Many things happen in the world, usually for no obvious reason. The Paill Spectrum model suggests that strange events or occurrences may actually be linked by a common thread. Things happen because there are distinct underlying threads of causation responsible for the observed event or behavior. Many health events are looked at with concern, with blame attributed to many diverse causes. Obesity is one such event where diet and exercise and traditional recommended treatments. Unfortunately as treatments they do not work.
Our preconceptions of the world cloud our understanding. This page showcases a number of observations of strange behavior, of unusual results of health research; where perhaps all is not as it seems.
Chronic fatigue
Dyslexic Language Problems
Chest Wall pains often diagnosed in hospital outpatients as “not” being due to a heart attack.
A Fibromyalgia like condition, (see case IV)
(Fibromyalgia may be a “third” wave PaillSpectrum condition.)Episodes of anger, irritability, aggression, and possible violence, as may be seen in “Road Rage”)Back to Top Paill
Marriages break-up, Domestic Violence occurs, and many people get hurt in many different ways.
Patients with the “Rage” will often have poor memory, attacks of jitters and panics, impulsive behaviour, and will display poor judgement.
DR Xxxxx : Comments on Medical Ideology In a Paill Spectrum World
Paill Spectrum model proposes alternate explanations for obesity, divorce, mental disorders, drug addiction, multiple sclerosis, macular degeneration (AMD), dementia, depression, breast cancer, cancer, terrorism, Gulf War Syndrome, chronic fatigue, disease. Other conditions where Paill Spectrum may be involved include Autism, Aspergers, anxiety, depression, dyslexia, schizophrenia, memory loss, ADD, chronic fatigue, learning difficulties,bad behaviour, road rage, temper, unfaithful, divorce, cancer, depression, mental, dementia, treat cancer, macular degeneration, rheumatoid arthritis, cognitive decline, chronic fatigue, bipolar disorder and weight gain.
How does Paill Spectrum Affect Behaviour?
Patients showing anger, violence, irritability, bad behaviour, rage, criminal behaviour, relationship problems, criminal behaviour, relationship problems, family arguments, domestic violence, poor judgement, criminal behaviour, and even paranoia may be showing symptoms of a newly identified syndrome called Paill Spectrum. Blood tests can help to confirm a diagnosis of illness in these patients. This web page discusses a new theory to explain strange behaviors: Rage, violence, poor judgement, paranoia, criminal behaviour, memory loss, legal issues or legal problems. :-]
Other symptoms of the syndrome are chronic fatigue, tiredness, sleepiness, memory loss, jitters and panics, anxiety attacks, dizziness or loss of balance, aches and pains such as sore elbows, sore chest, abdominal pain, sore backs of knees, sore Achilles tendons, sore and stiff hands.
Erasmus : Hard to beleive that in the 21st century , so many educated idiots believe in magic and only give lip service to the scientific method.
The model has been seen to work well in standard medical practice, according to Dr. Xxxxx. Even if only the most rudimentary of treatment interventions are used, they can give unusually good results, if the Paill Spectrum model is followed.
DR Xxxxx : The Paill Spectrum model suggests that in patients with symptoms attributable to Paill Spectrum,
a range of unexpected symptoms predicted by the Paill Spectrum model may be found
Symptoms and signs of illness will respond to treatment with Paill Spectrum compatible therapies
Predictable blood test abnormalities and risk factors may be found
Treatment causes a predictable pattern of blood test changes.
Treatments include gluten free diet, coeliac diet for gluten sensitive or wheat intolerant patients including for those with Celiac Disease, vitamin tablets, antibiotics
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Gossip Like: Comments: Sorry We’re not as brave as most tabloids. Maybe we should change.
1. Have you noticed changes in your favourite politician who has been in office for a long time? They still do the same things or react the same way to the same problems. They have the same nature (pleasant or unpleasant) that they have always had. Yet there is a vaguely perceptible drift in who and what they are, that worries you. Could they just be growing a little bit “simpler” with age?
