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Recently Diagnosed or Relapsed? Stop Looking For a Miracle Cure, and Use Evidence-Based Therapies To Enhance Your Treatment and Prolong Your Remission

Multiple Myeloma an incurable disease, but I have spent the last 25 years in remission using a blend of conventional oncology and evidence-based nutrition, supplementation, and lifestyle therapies from peer-reviewed studies that your oncologist probably hasn't told you about.

Click the orange button to the right to learn more about what you can start doing today.

Multiple Myeloma Therapy- WBH, Sauna, Kill MM, Look Younger?

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Evidence-based, Non-Toxic Therapies to Repair U.V. Skin Damage, Reduce Your Risk of Skin Cancer While Making Your Skin Look Better- 

I am a long-term multiple myeloma (MM) survivor and MM coach.  I swear by the therapeutic effects of whole-body hyperthermia aka sauna as a multiple myeloma therapy. You probably came to this post wanting to learn more about how to make your skin look better.  According to the article linked and excerpted below, sweating in a sauna makes your skin look better aka look younger…

To be honest, my focus has never been about glowing skin. I am a MM survivor who has an increased risk of both melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancer due to high-dose chemotherapy and radiation. Further, I sat in the sun way too much as a kid/teen. I burned my skin repeatedly.

I had a freckle removed in 2005. The biopsy of the skin was indeterminate. I assume that the freckle was basel cell skin cancer aka non-melanoma skin cancer.

As a multiple myeloma therapy, I follow an evidence-based, non-toxic lifestyle to reduce my risks of MM relapse, NMSC, and even treatment-related secondary cancer. Countless studies cite nutrition, supplementation, exercise, mind-body therapies and more as multiple myeloma therapy.

Sauna is a great way to detox, exercise my heart, make my skin look better, and relax.

If your focus is learning how to make your skin glow, please consider therapies in addition to whole-body hyperthermia. Studies show how nutraceuticals, diet and lifestyle therapies can heal sun damaged skin and reduce your risk of skin cancer.

Keep in mind that while whole-body hyperthermia can make your skin look better, this MM therapy can also lower your blood pressure,  detoxify, improve your circulation, reduce your risk of dementia, and more.

Scroll down the page to ask a question about skin health, heart health, brain health, etc. I will reply to your post ASAP.

Thanks,

David Emerson

  • MM Survivor
  • MM Coach
  • Director PeopleBeatingCancer

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Hyperthermia in Cancer Treatment

What is hyperthermia? Hyperthermia (also called thermal therapy or thermotherapy) is a type of cancer treatment in which body tissue is exposed to high temperatures (up to 113°F). Research has shown that high temperatures can damage and kill cancer cells, usually with minimal injury to normal tissues (1). By killing cancer cells and damaging proteins and structures within cells (2), hyperthermia may shrink tumors…”

Is Sweating in an Infrared Sauna Really the Secret to Glowing Skin?

“The future is here: Celebs such as Selena Gomez, LL Cool J, and Gwyneth Paltrow are perfecting their skin and giving their heart the equivalent of a 10-mile run while lying in a warm bed and watching Roku. Really! The treatment is infrared sweating, and while actors, models, and athletes are using it to glow for awards season, it also happens to be built for lazy girls like us who love nothing better than watching movies in a warm bed.

Here’s how it works: The treatment employs FIR infrared heat, a band of radiant energy that has long been used in Japan (known as “Waon therapy”) and shown to help improve cardiovascular conditions. Unlike tanning booths and UV rays, which heat our bodies from the outside in, FIR infrared warms our bodies from the inside—where our muscles and fat are stored—so it doesn’t burn our skin or damage DNA.

Heating our bodies from the inside can trigger a number of responses that come with promising health benefits. For one, FIR infrared heat can make our bodies flush toxins—such as traces of dirt, makeup, pollution, metals, nicotine, and alcohol—more rapidly. Of course, our skin and liver are equipped to detox on their own, but as proponents say, accelerating the process can help provide clear skin faster—something that keeps celebs sweating.

Infrared-induced sweat sessions can also cause the heart rate to quicken, stimulating better oxygen flow. Studies have shown that the treatment can regulate sleep and stimulate blood circulation in human skin, which in turn may help boost collagen production. Finally, the treatment is thought to relieve achy muscles by stimulating the removal of lactic-acid buildup in the body, and may melt fat cells over time.

It all seems too good to be true, so we headed over to Shape House in Los Angeles, where Gomez and Taylor Swift have reportedly been spotted, to try it for ourselves.

We turn up as advised, wearing loose-fitting cotton pants, a long-sleeved shirt, and socks (and looking very much like a member of the Guilty Remnant on “The Leftovers”). If you’re not prepared with the right gear, an attendant will provide suitable clothes in an on-brand shade of shocking orange, a look that screams Litchfield penitentiary….”

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