When You Hear Hoofbeats

Discusses the pragmatic approach to ruling out issues and conditions using a tried and true logic that applies across the board Nurses General Nursing Article

Listen for Horses... Not Zebras

In all aspects of life, a wise adage of "when you hear hoofbeats, think of horses and not zebras" truly applies. If you are not familiar with this approach to observing and responding to problem-solving it’s worth exploring.

Health care, and to a large extent the rest of the working world, is focused on listening for the zebras - that is, looking for the pathology, the disease, the exotic condition, something to diagnose. Rather than taking a simple, practical and common-sense approach to assessing cause and effect and practicing health care, we continue to associate the hoof-beats with zebras, or the exotic pathology we have all been trained to look for.

Common-Sense Approach Beginning to Disappear

This meaningful approach to care has been lost within this modern “expert medicine” era. We can even see today that this common-sense approach is even beginning to disappear from "alternative" health care practices, as well. Using many forms of supplementation or non-toxic treatment modalities are often used in place of drilling down to the causative factors in a patient’s symptom complex.

For Example...

Here is an example from one of my recent office visits with one of the patients. A very gifted, physical therapist, someone I have had treatment from myself, called upon me after having intractable muscle pain for a week. He could not lie down, could not sleep was in great discomfort, and was also concerned about what this could mean. He had spoken to a wide variety of practitioners who normally deal with musculoskeletal conditions and at the end of his exploration was still in pain and becoming rapidly more concerned. His doctors and practitioners were looking for the dysfunction or pathology that was causing his symptoms and treatments were not working.

When this happens to us we start to think, "do I have something really wrong with me?", if you're older you think "this must be what getting old is about", or if you are an active, healthy person who takes care of yourself you might ask, "how could this be happening to me, I take care of myself." This individual said he called me because he "didn't know where else to turn" to understand his pain and condition and isn't this what I did in my practice – look at the big picture and figure things out about the cause and effect?"

Start with the Basics

Being a Whole Health educated practitioner and patient educator, I started with the basics:

  • What specifically had he been doing prior to this onset?
  • What had he been feeling or avoiding feeling before this happened
  • Where is the specific discomfort?
  • Has he experienced this before and under what circumstances
  • What makes it feel better?
  •  What makes it feel worse?
  • Did he experience any other symptoms along with this pain?

He explained that he just joined a gym and was working out for the past week, but that he wasn't doing that much exercise to cause this discomfort and it wasn't just in one muscle, it was all over his body. He is in very good physical condition so the idea of mild exercising causing this full body pain didn't resonate.

He reported that he hadn't changed his diet, work habits, taken any unusual supplements, changed beds, changed shoes, or had any upset or stress over the past week. He tried a series of natural remedies and treatments to no avail. He was both personally and professionally stumped and so were the practitioners he had spoken with about his pain.

Having been called by several of my patients, the "Sherlock Holmes of Whole Health", I knew the task at hand was to find out the missing piece of information that would unlock the cause of the problem. Looking at the 5 Aspects of Whole Health ™ - the physical, environmental, chemical and emotional possibilities of what could cause this is where we started. We discussed his new membership at the gym. Logic told me that there was something connected to his activities at the gym that was the causative factor in his pain experience because it was after joining the gym that his pain began. It was just a matter of putting our finger on it.

Having suffered chronic back pain myself, I have been a fan of John Sarno, MD, who practiced from a causative perspective targeting the emotional roots of back and body pain. He had cited much research and evidence-based information on the subject but did not take a whole-person perspective, which is how we approached this patient.

After a few minutes of detailed review, one factor that surfaced seemed the right solution to the problem. After his workout, he went for a swim in the gym's pool.  After questioning him about the swimming experience, he shared that the pool was heavily chlorinated and he could tell because the water made his eyes burn.  Interesting and a major clue.

Now some of you who are practitioners reading this might think, "Ah-ha, he has a virus from the pool water", or “he swallowed pool water and had a bad reaction, or “his immune system must have had a toxic reaction to the chemicals in the pool". Sorry, but no cigar - these are all zebras.

Having comprehensive, evidence-based, health information and understanding of the How and Why of body function is critical in truly serving our patients/clients and being able to empower them with the knowledge they need to take control of their health.  Demystified health information is absolutely critical to empower your patient to take control and retain control over their health.

What does chlorine do to our body? It draws out minerals, most importantly calcium and magnesium. Because chlorine molecules have double negative bonds it is wildly attracted to double-positive bonds, as found in calcium. What minerals are significantly involved in muscle function?  And, what minerals are likely to be diminished with repeated exposure to chlorine – Ca and Mg!

I recommended that he go to Whole Foods or CVS and purchase a calcium and magnesium powder, take a dose am and pm over 2 days, and see if that helped. I received an e-mail about 24 hours later with the subject title "WOW" - it dramatically took away most of his discomfort, he got a great night's sleep and felt much better. He is swimming away, but mindful to take his calcium/magnesium before and after each swim.

A Simple Horse - Not an Exotic Zebra

This is the perfect example of thinking horses and not zebras in our practices. I do hope you found and encourage you to become a health detective using a whole health approach.
 