2. Why re mental health problems more common in the obese? Almost half of all patients presenting to a specialist weight loss clinic in the UK had depression, anxiety, personality trait issues or an eating disorder.
3. Can a person really not remember all the bad things that have done? Surely, they are just liars.
4. How can I tell when one of my team members is likely to make a wrong decision?
Back to Comments top
5. Why is there a bias against employing older workers? Surely they have more experience and a better understanding of how to do the job than a young person?
6. We see some people regularly as in through a window in the distance, usually the TV being the source of these experiences. This makes observing behavioural changes very easy. Could Hollywood-itis really be a disease? If so can you expect:
7. Why do people choose opposite sex extramarital / extra-relationship partners, even when it should be obvious how harmful the consequences may be to their personal lives?
8. Why do so many people break up and say it is because their partner was “mad”? Could they be telling the truth? Back to Comments top
9. Why do so many people we love start to become hard to live with, angry / irritable/ impulsive?
10. Where do the people on Jerry Springer come from? Are they really normal people?
11. Why do people say they are fat in spite of evidence to the contrary? Why can’t they believe the evidence of their eyes? What on earth is wrong with them?
12. Is it dangerous to lose weight? Why? What could happen long-term?
13. Why do so many women become fat, (long-term) especially after the birth of their babies?
14. Why are the careers of so many musicians / composers effectively over by the time they are 45? Surely they are just as clever as they always were, so why do the hits stop appearing?
15. Could there be something else behind divorce besides falling out of love?
16. Could there be something else behind domestic violence besides just bad people?
17. Why do people who so often appear angry or irritable, seem to stuff up other aspects of their lives?
18. Lots of people win big money from lotteries. They all realize that its more money than they will see in their life. They all talk about investing it and making plans for the future. Studies have claimed that 10 years down the road, the only difference between these people and most other people in the population, is that they own their own house. So where did it all go? Why?
19. In a similar vein, famous people show the same spending traits. How many famous people end up almost broke after a career of earning that makes the rest of the world envious. What is wrong with these people? Back to Comments top
20. Why do so many famous people’s careers go off, when they start to get fat?
21. What are the signs of a marriage about to go bust?
22. What should you think when the bruises start to appear? Can people get bruises unless they are actually subjected to real physical violence?
23. Why do the people of today, never seem to learn from the lessons of yesterday?
24. There are human behaviours that have no other logical explanation.
25. Why do so many people get completely better from illnesses?
26. Other seem to have strange symptoms and complaints for years.
27. Why is it that when you read the strange stories from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome patients, that the stories read like they have been stuck down by some horrible disorder, though there seems to be nothing wrong with them?
28. Why do some people have so much trouble stopping a diet , once they have started a diet?
Back to top
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Thoughts & Musings?
29. Why do people need to eat three meals and 2 snacks a day, while dogs for example only need to be fed once or twice a day?
30. Why are fat dogs rare, unlike fat people?
31. Why do TNF inhibitors increase the risk of developing MS up to 6 times the average community incidence? Is it significant they are also associated with activating infections such as TB to an extent that routine screening is recommended prior to initiating treatment?
32. Why should there be a link between Celiac Disease and Schizophrenia? Is it fair to assume that gluten may act as an environmental trigger? Aren’t aberrant brain “receptors” responsible for schizophrenia?
33. Is there really anything wrong with people who frequently attend their doctor with miscellaneous physical complaints such as headaches, heart symptoms, respiratory symptoms or bowel dysfunctions, yet who in spite of comprehensive examination and testing, are not found to be suffering from any pathological cause?
34. Do people who say they suffer anxiety and panics really need to take sedatives on a regular basis or are they just drug addicts?
35. Some studies have shown impaired zinc uptake in patients with anorexia. Cause of effect?
36. Schizophrenia is more common in developed countries than in poorer nations? Can it really be nutrition or diet or is something else responsible?
