Rejuvenation feels goodI spent 6 weeks this winter in Yuma, Arizona going across the border to San Luis, Sonora. Mexico, to the Coyle Clinic getting chelated, Hydrogen Peroxide treatments, and Plaquex. It's been years since I felt this good!
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A life-saving treatmentHerbert Ham has been coming to the Coyle Clinic for many years. Before he started taking chelation treatments, he had two heart attacks, and his doctor told him he needed bypass surgery or he would die. He could barely walk a hundred feet without being exhausted. He decided against bypass surgery.
Before Mr. Ham came to the Coyle Clinic he had gone for chelation treatments at a place in Scottsdale, Arizona, but he wasn't satisfied with the results. He had heard of the Coyle Clinic and decided to get chelation treatments here instead. Here he is 25 years later, still going strong and still getting treatments. Last year he hiked to the bottom of the Grand Canyon and back. He gives Dr. Coyle and the chelation treatments he's received at her clinic, credit for saving his life. |
Excerpt from the book "Forty Something Forever" A Consumers Guide to Chelation Therapy and other Heart-Savers: by Harold and Arline Breche
One day at the Coyle Clinic, a woman came in pushing an oxygen tank on a golf- type cart with tubes running from it to her nose. She was in the advanced stage of emphysema. Her treatments at the clinic consisted of two hydrogen peroxide infusions per week, alternated with EDTA chelation infusions. (The Coyle Clinic will administer no more than two peroxide treatments per week.) After her series of treatments, the woman left without need of the tank. She returned in the fall, again needing the oxygen. She said she waited too long to come back for her maintenance treatments. Later, another woman came in with the same condition. My wife thought to encourage her by telling her about the other woman. She said she knew her, they were friends and that is why she was there. She was able to go to the restroom without her oxygen tank before the end of her first treatment, a real surprise to her. She left at the end of her series of treatments once again without the need of her oxygen tank.
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Chief of the Department of Medicine at Broward General Hospital, Pompano Beach, FloridaDan Roehm, who is Chief of the Department of Medicine at Broward General Hospital, certified as a diplomat of the American Board of Internal Medicine and a Fellow of the American College of Physicians, is an example of the way a good doctor reacts once his interest is keen enough to do his own first-hand chelation research, rather than blindly accepting the medical party line. Dr. Roehm was a main-stream cardiologist until his wife began exhibiting symptoms characteristic of sub-clinical mini-strokes, any one of which could escalate into a full-blown fatal attack or debilitating episode
He said, "I had nothing to offer her; there was nothing I could do to ward off what I saw on the horizon, so I began an urgent search for some way to forestall the looming calamity." Once he discovered chelation, he tried it. When it restored his wife's health, Dr. Roehm added chelation and other alternative treatments to his practice, saying that it's more satisfying than doing the drug-and-surgery oriented medicine he was practicing before. |
Dr. Harold Huffman of Hinton, VirginiaDr. Harold Huffman of Hinton, Virginia, is another doctor whose first chelation patient was a family member. "It was 1982, and my father, 70 years old at the time, was a diabetic, suffering from diabetic retinopathy, and had already lost one foot because of gangrene and was facing the loss of the other."
A physician himself, he knew the prognosis was not good. "I called a nurse in Indiana who knew a lot about alternative medicine, and asked her what we could do. She recommended chelation to which my reply was, "What's that?" She filled me in on the details. I learned how to do it, and while I wasn't convinced it was any good, I knew it was dad's only hope of avoiding a second amputation. Talk about reluctant. I don't remember which one of us had more qualms, him or me. But we went into it with our fingers crossed and were more surprised than anyone when the treatments worked. it saved his remaining leg & even restored his eyesight and he continued practicing medicine for five more years." |
Dr. Grant Born of Grand Rapids, MichiganDr. Grant Born of Grand Rapids, Michigan, became involved with chelation to save himself. He was just forty-three, with no previous history of heart disease, when he went into cardiac arrest while attending a football game.
