TO: All breast cancer researchers, doctors, and patients.
I am a 35-year-old electrical engineer investigating the biomechanical
effects of shoes on degenerative diseases. Each year I post about this
admittedly unusual connection, but thus far nobody has taken it
seriously.
Chiropodist Dr. Simon J. Wikler pioneered efforts to understand the
influences of shoes in the 1950's, but his work was neglected during
the subsequent drug- and diet-based approaches to medicine. However,
the prolific footwear historian and podiatrist Dr. William A. Rossi
clearly demonstrated throughout his publications that shoes influence
the posture of the human body. Therefore, using the posture-based
approaches to medicine of the distinguished orthopedist Dr. Joel E.
Goldthwait, I have expanded Dr. Wikler's insightful work to include a
variety of illnesses and conditions whose causes remain unknown.
Breast cancer is just one example of diseases that are related to the
use of footwear. Dr. Wikler observed that rounding of the shoulders in
humans puts tissue at a mechanical disadvantage. He explains, "The
breast is slung between strong fibrous bands (fascia) that arise from
the breast and collarbones. As long as the shoulders are thrust back
and the chest held erect, breasts can become very heavy and sag
considerably without undue strain to these fibrous bands. In the
characteristic posture of unbalanced feet, however, the shoulders slump
forward and, instead of the breast bone being prominent, the armpits
are now more forward. It becomes mechanically impossible for the
breast-and-collarbone fascia to support the breast. Weak fibers from
the outer side of the chest attached to the armpits must now do the
job. But these fibers are incapable. So there is a constant straining
and tearing at these tissues on the upper outer part of the breast. It
is exactly in this site that more than 90% of breast cancer is found,
and it can be reasonably concluded that the deformation of the feet may
be an important cause."
You may find my thesis regarding shoes and disease on the Internet at:
http://www.shoebusters.com
My outlined treatment involves removing the cause, but resorting to
wide-toed, soft-soled moccasins; regularly applying a contrast bath, or
more descriptively, an alternate cold-hot footbath, to maintain
flexibility in the feet; rehabilitation of the abdominal muscles, via
forced exhalation, to balance the feet; and getting plenty of rest.
Thank you very much for considering my novel approach.
James Semmel
Albuquerque, NM
Lowell - 07 Jan 2006 01:23 GMT
Whew!!! Imagine that - Van
> TO: All breast cancer researchers, doctors, and patients.
>
[quoted text clipped - 45 lines]
> James Semmel
> Albuquerque, NM
James Semmel - 10 Jan 2006 19:22 GMT
Nobody bothered to point out that breast cancer afflicts women
significantly more often than men.
james