Have you or a loved one been diagnosed with an MTHFR gene mutation? These days special courses are held for this gene mutation, but the information being shared is fundamentally wrong. There really is no such thing as an MTHFR gene mutation, and misinformation on the subject is preventing people from getting the right answers to their health problems. Although doctors originally diagnosed only one MTHFR gene mutation, now there are different diagnoses for this gene mutation that you can be given, and as this misinformation continues to take hold, more and more MTHFR gene mutations will be created.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease and motor neuron disease, is one of the most misunderstood and mysterious diseases of our time. There is a lot of misinformation about ALS and many misdiagnoses of this disease that lead to devastating consequences. If you or a loved one is suffering from ALS, it is important to know that there is hope. A cure is possible once you understand what's really behind ALS.
Modern medicine has given the mysterious skin diseases various names - seborrheic dermatitis, other types of dermatitis, lupus rashes, urticaria, vitiligo, age spots, cellulitis, rosacea, actinic keratosis, scleroderma, lichen sclerosus and of course eczema and psoriasis. Each person's skin condition is different, although this is not always taken into account. Take eczema for example. It is often approached as if there is a single classic type. This leads to numerous misdiagnoses, including the definition of idiopathic (ie, of unknown cause) when the patient's skin condition does not fall within the narrow definition of eczema. The truth is that there are over 100 types of eczema and psoriasis.