"My heart just stopped," he recalls. "They revived me, got me to the Mayo Clinic, where the doctors agreed I needed bypass surgery perhaps a heart transplant. While I was wrestling with this news, a guy walks into my room with a book about chelation therapy and asks, 'Do you know anything about this?' It was like somebody sent him. What I read convinced me. I went for treatments. After chelation saved my life, I really got interested." Dr. Born speaks from experience when he admits there are social as well as professional pressures NOT to practice chelation. "My first wife was dead-set against my getting mixed up with a controversial therapy. Even though chelation helped me survive, she argued against it when I wanted to do it. She worried her reputation with the country club set would be wrecked if word got our that I was practicing 'quack-style' medicine." Dr. Born resolved his problem. He changed specialties and wives. The new Mrs. Born, Dr. Tammy Born, has no reservations about chelation and works at his side. |
Two amazing curesAfter experiencing some peripheral neuropathy for a few years, I started taking it more seriously. I began reading about it and learned that one of the causes of peripheral neuropathy can be poor or decreased circulation. Like all of our body's cells, nerves are nourished by the bloodstream, and if deprived, cells will die.
I had always had exceptionally cold hands and feet my whole life. That seemed to be an indicator that I might never have had great circulation in my hands and feet and I reasoned that if that were the case, it wouldn't take much of a decrease to negatively effect nerve health. I continued researching the topic and found an intravenous treatment called Plaquex. Studies have shown that infusions of it over time can dissolve soft plaque in arteries. I looked for places where I could get Plaquex, but there are none in Iowa. I had almost made up my mind to go to a clinic in Kentucky, but the treatment was expensive there, and the clinic administrator didn't seem very willing to answer my questions. It occurred to me that maybe there was a clinic in Mexico where the expense would be less. I searched the internet, and I was lucky enough to find the Coyle Clinic. The clinic administrator was happy to answer questions, so I planned a trip. Still I was quite apprehensive about going especially since I would be traveling alone. I flew into Phoenix, rented a car and drove to Yuma where my husband Paul had rented an apartment for me. Every day I made the 20-minute drive to San Luis where I parked my car just across the border and walked across. It was an easy process. All ll I had to do was walk through the immigration station and cross the street where there was a cab waiting to take me to the clinic. The clinic even paid for the cab. While I was attending the Coyle Clinic, I discovered that not only do people come from all over the US and Canada, but they've been coming for years! Some of them have been coming to the clinic for 10, 15, 20 and even 25 years. While I was there I met people from Arizona, California, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Washington, Wyoming, Colorado and Canada. I called home several times every day to talk to my husband. The third night I was there, I said, "Paul! You won't believe this, but my hands and feet are warm." His reply was, "Well do you suppose that's because you're in Arizona?" "No!" I said. "It's still January even in Arizona, and although it's warm during the day, it gets cold at night, and besides lots of people don't necessarily insulate their homes there all that well. This apartment gets cold at night! I have to run the space heater pointed pretty much at me all night long to stay warm." When I flew home in late January, it was an exceptionally frigid Iowa day. Paul and I ran as fast as we could from the airport to the parking garage. We jumped in the car, Paul reached over and took my hand and exclaimed, "Oh my gosh, your hands are warm!" I said, "Told ya'!" A year and a half later, Paul went with me to the Coyle Clinic. This time, instead of residing in Yuma, we stayed in the Hotel Araiza on the Mexican side of San Luis. It was every bit as nice as any Marriott or Hilton in the States and saved us 40-minutes of driving time every day. Paul had injured his knee before we left home and could hardly walk, to such a degree that I thought I was going to have to get him a wheel chair in the Phoenix airport. We both had infusions for the three days before the weekend arrived. With two free days at our disposal, Paul said he wanted to go to Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, an International Biosphere Reserve in the Sonoran Desert. He had wanted to see it since he was a teenager; it was a bucket list item. After having had only three treatments at the clinic, Paul hiked all day pain-free. |
Location and HoursExperience the healing benefits of infusion therapy at a clinic that pioneered it.
Phone USA 928-446-1964 Canada 011-52-653-534-3912 Mexico 653-534-3912 [email protected] Address AV. Madero 704 San Luis Rio Colorado Sonora, Mx Hours Monday — Friday: 7 AM - 1 PM Saturday: By appointment only Sunday: Closed |