37. There is an association between the incidence of schizophrenia and climate? Why?
Back to Comments top
38. Why do so many children with developmental delay, never have a cause identified or treated?
39. Autism and Aspergers in neurosciences research including functional imaging has so far yielded inconsistent findings about the brain regions responsible for the subtle differences in function. If these conditions are due to receptor or brain chemistry problems, why do they vary so much?
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40. Researchers at a US Cardiovascular Research Institute concluded at least half of the genetic variations linked to heart attacks bear no obvious relationship to cholesterol levels, Blood pressure or any of the usual suspects in heart disease. Instead they strongly suggest mechanisms such as inflammation that may be caused by an infection or by perhaps a haywire immune system.
41. One in ten 10-15 year olds in Australia have at least one risk factor for cardiovascular disease and the same number already have signs of liver damage. (Abnormal Findings include: raised ALT = Alanine Transaminase, Elevations of sensitive CRP assays and elevated insulin levels.).
42. Patients with inflammatory bowel disease are significantly more likely to have other chronic inflammatory diseases including MS (Multiple Sclerosis) and Asthma. Asthma is 50-70% more likely in patients with Ulcerative Colitis. Asthma is 40% more likely in patients with Crohns disease. There is a doubled risk of developing MS in patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. It is unsure whether the association is related to shared genes, shared causative triggers, consequences of disease manifestations or consequences of treatment.
43. Dyslexic children use up to five times the brain area to process an ordinary language task as other children. How can children who have this level of brain functioning be so inefficient?
44. In MS (Multiple Sclerosis), why can this autoimmune disease be treated with both immune stimulants as well as immune suppressants? What model of disease could justify such diametrically opposed treatments.
45. Childhood obesity in Australia is increasing at 1% per year, and over half of all young Australians will be overweight by 2025. Are kids just eating too much and fat too lazy, or could something else be wrong?
46. Heart rate changes or dysrhythmias have been shown to stabilize or improve with fish oil treatment.
47. Why is there so much diagnostic overlap (difficulty in assigning disease labels to sufferers) in the childhood brain disorders: namely ADD or ADHD, Autism and Aspergers and conditions such as developmental delay. Why do they all respond to EFAs, (Essential Fatty Acid Supplements)?
48. Why are wheat free diets useful in autism and the childhood behavioural disorders?
Back to Comments top
49. Does the description of syndromes such as MS overlap with syndrome descriptions from the Paill Spectrum Disease model?
50. Do statins (cholesterol lowering drugs) cause peripheral neuropathy or memory loss? Why is there so much difficulty in working out whether these conditions even exist at all?
51. Various reports have indicated Interferon Alfa-2B may precipitate that avascular necrosis in CML (Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia) patients. Is there a possible overlap between this finding and the incidence of spontaneous avascular necrosis in the normal population?
52. Cataracts have been noted to be more common if the eye lens is deficient in Selenium. Selenium affects antibody production and lipid membrane solidification. Why should this be important?
53. What possible explanation is there for the mechanism by which antibiotics or immune stimulants such as Imiquimod cause events such as:
54. Why should loss of memory in dementia be associated with hearing loss? What is going on here?
55. What is the mechanism that explains the brain tissue loss in schizophrenia in the deep ganglia and the cerebellum on imaging? Back to Comments top
56. What are MRI ghosts? (These are white areas of enhancement that appear and eventually disappear in some patients who have an MRI test done, for whatever reason). Are these findings important? Are MRI ghosts more common in MS (Multiple Sclerosis?)
57. Women with diabetes tend to have more advanced breast cancer.
58. The search for common cancer genes is unlikely to be fruitful because the genes may not exist or may have only limited influence on the development of the cancer, according to some experts.
59. Why is postnatal depression so common and often so severe in the postnatal period?
60. Obese patients need a more aggressive lipid lowering treatment for it to have an effect on their atherosclerosis. Researchers suggested that the differing effects seen with statins (cholesterol lowering medications) in the obese might be explained by the anti-inflammatory effects of the drugs, rather than their lipid lowering ability.
