sure your provider abides by our patent and trademarks and sends your prescription to a Wiley Registered Pharmacy.
|
|
|
|
|
* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
|
|
|
|
|
© Copyright T.S. Wiley and The Wiley Protocol Systems, 2011. All Rights Reserved. This content may be copied in full, as long as copyright, contact, and creation information is given, only if used only in a non-for-profit format. If possible, The Wiley Protocol Systems would also appreciate an endorsement and encouragement to subscribe to the newsletter. If any other use is desired, written permission is required.
|
Wiley Systems Santa Fe, NM 1-800-929-WILEY
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
|
|