Review Article
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There is a need for an alternative
or modified medical paradigm incorporating an understanding of the nature and
significance of the physiological systems
Graham Wilfred
Ewing
Montague
Healthcare, Mulberry House, 6 Vine Farm Close, Cotgrave, Nottingham NG12 3TU,
United Kingdom.
Citation:
Ewing GW.
There is a need for an alternative or modified medical paradigm incorporating an
understanding of the nature and significance of the physiological systems.
North
Am J Med Sci
2010; 2: 246-251.
Availability:
www.najms.org
ISSN:
1947 – 2714
Abstract
Background:
There are fundamental limitations associated with the diagnosis of disease and
the development of drugs. Drugs are not able to influence the fundamental
stress-related and multi-systemic origins of disease. They mitigate only the
extent of the symptoms and are often significantly ineffective. They are used to
inhibit the progress of specific biochemical sequences associated with
pathologies however many diseases are the consequences of impaired neural
regulation of the various organ networks commonly referred to as the
physiological systems. Very
little research is devoted to the study of the physiological systems though
extensively used in primary care by the GP. What claims to be systems biology
does not take into account the physiological systems. Instead of looking at the
systems which regulate the body's function and biochemistry, most systems
biology seeks to establish the best-fit ‘systems’ which can best explain the
complexity of pathology. This is a significant limitation of orthodox
‘bottom-up’ systems biology.
Aims:
This article reviews the existing biomedical paradigm and emerging alternatives.
It takes into account the
work of the Russian researcher IG Grakov who has mathematically modeled the
consequences of cognition,
in
particular of visual perception,
upon the autonomic nervous system and physiological systems. Results: The
article illustrates limitations with the bottom-up systems biology approach. In
particular it overlooks the significant influence of sensory input upon the
autonomic nervous system.
Conclusion:
There is a need for an alternative or modified paradigm, as outlined in the
article, to consider the multi-systemic nature of the body’s function and its
environmental interface if new and more effective therapies are to be developed.
Keywords:
Virtual Scanning, physiological systems, multi-systemic.
Correspondence to:
GW. Ewing. Director, Montague Healthcare, Mulberry House, 6 Vine Farm Close,
Cotgrave, Nottingham NG12 3TU, United Kingdom.
Tel.: 0115-9890304, Fax:
0115-9899826, Email:graham.ewing@montague-diagnostics.co.uk