HealthLinks Charleston Sept/Oct 2022

www. Char l es tonPhys i c i ans . com | www.Hea l thL i nksChar l es ton . com | 35 Health & Wellness Testing on Your Terms! Certain foods you eat may cause internal inflammation – resulting in pain. This can be avoided! Personalized DNA Call 843.491.1075 or visit ARCpointlabs.com/Charleston-SC 2831 Tricom St., Ste B | N. Charleston, SC 29406 Our Pharmacogenetics (PGx) test can determine which medications work best with your unique DNA...and which to avoid. A simple non-invasive cheek swab No doctor order or insurance needed. No appointment necessary. Viral testing options include Influenza (Flu) & Strep COVID-19 Lab Testing (Blood Work) • Travel Testing • Onsite, after hours, concierge and event services available • Food Intolerance/Sensitivity & Allergy • Full array of Female and Male Health and Wellness Panels • Avoid adverse drug reactions • Eliminate trial and error Same Day PCR, Antigen & Antibody Testing (results in hours) cheese. After an unappetizing year, she had improved her kidney health and dropped from stage 2 to stage 1. Capicchino made it clear that the diet wasn’t a cure, Linda recalled, “but you can stave off having dialysis.” A native Australian, Capicchino was attracted to the South, Linda said, “because she thought she could do the most good in a place like this.” The diets are very specific and very strict. Realizing that her clients in the South were the most in need but also least likely to follow the regimen, Capicchino returned to Australia in 2019. Knowing that the progressive disease had not been permanently beaten back, Linda has stuck with the diet, and as bloodwork revealed changes such as high potassium and phosphorus, other foods were jettisoned, including nuts, whole grains, fruits and vegetables. “You get very little information about what to do with this kind of a diet,” she explained, noting that crafting an eating plan based on the disease stage and the results of countless blood tests required “a lot of research and educating myself. It was very hard. It would be hard for anyone.” But Linda is no stranger to facing challenges, mostly alone. Ever since childhood, she said “there was no one I could ever allow myself to count on for anything.” At 17, she was the caregiver for her mother. In 2011, she nursed her husband, Dave, through ALS, a progressive neurological disease that is physically and emotionally debilitating both for patients and their families. “I made a promise to him that he would die in his own home, but it almost killed me,” Linda recalled. And in 2017, with no family or support system in Greenville, she battled breast cancer. Linda, five days after her transplant.

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