Erik Enby

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Erik Ossian Hugo Enby (born 12 May 1937 in Karlskrona, Sweden) is a Swedish medical doctor and specialist in the field of geriatrics who has become known for his controversial research on the cause of diseases.

Contents

[edit] Early life - biography

Erik Enby was born 12 May 1937 in Karlskrona, Sweden. His father was a sea-captain in the merchant marine, and his mother a graduate of the Royal College of Music. His family moved to the town of Gothenburg in 1944, where Erik spent his school years until 1959 when he graduated from high school with a diploma in the Classics. Later on he supplemented his high school education with the subjects in natural science required in order to study medicine.

Erik Enby did his military service in Stockholm 1959-1960. After that, he studied music in Stockholm and Gothenburg. In May 1962, he began to study medicine in Heidelberg in West Germany. Shortly after that, in 1964, he married. In 1967, Erik returned to Gothenburg, Sweden, where he continued his medical education. In 1973 he was authorized as a Registered Doctor by the National Swedish Board of Health and Welfare in Stockholm.

From 1973 to 1974 he worked at the dermatology clinic in Gothenburg. In the year of 1974 he began clinical studies, and then he became interested in the diagnostic methods and forms of therapy used in alternative medicine. He gathered more knowledge and information in this field through specialist literature and on study tours in the United States and Germany.

In 1977 Erik Enby opened his own private medical practice to explore new forms of therapy. As it turned out, there were many opportunities to help patients who could not find a remedy for their illnesses in the established medical care. As a result, his practice was constantly growing. In addition, he had his work at the University Clinic for Geriatrics at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, where he was in charge of a ward with various policlinical duties. In 1980 he became a specialist in the field of geriatrics including internal medicine. Eventually, he also became a general practitioner. He retired from Sahlgrenska University Hospital in 2004.

In 1979-1980 Erik Enby became interested in the definitions of “health”, “illness” and “death”. Gradually, he began to realize that an illness must be a special condition arising in the tissues. These ideas made it impossible for him to whole-heartedly participate in the research work at the clinic where he was employed, because he eventually realized that the research he was interested in lay in a different direction. After a while he developed his method of research, and the last 30 years he spent all his leisure time working on his theory. He explains what he means by “health”, “illness” and “death” with the help of the microbe-like formations he has found in the blood tissues. His analysis is based on the blood microscopy work, carried out by the professor in zoology, Günther Enderlein, towards the end of his life. In addition to his own research, he managed to carry on his full-time work at the hospital. His colleagues were naturally astonished at his findings, but did not dare to show their interest openly, since they understood that his findings could have serious consequences for the conventional medicine.

[edit] Microbiology - Scientific work and theories about pleomorphism and origins of diseases - Monomorphism versus pleomorphism

Monomorphism, where it is assumed that microorganisms appear in an unchangeable, constant shape and that they can be divided strictly into groups. Pleomorphism, where it is supposed that microorganisms can have cycles, that is, they go through different stages of development.

Dr. Erik Enby is renowned for his work with the blood and his discoveries and theories about the origins of diseases, based on former works of other scientists. Among his predecessors and important researchers in the microbiology is Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723), who was the first to observe microorganisms, using a microscope already in 1676. He is commonly known as “The Father of Microbiology”.[1]

Famous researchers, whose literature has inspired Dr. Enby to further research, are among others Claude Bernard (1813-1878), Antoine Béchamp (1816-1908), Ignaz Semmelweis (1818-1865), Rudolf Virchow (1821-1902), Louis Pasteur (1822-1895), Joseph Lister (1827-1912), Heinrich Anton de Bary (1831-1888), Robert Koch (1843-1910), Wilhelm Zopf (1846-1909), Ernst Bernhard Almquist (1852-1946), Carl Spengler (1860-1937), Jules Tissot (1870-1950), Günther Enderlein (1872-1968), Felix Löhnis (1874-1930), Wilhelm von Brehmer (1883-1958), Emmy Klieneberger-Nobel (1892-1985), Wilhelm Reich (1897-1957), Linus Pauling (1901-1994), Virginia Livingston (1906-1990), Lida H. Mattman (1913?- ), Alfons Weber (1915-1994), Olov Lindahl (1919-1991), Gaston Naessons (1924- ), Per-Arne Öckerman (1933- ), Alan Cantwell (1934- ), Tamara Lebedewa (1938- ), Joel D. Wallach (1940- ) and Matthias Rath (1955- ).

Other notable biologists: William Ph. Dunbar, Gyula de Szilvay, S. Silver, John W. Rippon, Irene Corey Diller, D. Burkitt, John W. Nuzum, L. Dienes, S. Razin, Jo Anne Whitaker, Elis Sandberg, Wolfgang Köstler and E. Olavi Kajander.

Medical doctors, who have taken up the works of Günther Enderlein, and who have been able to confirm his discoveries are, besides Erik Enby, Karl Windstosser (1906-2000) and Alfred Baum from Germany, Abraham Ber from USA and Nello Mori from Italy, as well as others round the world. Paul G. Seeger, for example, through his research also confirmed Enderlein.

The microbiologists/pleomorphists, who have influenced Dr. Enby the most, are the following: Prof. Claude Bernard (1813-1878) a famous French pleomorphist, physiologist and biologist - from peasant to hero of France - was called "one of the greatest of all men of science". "Le microbe n´est rien, le terrain c´est tout." (Mikroberna är intet, miljön/terrängen/jordmånen är allt.) (Die Mikrobe ist nichts, das Milieu, in dem sie lebt, ist alles.)

