Thanks, Anthony.
The mention of ablation, cauterization to build a deliberate scar tissue to present a barrier for the over-reactivity, has been done on heart arrhythmia. But only the surgeon who invented the procedure and his own tools for the surgery, at John's Hopkins in Boston, gets the good results. Someone I know had the surgery five times in Seattle, and got only partial relief. Finally, they paid out of pocket to get it done by the best, and got 100% remission from the heart problems first time, and is fine years later.
That surgeon knows the heart, the nerves involved in the disease condition, and his tools. He is highly skilled and hard to get into. So it's not that the surgery is a flop, it was that it's a long shot and only the best are worth risking it.
If this procedure is fully studied and a surgeon who is highly gifted makes it his life work, someone beyond Lipoff, then we may have some hope in future years to come. But, again, for those who can afford to fly and pay out of pocket. Conjecture, but not out of the realm of possible.
The mention of ablation, cauterization to build a deliberate scar tissue to present a barrier for the over-reactivity, has been done on heart arrhythmia. But only the surgeon who invented the procedure and his own tools for the surgery, at John's Hopkins in Boston, gets the good results. Someone I know had the surgery five times in Seattle, and got only partial relief. Finally, they paid out of pocket to get it done by the best, and got 100% remission from the heart problems first time, and is fine years later.
That surgeon knows the heart, the nerves involved in the disease condition, and his tools. He is highly skilled and hard to get into. So it's not that the surgery is a flop, it was that it's a long shot and only the best are worth risking it.
If this procedure is fully studied and a surgeon who is highly gifted makes it his life work, someone beyond Lipoff, then we may have some hope in future years to come. But, again, for those who can afford to fly and pay out of pocket. Conjecture, but not out of the realm of possible.