Guest guest Posted July 6, 2002 Report Share Posted July 6, 2002 Dear All, I had a very interesting meeting with Mrs. Vivien Chou in London this Wednesday. The reason for our meeting was the common interest we have in Equiguard. Mrs. Chou is the Managing Director of the company in Honk Kong promoting Equiguard. Equiguard is a traditional formula for the treatment of 'kidney deficiency'. On the strength of the very favourable thousand year plus history of the Equiguard formula in China, and on the basis of a very favourable in-vitro study at NYMC[1] showing the cancer kill potential of the herbal mix, Mrs. Chou hopes to persuade some notable researchers in the USA to give Equiguard a thorough scientific testing, including double blind human trials. I wish her well in the USA, and I wish Equiguard success - we all need a helping hand to defeat this disease which brings us together. What follows is my assessment of Equiguard based on my limited research and personal experience of prostate cancer and should not in any way be taken to represent the opinion or 'off the record' comment by any other party. Since traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) defines the kidney as the guardian of reproductive function and sexual virility as well as urinary excretion, the urinary-prostate symptoms typically experienced by aged hypogonadal men are well suited to a herbal mix such as Equiguard[2]. The herbs together have a strong 'yang' flavour which will bring up vitality generally and act as a tonic for sexual impotence and senility. The constituent herb astragalus will help the immune system deal with infections of the genito-urinary tract and thereby improve flow and reduce pain on urination or ejaculation. The constituent herb epimedium has an agonist effect on the hypothalamus-pituitary which accounts for the ability of Equiguard to tonify sexual function. This may be a desirable quality in men who are suffering from hypogonadal status due to natural causes brought about by ageing. However there is only limited scientific evidence[3] to suggest that LHRH agonist stimulation of men with prostate cancer is a desirable function and we should proceed with caution at this stage. It may well be the case however that Equiguard could be used with great benefit during the withdrawal phase of hormone block (HB) for example LHRH synthetic analog agonist treatment: lupron or zoladex; LHRH synthetic analog antagonist abarelix; or synthetic estrogen DES or PC-SPES. During the withdrawal phase of HB which can last anywhere from three to six months a deliberately invoked sudden rise to normal sex steroid status may counteract the onset of prostate cancer cell proliferation due to the low levels of, or imbalance in said hormones (including male estrogens) which are typically experienced[4]. By the same token I understand it would not be productive to use Equiguard in a context of LHRH synthetic analog agonist induction of HB as the herbs will synergise with the agonist to exacerbate testosterone flare and stimulate an increase in tumour growth[5]. I feel there is a place for herbs with a 'yin' flavour in the treatment of aggressive prostate cancer which seems to characterise many men - particularly younger men in the West. Indeed, Western conventional HB can be considered as 'yang-reducing' from a TCM point of view, without a complementary yin-enhancing aspect. In their strictest sense TCM herbs convey both yin and yang curative aspects and we in the West need to understand this complementarity if we are to advance our fight against prostate cancer. Herbs such as artemisia, saw palmetto, and fungii such as coriolus, ganoderma and cordyceps, all have a yin-enhancing effect to counteract the excessive yang which characterises Western prostate cancer. Again, good luck to Mrs. Chou and Equiguard. Please feel free to post this information to any other group. You are welcome to take this discussion to PC-TCMgroups ( subscribe:- pc-tcm-subscribe ) Cheers, Sammy. References: 1. pc-tcm/files/EQUIGUARD/1/ 2. pc-tcm/files/EQUIGUARD/2/ 3. pc-tcm/files/ARCHIVE/PROUT/4.gif 4. http://www.lef.org/protocols/prtcl-130.shtml 5. http://www.prostate-cancer.org/education/andeprv/hormone.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.