61. Do Dementia and Parkinson’s disease have anything in common?
62. What does “Fatty Liver” mean? (As assessed by non-virally elevated transaminase rises). Is this condition related to any other medical condition?
63. Why do some patients have central abdominal tenderness? What causes this? Is it jut pancreatitis?
64. What are the benefits of developing high blood pressure?
65. Why do doctors have so much difficulty agreeing as to what constitutes a diagnosis of for example, Bipolar Disorder? Why do the diagnostic criteria keep changing? Does the diagnostic difficulty affect the diagnosis of any other psychiatric disorder?
66. Why should obesity, excess BMI be a major preventable contributor to dementia?
67. Is the incidence of memory dysfunction due to increase over the next 20 years?
68. Why is there a growing body of evidence from observational and epidemiological studies suggesting a protective effect of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids against dementia?
69. Is it important that patients with low Folate levels / B6 levels should show poorer baseline cognitive functions? Low Folate levels appear to be a risk factor for cognitive decline. c
70. Why should Rosglitazone show a beneficial effect in Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome? Is getting fat just part of the problem or a sign or something else going on?
71. Almost 20% of two year olds have language problems that could cause illiteracy and long-term speech disorders. Children with language disorders were often misdiagnosed as being badly behaved or being academically poor. (19% of two year olds in the study were late talkers with a vocabulary of less than 50 words. Why? What is going on? Are all these events linked?
72. What is the Gulf War Syndrome? Why should the patients show features of irritability, headache, fatigue and joint pain?
73. Why is sexual dysfunction almost twice as common in female patients with hypertension as in normotensive women?
74. What is a good breakfast? Why? Back to top
75. Why do studies suggest that half the people who develop “impaired glucose tolerance” will develop diabetes within ten years? Why should intervention to prevent diabetes start before people develop diabetes?
76. Why do some authors suggest that memory loss may be a complication of diabetes. There is little direct evidence that recurrent severe hypoglycemia causes direct damage to the brain. Older people who have diabetes have double the risk of dementia or cognitive decline than age matched control patients who do not have diabetes. The effect appears independent of severity of hypoglycaemic episodes. Why should older people with diabetes have vulnerable brains, when younger patients seem to be relatively protected?
77. Why do some children playing on-line games, not realise that other children from other countries and other time zones may be on-line at the same time. Back to Comments top
78. Why does the CDC say that up to 80% of people with chronic fatigue, do not know that they have the condition. The CDC also states that there are tens of millions of people with similar fatiguing illnesses, who do not fully meet the strict research definition of CFS.
79. Isn’t it odd that an active lifestyle defined as regular physical activity at least three times a week, should have a protective effect for incident AMD (macular degeneration) in people older than 65.
80. Why are sleeping problems common in children as young as ten years old? One study found that up to 50% of children in each age band had insomnia symptoms.
81. Why should studies suggest that “white coat hypertension” (the tendency of people’s BPs to rise when they are seen by a doctor), might not be as innocent as people think?
82. Why does one medical school study suggest that dysfunctional personality characteristics found in medical students, may suggest a poorer learning outcome?
83. In the family of patients with MS, why are other autoimmune diseases (such as Hashimotos thyroiditis, inflammatory disease and psoriasis), more likely to be found?
84. Why is severe psoriasis associated with a significant increase in ischaemic heart disease in patients younger than 50 years old? Some Consultants suggest that monitoring inflammatory markers such as CRP (C Reactive Protein) is more important in assessing risk, rather than just using the symptomatic psoriasis severity as a guide in assessing risk.
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85. It is interesting to note that a recent study in NSW (a state in Australia), showed that 51% of people in the 45-64 year old bracket, said that they were overweight. This is an increase of 9% on 1997 figures. Quite a strong trend line.
