Arming the Immune System: The Incredible Power of Natural Immunity & the Fever Response
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About this ebook
This book is a public service announcement. Discover the power of your natural immunity. Learn why we should allow our bodies to run their intelligent health maintenance programs, including those of the immune system. As they are more effective at eliminating invaders than any military on earth. You will discover that fever is an essential part
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Arming the Immune System - Gurdev Parmar
Arming the
Immune System
The Incredible Power of Natural Immunity & the Fever Response
By Dr. Gurdev Parmar
To my family for their infinite love and support, allowing me to be brave. And to all the brave scientists and physicians who came before me, paving this road of knowledge.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter One: A Hot Topic
Chapter Two: Getting Hotter
Chapter Three: Fever for All!
Chapter Four: Interrupting Fever
Chapter Five: Suppression Means Staying Sick Longer
Chapter Six: What’s Really Going On?
Chapter Seven: Fever Myths
Chapter Eight: Benefitting from the Body’s Natural Systems
Chapter Nine: The Evolution of Fever Therapy into Modern Immunotherapy
Chapter Ten: A Future with Fever
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References
Introduction
It is the function of our intellect to realize the truth through untruths. Knowledge is nothing but the continually burning up of error to set free the light of the truth.
Rabindranath Tagore, poet and recipient of the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature
As I sat in that lecture hall at Simon Fraser University, on the west coast of Canada, twenty-one years old and in my last year of my bachelor’s degree in biological sciences, I knew I was about to have my mind blown. And I was ready. The class was called Darwinian Medicine, and I’d asked for special permission to attend. It was a master’s course, and I was just an undergraduate, but I was fascinated by the subject and determined to learn. I was also a little star-struck by the professor.
Most people didn’t know or care about Dr. Lawrence Dill, but to me, he was a celebrity. He was up there with the other giants, Drs. Ron Ydenberg, Louis Druehl, and Bernard Crespi. What—you haven’t heard of them? Maybe you’re cooler than me. These guys were rock stars in the biology world back in the day. In my few years at SFU, they helped transform my understanding of our universe, world, species, health, disease, and more.
Now, I was about to hear directly from one of these rock stars of biology. Dr. Dill had graciously accepted me into his Darwinian Medicine class and was now pacing at the front of the room, looking every bit the superstar with his crumpled grey suit and fantastically bushy eyebrows. When he instructed us to open our textbooks, I had no idea that this book and course would be part of my transformation. It would help set the trajectory of my career and my research. It would lead to my writing this book—the one you are now holding in your hands— decades later.
The Body Does Its Job
The book was Why We Get Sick: The New Science of Darwinian Medicine by Randolph M. Nesse, MD and George C. Williams, PhD. The back cover said, The next time you get sick, consider this before picking up the aspirin: your body may be doing exactly what it’s supposed to.
The authors were a medical doctor and an evolutionary biologist, and they discussed why things happen in the body from an evolutionary perspective.
They suggested that if you have a cough, there was a reason for it. Perhaps the body is prompting you to cough to help expel an infection in the lungs, and that stopping the cough may be counterproductive. They said if you have diarrhea because of an intestinal infection, this is the way the body rids that pathogen, and immediately stopping that diarrhea may not always be best. They said if you sprain your ankle and it gets big and fat, it might not be best to bring down the swelling, as the puffiness was preventing the ankle from moving which allowed it to stay in place and heal. They recommended that if you get a fever, you should not stuff yourself with fever-reducing medicines but instead let the fever ride, as it encouraged you to lie down at home, isolated and conserving energy to fight the fight. Ultimately, Drs. Nesse and Williams proposed that it is not always smart to blindly interfere with the body’s natural processes. Instead, we should try better to understand and listen to these well-tuned systems that have evolved over hundreds of millions of years.
This text and course launched an obsession that had already been brewing in my young noggin’ throughout my undergraduate degree. A captivation of the inextricable connection between humans, human health, and the natural world around us. After all, our bodies are complex ecosystems living within complex ecosystems. How can our bodies and their states of health be anything but completely dependent on the environment in which it lives? This connection has been unfolding for hundreds of millions of years and continues today. It’s a story that explains why certain conditions or diseases exist and persist. Also, why our bodies do what they do.
Whether created in the image of god or by a magnanimous explosion, our bodies and the natural world around us are absolutely and positively beyond imagination or complete comprehension. Just incredible. Miraculous. Divine. This book and its subject matter applies to us all, regardless of backgrounds and belief systems.
More specifically relevant to this book, I was fascinated by the biological importance and significance of the many signs and symptoms we experience as humans. Each of them have good, solid, rational explanations for why they occur. I learned that it might not be best to always interfere with bodily functions that serve a purpose, including symptoms
such as pain, inflammation, vomiting, diarrhea, and fever. Of all of these intelligent hard-wired programs we have in our bodies, the one that fascinated me the most, was the fever response. As I further explored my newly found obsession, I discovered exquisite research had been done across the animal kingdom, from insects and flies to humans of all ages, studying the incredibly complex and orchestrated mechanisms of our bodies in building a fever.¹
Coalescing Ideas
Of course, as a premedical undergraduate student, I wasn’t just taking one class with one textbook. My other studies included kinesiology, health sciences, philosophy of religion, and environmental toxicology. As I learned I constantly reconciled these new subjects with my ongoing interest in human health and the world around us. I was also fascinated with ancient teachings, human knowledge and wisdom through medical anthropology. I was starting to explore Ayurveda, Chinese medicine, botany and medicinal plant identification, and so on—practices that had developed over millennia. It is knowledge not to be lost. Yet, I have a naturally scientific mind. I like research papers. I need evidence.
