heart bypass

HEART ATTACKS STRIKE WITHOUT WARNING!
A HEART BYPASS OR ANGIOPLASTY IS NOT YOUR ONLY OPTION

cure atherosclerosis

YOU ARE LIKELY READING THIS BECAUSE YOU OR SOMEONE YOU CARE ABOUT HAS CORONARY HEART DISEASE, OR HAS BEEN ADVISED TO UNDERGO HEART BYPASS SURGERY.

YOUR LIFE  MAY DEPEND UPON WHAT YOU DO NEXT
YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO MAKE THE WRONG CHOICES

Surprisingly, your doctor may not be the best person to advise you at this juncture. This is not because your doctor is a bad person or because he or she wants you to suffer or die.

Quite the opposite. Your doctor is most likely a caring person who intends to give you the very best medical advice and help that they can.

The problem unfortunately  lies deep within the medical profession. There is a great deal of incorrect information that has been taught based on a fundamental misconception, and this incorrect information continues to be taught. Generations of doctors are now so imbued with this faulty information that they actually defend it against anyone who suggests that it might be incorrect.

There is every possibility that your own doctor truly believes the information that they are giving to you is the best course of action for you to take,
but before you take that advice, I would urge you to at least read what one eminent heart surgeon with 25 years of pioneering heart surgery experience has to report on why an angioplasty or heart bypass might be the very last thing that you need. Surgery is NOT the only cure for atherosclerosis or blocked arteries.
You can avoid heart bypass surgery.


CLICK HERE TO READ>>HEART BYPASS REPORT<<CLICK HERE TO READ
 

THIS IS WHAT HAPPENED TO ME - A TRUE STORY

I was 45 years old, male, physically fit and I did not smoke.

I ate what I considered a fairly healthy low fat diet. I am not perfect and occasionally I ate "bad stuff" too.

I had a regular exercise regime and a job that required a good deal of physical activity.

I had a series of heart attacks which landed me in hospital. My condition refused to stabilize and I remained in hospital for several weeks.

Everyone, doctors included, agreed that I was too young and too "healthy" to have a heart attack, but nonetheless, I was scheduled for surgery.

I received an angioplasty to two arteries and a stent to the third. I was also put on a program of warfarin (rat poison) and a statin drug.

Following my release from hospital I was the model of correct exercise and very low fat eating. I took my medication exactly as prescribed. I really did not want to die.

One year later, another heart attack and this time a pacemaker was installed.

Everyone agreed that I was indeed very unlucky. I was the exception that proved the rule.

Over the next few years I was not terribly well  My blood pressure went very high and even with prescribed drugs it stayed well above the normal range.

Then horror of horrors, another very serious heart attack. I nearly died with that one, but due to some fast action by the ambulance service I survived.

I was scheduled for another angiogram, but this time my luck had run out. The blockages were too severe and I needed a triple bypass.

The surgeon was great and did a very neat job. It is strange that no one tells you just how much the recovery from having your sternum cut open hurts. Well it does.

The surgeon said he was very pleased with the operation as a whole, but the bad news was that he could only bypass two of the three blockages. The third was literally where the artery joined the heart.

Great!!!

It was a little after this that I began to research what could be done for someone in my situation. This is when I found the work of an eminent heart surgeon who seemed to disagree with the notion that a bypass or angioplasty are the only ways to treat heart disease.

I read the whole report and decided to take his advice. What choice did I have?
I am now 59 years old and I feel as healthy as a twenty year old. I do not need any medication and have not suffered any heart related problems since taking the advice.

The batteries for my pacemaker have long since run out and although I have considered having the thing removed completely, I really do not want to go under the knife ever again - so I just ignore the fact that it is even there.

You may be able to avoid bypass surgery. Coronary heart disease does not need to
mean that your life is over because it really is possible to reverse and even cure atherosclerosis.
Your goal should be to cure blocked arteries, regain your heart health, reduce high blood pressure and avoid a heart bypass if at all possible.

One last thing, do not be obsessed with your attempts to lower cholesterol, it may
not be quite the sillent killer that it has been portayed as.

If you would like to find out more about your true options, you might save yourself from what I went through by clicking on the link below.



TELL ME ABOUT THE ALTERNATIVES TO HEART BYPASS SURGERY

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