86. In breast cancer families, researchers have found that women who had not inherited the BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations were still three times more likely to develop breast cancer by the age of 50 than the general population. It was hypothesized that the increased risk is due to the presence of other susceptibility factors or susceptibility genes in the affected families. Back to Comments top
87. Re Sleep Apnoea:
88. Re hyperhidrosis or excessive sweating of the palms or soles: (quote from medical publication): “It tends to be a disease of younger people, decreasing in severity with age.”
89. Why should obese women after menopause, have a 75% greater chance of developing breast cancer. Continuing to gain weight after 50 also put breast cancer patients at greater risk of dying from breast cancer.
90. From a medical publication:
91. Why should female twins be significantly more likely to experience premature menopause than other women? The prevalence of premature ovarian failure was three to five fold greater in twins between 40-45 years old, than in the general population. The association was even significant in non-identical twins.
92. In Queensland, Australia, 2 of 3 males and 1 of 2 women were overweight. People who are overweight are at much greater risk of developing serious medical conditions. Cause, effect, or coincidence?
92. Isn’t t interesting that allergic rhinitis is on the rise, now affecting as many as one in five Australian children.
93. A curious Study:
94. One US study showed that eating at least two to three serves of vegetables daily, resulted in the equivalent of five years less of cognitive deterioration. Eating fruit was not associated with any cognitive change or protection.
95. One recent European study showed that increasing bread or pasta intake and reduced poultry, meat or vegetable intake was associated with an increased risk of renal cell carcinoma.
96. Interestingly, the risk of TB is increased in patients with Coeliac disease. Patients with Coeliac disease have an almost fourfold increase in risk of developing TB regardless of sex or age.
97. Researchers at the Mayo Clinic in the US have identified that progressive cognitive impairment could be associated with Coeliac Disease. In particular, the incidence of neurological symptoms such as ataxia or seizure was noted to be higher in the Coeliac patients.
98. Some doctors are beginning to think that tennis elbow is not a localised problem but part of a complex whole body response. Back to Comments top
99. One study in young children recently suggested that boosting physical activity in preschool will not necessarily curb rising rates of child obesity. However, doesn’t modern medicine say that obesity is due to exercising too little or eating too much?
100. In a pattern repeated in many Western countries, Crohn’s disease (an inflammatory bowel disease) is becoming more common in children and teenagers. The purported explanation is that we wash our hands too much.
101. Patients starting on the popular low carbohydrate, high fat and high protein Atkins diet, often within the first two or three days report three times the number of dreams compared to controls, with most of the dreams vivid and unpleasant. Patients were also more tired, sleepy and had suppressed mood more often during the first few days, when their bodies were ketotic.
102. Further evidence has emerged that cerebral palsy is caused by antenatal factors such as maternal infections, rather than birth trauma.
103. Isn’t it interesting that the “transaminase rise” (AST and ALT) associated with “fatty liver”, due to a build up of fat in the liver cells? Meanwhile the same blood test finding in Hepatitis C patients is attributed to a necro-inflammatory changes in the hepatocytes.
104. Is the finding that prolonged use of the anti-diabetic drug metformin results in a decreased serum vitamin B12 level. Could this be important?
105. Isn’t it interesting that lead exposure may increase “all causes” risk of illness as well as an increased risk of cardiovascular mortality?
106. In his book “Diabetes”, Dr Bernard E Lowenstein MD reported that the death rate from diabetes among doctors was 35% higher than the general population. He theorized that doctors are more likely to follow conventional therapy programmes that they prescribe more strictly, and thereby intensify their negative effects. (The source of this comment is naturopathic rather than medical media). There is a school of thought in naturopathic circles that suggests diabetes can be improved by changing the pH of food ingested. (Alkaline being better.) Acid base and electrolyte balance are important in cell function. Lack of experience with these concepts, suggests that no more be said by me. Others are more qualified to make their own arguments. Back to Comments top
107. Isn’t it interesting that recent reports suggest older patients prescribed new cholesterol lowering medications such as Ezetimide (Ezetrol), should be closely monitored for signs of depression, after reports of mood disorders arising early in depression.