References

Ionic Bonding

What Does Magnesium Do for Your Body?

A Whole Person Approach to Health and Healing

Specializes in Critical Care.
7 hours ago, klone said:

So why does chlorine, while still in its bucket and not put into a pool, still smell like chlorine?

A bucket full of concentrated chlorine will have at least a small amount of those chloramines to give it a detectable order, although once diluted in pool water (so long as the pool water is urine free) you won't be able to smell that "chlorine" smell.  It's when it mixes with urine that the odor becomes noticable.

Mark Rober asking your exact same question:

https://youtu.be/S32y9aYEzzo?t=270

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.

OMG I love Mark Rober. Thanks for that link!

Just watched it - thank you, that was a wonderful video. And now I question my life.

Specializes in ER.

OP, good call. There's not enough attention to things absorbed through the skin of seemingly ordinary products and substances. Often those things disrupt hormones or other functions in the body. Chlorine and fluoride in water is known to interfere with uptake of iodine in the thyroid also. Other skin care products and common modern hygiene products contain substances that disrupt hormones in the body. The skin is the largest organ of the human body. 

4 hours ago, klone said:

OMG I love Mark Rober. Thanks for that link!

Just watched it - thank you, that was a wonderful video. And now I question my life.

Do you like him because of his looks or that he does a good show? 

First I've heard of him by the way. 

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.
1 hour ago, Curious1997 said:

Do you like him because of his looks or that he does a good show? 

First I've heard of him by the way. 

What the *** kind of question is that? Are you 15?

1 hour ago, klone said:

What the *** kind of question is that? Are you 15?

The kind of question that draws that sort of reaction ???

Anger! Hostility! 

Actually, I just wanted to know if he actually is someone worth listening to, but you answered that spectacularly. 

Don't you guys know that what you put out accurately describes you? 

Now let's see how you react? 

2 hours ago, Curious1997 said:

[...]

Actually, I just wanted to know if he actually is someone worth listening to, but you answered that spectacularly. 

[...]

Then perhaps you should have asked that question, and not the tripe that you did. 

But, I think you knew what you were doing, and got the expected response.

Specializes in Critical Care.
8 hours ago, Emergent said:

OP, good call. There's not enough attention to things absorbed through the skin of seemingly ordinary products and substances. Often those things disrupt hormones or other functions in the body. Chlorine and fluoride in water is known to interfere with uptake of iodine in the thyroid also. Other skin care products and common modern hygiene products contain substances that disrupt hormones in the body. The skin is the largest organ of the human body. 

Excessive fluoride and chloride intake relative to iodine intake can result in both displacing some iodine from the thyroid, although fluoride in water makes up a small portion of typical daily fluoride intake, chlorine in water makes up an extremely small portion of the chloride needs of our body.

Both Fluoride and Chloride are important parts of our nutritional intake, although as with anything too much of a good thing can be bad.

It's not really possible to ingest or absorb a toxic amount of chlorine from a pool since to just meet the recommended daily intake you would have to ingest or absorb more than 300 gallons of pool water per day.  

On 4/29/2021 at 12:17 PM, CommunityRNBSN said:

[...]

Edited: I took out a comment about this person being a chiropractor, not a nurse. She says below that she is also a nurse. I did still send a report to the moderators related to this pseudoscientific diagnosis.

Unless there are two Dr Georgianna Donadio, PhDs, she is.

https://www.sharecare.com/user/Dr-georgianna-donadio#credentials

Specializes in Whole Health and Behavioral Health.

Hello Chare-
Thank you for submitting your comments to the administrators.
I look forward to speaking with them.
Kind regards 
Georgianna
 

Specializes in Critical Care.
1 hour ago, chare said:

Unless there are two Dr Georgianna Donadio, PhDs, she is.

https://www.sharecare.com/user/Dr-georgianna-donadio#credentials

It also states she is one of six Nightingale Scholars, I'm curious what she's referring to, maybe she can help me out.

Specializes in Travel, Home Health, Med-Surg.
1 hour ago, MunoRN said:

Excessive fluoride and chloride intake relative to iodine intake can result in both displacing some iodine from the thyroid, although fluoride in water makes up a small portion of typical daily fluoride intake, chlorine in water makes up an extremely small portion of the chloride needs of our body.

Both Fluoride and Chloride are important parts of our nutritional intake, although as with anything too much of a good thing can be bad.

It's not really possible to ingest or absorb a toxic amount of chlorine from a pool since to just meet the recommended daily intake you would have to ingest or absorb more than 300 gallons of pool water per day.  

I am not sure why you are so insistent that this could not have happened the way OP says it did. How do you know it is not possible to absorb a toxic amount of chlorine this way. Maybe this particular person did because we are all different and react differently (physiologically) to different things (meds for instance). It is not that big of a stretch to think that for toxins also. You are only looking at this from a western medical point of view and there is so much more, more that we just don't know or are beginning to know! And, even if you think "science"  is the only way to go just remember that science is always changing with new information etc.