Everything changed for me in March 2019.
I was treating a 67-year-old patient named Margaret Johnson. She'd been suffering from diabetic neuropathy for 8 years. She'd already tried every "official" treatment:
✗ Gabapentin (terrible side effects)
✗ Pregabalin (constant dizziness)
✗ Physical therapy (temporary relief, astronomical costs)
✗ Dozens of creams (effectiveness lasted hours)
Margaret was desperate. She told me she woke up every night at 3 AM with her feet "on fire." She couldn't walk through the mall with her daughter anymore. She was thinking about buying a wheelchair.
Then she asked me a question that changed my career:
"Doctor, if my nerves are really 'dead,' why do they hurt so much? Dead things don't feel pain, do they?"
I was speechless.
Because she was right.
If the nerves were truly "irreversibly damaged," as I'd been trained to believe, they wouldn't be able to send pain signals to the brain.
The fact that it hurt meant they were ALIVE. Just dormant.
That night, I started researching everything medical school didn't teach me about neural reactivation.
And I discovered something Big Pharma doesn't want you to know...