108. Isn’t it interesting that facial acne can be significantly improved by switching to a low GI (Glycemic index) diet? In any case, how do antibiotics really help acne? The proposed explanation is that the effect is due to lowering the glucose response to food, (i.e. changing Insulin Resistance).
109. The recent ANZDATA registry release of new figures for 2005, depicts an alarming picture of chronic kidney disease. There has been an average 5-6% rise in new patients in dialysis or transplantation programmes over the last seven years.
110. A seldom studied mental illness called Intermittent Explosive Disorder, characterised by recurrent episodes of angry and potentially violent outbursts- seen in cases of road rage and spousal abuse- has been found to be much more common than previously thought. The disorder affects as many as 7.3% of adults or 16 million Americans in their lifetime. Intermittent Explosive Disorder attacks are out of proportion to the social stressors triggering them, and are not due to the effects of other mental diseases or drugs. If people think of these explosive outbursts as just bad behaviour, they are not thinking of this problem as a serious biomedical problem that can be treated. Amongst people with this disorder, 81% were also diagnosed with depression, anxiety or alcohol / drug disorders.
111. One recent study suggests that the effects of MS (Multiple Sclerosis) extend beyond affected areas into large areas of the brain that appeared outwardly normal.
112. Alzheimer’s Disease threatens to overload future health care systems as the number of cases worldwide threatens to exceed 80 million by 2040.
113. How should you look at findings such as the recent intravitreal injections of ranibizumad (Lucentis) over twelve months in patients with Macular degeneration resulted in the average patient gaining about two lines of visual acquity. Patients receiving the standard IV verteporfin treatment lost about two lines. One in three people are suggested to be affected by macular degeneration by 75 years old. AMD (Macular degeneration) is the leading cause of blindness in the elderly.
114. About 10.5% of children are suggested to be suffering from fatty liver. This appears to be related to the burgeoning obesity epidemic. Back to Comments top
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115. One study recently suggested that children with behavioural problems become risk-taking drivers as adults. Children aged 5-8 who were hyperactive, aggressive, or poorly adjusted to school reported more car accidents when they reached driving age.
116. Why does “282” do what it does? (282 is calcium propionate) a food additive used to prevent mould growth in foods. Why should it have such a bad reputation with many parent groups seeking to have it banned as a food additive.
117. Conflicts in Afghanistan an Iraq are generating the predictable long-term outcomes including soldiers with PTSD (Post traumatic stress disorder) and other psychiatric problems. 12% had PTSD and 9% had depression seven months after a combat injury? Interesting.
118. Research has suggested that the body is programmed to resist weight loss. However, isn’t weight gain just due to eating too much or exercising too little?
119. Recent research has suggested that alcohol consumption in adolescence might damage the wiring of the brain responsible for learning. This challenges the standard hypothesis that people can drink heavily for years before causing themselves significant neurological injury. Much of this new hypothesis is based on research on sliced adolescent rat brains, and has been used to explain the progressive increases in adolescent behavioural issues, that have impacted on police services. Could there be more to this whole scenario?
120. Some researchers suggest that erectile dysfunction is all due to evolution. Perhaps these researchers need to be introduced to concepts such as Darwinism and Natural Selection.
121. Professor Barry Popkin at the 10th International Congress on Obesity in Sydney, suggested that governments should apply hefty taxes to one of the main culprits in causing obesity (in his opinion), namely soft drinks. How successful is this likely to be? Should junk food advertising be banned by legislation, much the same as smoking is banned? Would this course of action achieve anything?
122. High copper intake has been suggested to increase cognitive decline in elderly people whose diet is high in saturated and trans fats. Interesting!
