Misplaced Pages

Mucoid plaque: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 22:59, 29 December 2006 editValjean (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, IP block exemptions, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers95,275 edits Criticisms: he's been promoted← Previous edit Revision as of 15:04, 30 December 2006 edit undoHeelop (talk | contribs)555 edits Violates WP:EL See “Concerning Paul Lee’s Blog Site” in Discussion page for the full explanation.Next edit →
Line 45: Line 45:
* - * -
* - Richard Anderson, N.D. * - Richard Anderson, N.D.
*
* *



Revision as of 15:04, 30 December 2006

This article's factual accuracy is disputed. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced. (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Mucoid plaque or mucoid rope is an alleged thick coating of mucus-like material claimed to exist in the alimentary canals of most normal people. Supporters assert that doctors aren't trained to recognize it or use other names for it. It has been used in urban myths and is a phenomenon widely believed within holistic health circles.

Background

A word invented by naturopath Richard Anderson N.D. N.M.D:

"I coined the term mucoid plaque, meaning a film of mucus, to describe the unhealthy accumulation of abnormal mucous matter on the walls of the intestines. Conventional medicine knows this as a layering of mucin or glycoproteins (made up of 20 amino acids and 50% carbohydrates) which are naturally and appropriately secreted by intestines as protection from acids and toxins." (What is Mucoid Plaque?, by Richard Anderson)

The role of the colon is to absorb water and nutrients. A limited amount of bacterial fermentation and absorption of other substances goes on.

Richard Anderson claims that “clinical and anatomical studies from many papers and textbooks have demonstrated that mucoid plaque exists in the alimentary canal” (Anderson 60).

A search of the National Library of Medicine's PubMed database does not return any research that uses the term at all, or in this way.

Anderson claims that medical doctors are not trained to recognize the difference between mucoid plaque and the normal mucosa. “Until the mucoid plaque begins to mix with fecal matter, its color and texture may appear similar to healthy bowel mucosa,” he says (Anderson 66; 88). In his book, Richard Anderson cites numerous conventional scientific sources referring to intestinal mucus and claims they support his assertion (Anderson 59). None of them mention mucoid plaque.

Richard Anderson is in the business of selling books promoting this view and products to fix or remedy it.

Enemas, rigorous fasting and herbal treatments are said to expel the plaque, which then appears as a rope-like rubbery stool matching the shape and length of the large intestine.

Criticisms

Edward Uthman, M.D., a practicing pathologist and Adjunct Professor of Pathology at the University of Texas School of Medicine, has said on the basis of never having seen it in several thousand intestinal biopsies: "This is a complete fabrication with no anatomic basis."

Another practicing pathologist, Ed Friedlander, M.D., at Brown University, states, "As a pathologist, I have opened hundreds of colons and never seen anything like ‘toxic bowel settlement’." Furthermore, in reference to those pictures of mucoid plaque he says, "Sites they have shared include one depicting what I recognize to be a blood clot."

It is known that impaction of as little as a pound of fecal material will cause extreme pain and even bleeding. In 1994, an Israeli man sought medical attention because he was suffering from severe constipation two days after having eaten a large quantity of pomegranates. He refused to allow doctors to administer an enema, fled the hospital, and returned a week later in severe pain and bleeding from his rectum. This time the doctors operated to remove the impacted feces, which weighed half a kilogram or a little over a pound. Just one pound of impacted feces was causing extreme pain and rectal bleeding in this patient.

The John Wayne and Elvis Presley Myth

Some unscrupulous marketers, seeking to profit from the mucoid plaque theory, have created and promoted a myth concerning the entertainers John Wayne and Elvis Presley.

Advertisements for some products marketed to cleanse the colon of mucoid plaque claim that an autopsy of John Wayne after his death from cancer revealed that the famous American actor had over 40 pounds of this plaque/fecal material accumulated in his colon. In fact, an autopsy was never performed on John Wayne. Similar false claims are made about singer Elvis Presley.

Note that the practitioners who are widely regarded, within alternative medicine circles, as the original, prominent experts such as Richard Anderson, Robert Gray, Bernard Jensen, Victor Earl Irons, and John Christopher never created nor promoted the John Wayne and Elvis Presley myth.


References

  1. ^ Urban myth on snopes.com
  2. Bowel Cleanse FAQ
  3. Richard Anderson's books
  4. Arise and Shine Herbal Products
  5. Mucoid Plaque. Uthman, Edward
  6. Ed’s Guide to Alternative Therapies: Colonics. Friedlander, Ed
  7. "Pomegranate Feast Ends in Constipation." The Jerusalem Post 4 September 1994 (p. 2).

External links

Category: