SURGERY, THE PROS AND CONS

Surgery

Dr. Maxwell Nartey

Professor of Symptometry

American School of Symptometry, NFP

Many surgeries are necessary, but what happens after surgery will now be explained.

Slicing the skin causes many capillaries to collapse, as sludge interferes with the nerve’s effort to grow into its shaft. Capillary collapse coupled with the nerves’ efforts to grow into their shafts cause poor granulation and deep scaring.

A light scar indicates that granulation occurred smoothly. A deep scar indicates the contrary.

Surgeons do not ionize sludge and reverse capillary collapse, causing a deep scar to form and serious circulatory problems to occur after surgery.

Every woman who underwent C-section eventually developed urinary incontinence. Also, people who underwent wrist surgery continue to experience tingling in their fingers and wrist pain, and those who underwent leg surgery continue to experience leg pain, heaviness or numbness. Many must walk with a cane or a walker.

Many sportsmen and women who underwent surgery can confirm these observations.

I underwent wrist surgery and leg surgery but I don’t suffer from post-surgical complications because I ionized sludge and calcification and also reversed arteriosclerosis and capillary collapse to facilitate excellent capillary circulation to my nerves, proving that Symptometry does what surgeons cannot do.

The limitations of surgery

Surgery sounds good but surgeons have some limitations that the public must know.

After surgery, stitching is done, and the person is sent home to recover. This is standard practice.

In a few cases, the removal of stitches is scheduled, and the stitches are removed. What else does the surgeon do? Nothing. Their job is done, but the nightmares of the person who underwent surgery will begin.

Surgeons assume that natural healing will occur after surgery. The truth is that people with extremely filthy blood full of poisons, alkyl from the anesthetic drugs, blood clots, fat globules, sludge, clutter, recombinants, etc. will not heal as quickly and smoothly as people who have far less garbage in their blood.

Also, after surgery, granulation must occur, and the nerves must find their shafts and grow into them. Surgeons are not concerned about granulation, reversing capillary collapse, and nerves growing into their shafts. They perform surgery, and they are done. I know this too well because I underwent surgery twice. Here is what should be known.

For granulation to occur smoothly, the bonds of the clots, poisons, anesthetic drugs, clutter, alkaloids, acids, etc. that are in the person’s blood must be broken so oxygenated blood can provide the cells of the lacerated tissue with what they need for smooth granulation. Symptometry has these bond breakers.

I discussed granulation on page 139 of my book titled Symptometry and Symptometric Science At A Glance.

Unless excellent capillary circulation is restored after surgery, something surgeons cannot do but Symptometry does with great success, post-surgical complications such as numbness, pain, swelling, tingling, itching, and the disruption of regular organ functions after surgery will be inevitable.

Another point that should be emphasized is that surgery is not always the solution to pain and discomfort.

How clean is a person’s blood and how good is a person’s capillary circulation in their knees, hips, shoulder, elbow, fingers, toes, etc.? These questions must be asked, but are not.

Knee surgery and hip surgery have never resolved poor capillary circulation in the knee and hips. Why? Here is why.

Nerves, cartilage, tendons, and ligaments receive their nutrients and resources through capillaries.

The cartilage problem

Athletes have a lot of cartilage, tendon, and ligament problems. Why? Let’s find out.

If the capillaries are occluded or are stenosed, or the capillary filtration force is extremely weak, the knee or hip cartilage won’t receive somatomedin from the liver to replace old cartilage, causing cartilage to continue to deteriorate. This is the truth about cartilage that has never been shared.

Therefore, a cartilage problem is also a liver problem, and a liver problem is also a circulatory problem.

People are free to pursue surgery, but those who prefer the natural and scientific route have every right to know where this natural and scientific route is, and the institution that provides it. The institution is Symptometry.

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