Antoine Béchamp (1816-1908), (antagonist of Louis Pasteur), Professor and a French biologist, one of the most famous researchers in France, whose ideas about microfloras in the blood from chronically diseased, "blood is not sterile", has had a decisive significance for the work of Dr. Enby.

Louis Pasteur (1822-1895), French chemist, biologist and monomorphist. Some people say that he is the greatest biologist of the 19th century. Others mean that Louis Pasteur built his reputation, and altered the course of 20th century science, by plagiarizing and distorting the work of Antoine Béchamp. (See "The Dream and Lie of Louis Pasteur" by R.B. Pearson, who gives historic examples, why Pasteur wasn't the original scientist to create the germ theory of diseases.) On his death bed, Louis Pasteur admitted that he was wrong. His last words: "Claude Bernard is right; it is the soil and not the germ, that makes the plant grow."

Prof. Dr. in Zoology Günther Enderlein (1872-1968). He based his initial work on Antoine Béchamp. He discovered at the beginning of the 20th century that the blood and other body fluids contain small particles, so-called endobionts. The endobiont is always present and cannot be removed from the living cell. The clinical symptoms of a disease depend on the stadium it its development. This "fungal parasite" can be present in all tissues and organs.

[edit] Scientific research on the Concept of Disease

Since the late 1970s, Dr. Enby has carried out independent research on the nature of illness with a view to understanding and explaining the phenomenon chronic illness. His research is based on the principle that illness is caused by pleomorphic microbiological growth. Could the symptom picture of different illnesses be traced back to a common denominator? The research work confirms that most of the so-called chronically sick have growing structures in blood and solid tissues, not described earlier in modern medical research. During most of his medical life, he has been interested in the nature of illnesses and has found that they are due to infections. The orthodox medicine has not yet accepted the results of his research, neither has it been able to prove it wrong. Dr. Enby's results will, however, in all probability change the approach to illness.

Erik Enby's present goal is to continue publishing interesting findings from his research. He would prefer to do so in a serious academic context and has therefore tried to explain his work to the University of Gothenburg. The Ethical Committee approved his research on June 15, 1983, and he is officially allowed to take blood tests to go ahead with his research. This means that his blood studies are registered as a University research project. [2] As it has been impossible to find a scientific leader for the project in Sweden or abroad who knows anything about Dr. Enby's field of research, he has made the investigation under his own management. This is probably because this field is fresh and new, and the person who can produce such research will probably build a new school of medicine.

[edit] Works by Dr. Erik Enby

[edit] Books mentioning Dr. Erik Enby

  • Premmert, Ulla & Andreassen, Knut (1987). Erik Enby och mikroorganismer. Kap. 12. ”Bra att veta: En bok om bröstcancer” Allerbok, Helsingborg, ISBN/ISSN 91-7506-398-0.
  • Lindahl, Olov (1990). Recept På Hälsa - Mina bästa råd till Dig som vill bevara eller återfå hälsan, page 328, ISBN 91-1-893292-4.
  • Dumrese, Jost & Haefeli, Bruno (1996). Pleomorphismus, Blutsymbionten, Blutparasiten, Blutpilze Unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Enderleinschen Cyclogenie und der diagnostischen Methoden nach Haefeli. ISBN 3-7760-1521-7, p. 505, 545.
  • Hess, David J. (1997). ”Can Bacteria Cause Cancer? – Alternative medicine confronts big science", p 41-47, p. 209. ISBN 0-8147-3561-4.
  • Diamond, W. John & Cowden, W. Lee & Goldberg, Burton. (1997). An Alternative Medicine – Definitive Guide to Cancer, p. 908-909. ISBN #1-887299-01-7.
  • Schönfeldt, Torsten. (2002). Finn Dina vägar till bättre hälsa, p. 494-508. ISBN 91-7910-414-2.
  • Aloisio, Ted (2004). "Blood Never Lies - A Practical Guide To Health And Nutrition", p. 143. ISBN 1-932560-94-7.
  • Cantwell, Alan. (2005). "Four women against cancer - Bacteria, Cancer and the Origin of Life", p. 136. ISBN 0-917211-33-2.
  • Krämer, Elke. (2006). "Leben und Werk von Prof. Dr. phil. Günther Enderlein. (1872-1968)", p. 9, p. 263. ISBN 978-3-87667-285-4.

[edit] External links

[edit] Criticism of Dr. Enby's work


[edit] References

  1. ^ Anton van Leeuwenhoek
  2. ^ (Project no. 214-83. "The Ethical Committee of the Medical Faculty, University of Gothenburg, found the analysis of blood and blood plasma regarding the variation of an unknown possible pathogenetic factor in the disease panorama, ethically acceptable.”)

Lida Holmes Mattman, PhD, Professor Emeritus, Dep. of Biology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan. "Cell Wall Deficient Forms - Stealth Pathogens". (1993). ISBN 0-8493-4405-0.

Günther Enderlein, Professor Dr. phil., "Bakterien-Cyclogenie". (1981). Hoya. Semmelweis-Verlag. "Akmon. Das Blut als Phaenomen der Gesundheit in akmosophischer Betrachtung". (1955). Ibica-Verlag.

Frau Dr. med. Elke Krämer, "Leben und Werk von Prof. Dr. Phil. Günther Enderlein". (2006). Reichl Verlag, St. Goar. ISBN 978-3-87667-285-4.

Dr. Alan Cantwell, MD, Los Angeles, California. www.ariesrisingpress.com