Enter naturopathic medicine, a healthcare discipline that combines modern medical science with ancient medical wisdom. Naturopathic doctors (NDs) have foundations in anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, pathology, histology, and the like. Trained to perform complete physical examinations, lab tests, imaging tests, and able to prescribe pharmaceuticals and perform minor surgery. All of this built on the foundations of naturopathic philosophy rooted in traditional modalities including Ayurveda, Chinese medicine, herbal medicine, dietary and nutritional supplementation, lifestyle management, therapeutic fasting, hydrotherapy, and others.
With all these tools at hand, NDs can use standard diagnostic methods to form a diagnosis, then present evidence-guided and evidence-informed treatment options. Patients get the knowledge to make informed decisions. NDs guide them on who to talk to for conventional treatments and which natural and integrative options are available.
For all doctors, the first law, based on the Hippocratic oath, is: First, do no harm. That tells medical practitioners they shouldn’t do anything more harmful than what is happening in someone’s body. Treatments should not be more harmful than the illness. This idea underpins naturopathic medicine. The second, and just as vital tenant, is to cooperate with the body’s own healing power—just as I had learned in the Darwinian Medicine course. When you understand what the body is trying to do, you can help it do its job. Sure, when things are broken, critical, or otherwise far beyond repair, modern medicine can take care of so much more today than ever before in all of history. But for most day-to-day chronic conditions and run-of-the-mill acute issues, listen, and help the body do its job, and stop stopping it all the time.
A Career in Cancer
Today I’m the co-founder and medical director of Integrated Health Clinic®. The Cancer Care Centre of our clinic specializes in naturopathic oncology—a distinct entity within the larger and broader discipline of integrative oncology. It’s focused on evidence-based, whole-person care, and it uses all appropriate therapeutic approaches, healthcare professionals, and disciplines to achieve optimal health and healing.
We opened our clinic in 2000 and have treated tens of thousands of patients there. I’m licensed in BC, Canada, and Washington State, USA, and I’ve been a Fellow of the American Board of Naturopathic Oncology (FABNO) since 2007. Through this work with patients, other researchers, and educators, I am ever more interested in the benefits of fever. This might seem like a big leap from treating cancer, but from my perspective, it’s actually integral to the subject.
The Path to Understanding Fever
Back when I was reading Why We Get Sick, I learned that fever is a natural, biological process found throughout the animal kingdom that has survived four hundred million years of evolution. I learned that this natural process is a beneficial treatment that the body creates for itself. As I became more interested in natural therapies, it made sense to look closer at what the natural fever process really does.
As I continued learning, talking to experts, and treating cancer patients and survivors, I further understand the incredible importance of fever in the immune system. Cancer, after all, affects the immune system. As do many other microscopic invaders, such as particulates, allergens, bacteria, viruses, and fungi. Our immune systems deal with these pathogens in an organized, efficient, and effective manner every day. Most of the time, our bodies are successful in shutting them down, preventing them from making us sick. However, once in a while, these tiny bugs or cancerous abnormal cells break through our bodies’ first lines of defense, and infiltrate our systems. Just as it seems victory will be theirs, though, our bodies mount a massive response, overwhelming and destroying the invaders. This is the immune system at work, and fever is an essential element in its success.
The more I learned about the subject the more in awe I was of what the body can do. Fever is dismissed because it makes us feel bad, but it’s an ancient mechanism for our defense, and we now have a massive amount of evidence that it is incredibly effective. It is powerful. It is safe. It is something every single person should know about. It’s a tool we are all equipped with.
As time went on and my practice and experience continued to progress, I grew more and more intrigued by the world of immune-directed cancer therapies. I have now worked with forms of immunotherapy, a fancy term for treatments that directly affect the immune system—for almost a quarter century. I began clinical hyperthermia training in Europe in 2002. This was predominantly in Germany, but I learned from the world’s foremost experts in hyperthermia from various countries representing Europe and Asia. We’ll talk more about these treatments later in the book.
I conducted an eight-year retrospective observational study that looked at overall survival rates and quality of life for our clinic’s patients treated for the most common stage four cancers, including breast, colorectal, lung, prostate, ovarian, and brain. The outcomes were published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing. I’m the lead author and editor-in-chief of a big book called Textbook of Naturopathic Oncology: A Desktop Guide of Integrative Cancer Care, which has a small section that dissects the many studies that demonstrate the benefits of fever, fever-inducing treatments, and all forms of immunotherapy currently in use in conventional oncology. That big ol’ textbook was, however, for doctors. It used an obscene amount of nerdy words and impossibly boring tables and charts.
This book—the one you’re holding in your hands—takes all the science, research, studies, and experience from around the world and throughout time and condenses it into something we can all understand and use. This book is a public service announcement. I wrote it for people who want to get sick less, get better faster, and live healthier lives. Yes, it’s for doctors who want to treat