Please read the inspiring story (see pages 42-43) of how David Longman's  daughter Louise (now aged 21) was successfully treated and cured of a benign  vascular tumour which had blighted her life since birth. The technique used was  Photodynamic Therapy (PDT), which applies a photosensitising agent which is  applied and absorbed into the tumour. 
When the agent (Foscan in this instance)  is activated by the correct wavelength of light, this converts oxygen molecules  into singlet oxygen, which destroys the targeted cells. There is no heat used or  generated, so that any healthy cells which may have been destroyed can regrow,  with little or no scar tissue.
This technique, also described in Photodynamic Therapy for Cancer (PH Issue 117 November '05), has been used with increasing success with a  variety of cancers, including mouth, oesophageal, skin, head and neck,  pancreatic, lung and prostate. It is also being applied in non-cancerous  conditions including Age-Related Macular Degeneration (ARMD), atherosclerosis  and rheumatoid and inflammatory arthritis.
Evidence that PDT can be a more effective and lower-cost option compared to  surgery is growing; the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) has  recently published guidelines and recommendations for the use of PDT in the  treatment of skin cancer. However, it is possible that your own GP or Consultant  may not be aware of PDT. That is why, in order to provide the best information  and clinical progress data about PDT for doctors, David Longman has formed a  charity to promote information about the use and benefits of PDT. Donations,  which will help to further PDT research can be made via ww.killingcancer.com
Biljani and colleagues from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in  New Delhi have published a praiseworthy research study which I haven't heard  about in the media (see Research Updates page 41). The study involved 98  individuals suffering from hypertension, coronary artery disease and diabetes  mellitus, who attended an outpatient facility which conducted an 8-day lifestyle  modification programme based upon yoga. The intervention consisted of yoga  asanas (postures), pranayama (breathing exercises), relaxation techniques,  meditation, stress management and nutrition. The results, after only 8 days,  were significant: fasting plasma glucose, total cholesterol, low-density  lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, total cholesterol ratio to high density  lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and total triglycerides were significantly lower  on the last day compared to the first day of the course. It is amazing what  transformation can be achieved after such a short period. I very much doubt that  many coronary heart disease or high blood pressure patients are offered such  conservative, non-invasive treatment options from their physicians; more likely  they are put on a waiting list for a coronary by-pass operation, the results of  which are rarely permanent.
Meanwhile, threats to natural products including nutritional supplements and  herbal medicines have become more ominous. According to the Alliance for Natural  Health (www.alliance-natural-health.org):
"Natural products used freely by consumers and practitioners for  healthcare purposes have never been so greatly under threat. New EU laws on food  supplements, herbal medicines, novel foods and pharmaceuticals, pose some of the  most severe obstacles to large numbers of natural products that are based either  on ingredients that have been part of our food supply, or have been used  medicinally in different parts of the world, for thousands of years…
"Patterns on how the threats to natural healthcare actually  manifest themselves are becoming increasingly apparent. Misrepresented  scientific studies, pushed hard by biased media. provide imaginary black clouds  over natural products that give the regulators sufficient powers to potentially  legislate natural products out of existence. In Europe, regulators currently  have the arbitrary power, to be used at their own discretion, to categorise any  food or food supplement as a drug. This can hardly be right!"
In the event of a potential pandemic of virus strain H5N1 Avian Influenza,  which if sufficiently virulent may have the capability to infect and possibly  kill millions of people worldwide, our adoption of sensible self-help dietary  and nutritional supplement measures may result in saving many lives, including  our own. To ensure that our immune systems are operating optimally, we ought to  stop smoking, ensure that we are eating sufficient fruits and vegetables, take  exercise and get sunlight, eat oily fish and increase our intakes of  virus-combating supplements including vitamin C and zinc. An Expert Column will  explore this further in the next issue.
I truly understand how busy and focused our lives have become, and that not  all of us have the tenacity and motivation to form a charity to push through  progress in any given clinical area. However, if we are not vigilant regarding  the state of the EU Nutrition and Health Claims Regulation, we will end up with  the truly Big Brother Kafkaesque nightmare scenario in which any and all claims  made about a food product will be controlled by this EU Directive. Long live  freedom!