123. Professor recently announced that the cause of Rheumatoid arthritis may be a single antigen, or something derived from the environment that mimics a single antigen. There also appears to be a link between the inflammation of Rheumatoid arthritis and the inflammatory processes that contribute to coronary artery disease. Consequently, he suggests closely monitoring the lipid levels of Rheumatoid arthritis patients very closely.
124. Male baldness is more common in climates with less sun exposure. Weird!
125. A review at the Black Dog Institute has found that low dietary intake of n=3 PUFA is associated with bipolar disorder and depression. Supplementation may improve the symptoms of these disorders.
126. A symposium at Columbia University’s Institute of human Nutrition stated that n=3 PUFAs may help:
127. Recent research suggests that cognitive problems are a core component of bipolar disorder. Deficits in executive function predicted poor psychosocial function, as did persistent subclinical depressive symptoms and early onset of illness. Back to Comments top
128. At least one survey reports that 16% of boys aged between 6-12, have symptoms of ADD, ADHD. Could this be for real?
129. Studies have suggested that obese women are more vulnerable to depressive mood. What could be the relationship?
130. Patients prone to acting out their dreams while asleep have an increased risk of developing neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson’s.
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Chronic fatigue
Dyslexic Language Problems
Chest Wall pains often diagnosed in hospital outpatients as “not” being due to a heart attack.
A Fibromyalgia like condition, (see case IV)
(Fibromyalgia may be a “third” wave PaillSpectrum condition.)Episodes of anger, irritability, aggression, and possible violence, as may be seen in “Road Rage”)Back to Top Paill
Marriages break-up, Domestic Violence occurs, and many people get hurt in many different ways.
Patients with the “Rage” will often have poor memory, attacks of jitters and panics, impulsive behaviour, and will display poor judgement.
Comments on Medical Ideology In a Paill Spectrum World
Paill Spectrum model proposes alternate explanations for obesity, divorce, mental disorders, drug addiction, multiple sclerosis, macular degeneration (AMD), dementia, depression, breast cancer, cancer, terrorism, Gulf War Syndrome, chronic fatigue, disease. Other conditions where Paill Spectrum may be involved include Autism, Aspergers, anxiety, depression, dyslexia, schizophrenia, memory loss, ADD, chronic fatigue, learning difficulties,bad behaviour, road rage, temper, unfaithful, divorce, cancer, depression, mental, dementia, treat cancer, macular degeneration, rheumatoid arthritis, cognitive decline, chronic fatigue, bipolar disorder and weight gain.
How does Paill Spectrum Affect Behaviour?
Patients showing anger, violence, irritability, bad behaviour, rage, criminal behaviour, relationship problems may be showing symptoms of a newly identified syndrome called Paill Spectrum. Blood tests can help to confirm a diagnosis of illness in patients with anger, violence, irritability, bad behaviour, road rage, trolley rage, register rage, Violence, arguing teenager, arguments, bicker and fight, criminal behaviour, relationship problems, family arguments, domestic violence, poor judgement, criminal behaviour, and even paranoia. This web page discusses a new theory to explain strange behaviors: Rage, violence, poor judgement, paranoia, criminal behaviour, memory loss, legal issues or legal problems. :-]
Other symptoms of the syndrome are chronic fatigue, tiredness, sleepiness, memory loss, jitters and panics, anxiety attacks, dizziness or loss of balance, aches and pains such as sore elbows, sore chest, abdominal pain, sore backs of knees, sore Achilles tendons, sore and stiff hands.
The Paill Spectrum model suggests that in patients with symptoms attributable to Paill Spectrum,
a range of unexpected symptoms predicted by the Paill Spectrum model may be found
Symptoms and signs of illness will respond to treatment with Paill Spectrum compatible therapies
Predictable blood test abnormalities and risk factors may be found
Treatment causes a predictable pattern of blood test changes.
Treatments include gluten free diet, coeliac diet for gluten sensitive or wheat intolerant patients including for those with Celiac Disease, vitamin tablets, antibiotics
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