Imagine the following real-life clinical case:
Patient invests more than a decade in follow-ups with various doctors, but especially with one “specialist”, to try to “solve his problem” of “high” cholesterol and hypothyroidism, but only experiences a rollercoaster effect, with “ups and downs” in their control/regulation/optimization (improvement for a short time after taking medication and then worsening again whenever they are withdrawn or their doses are reduced - apparently due to inefficiency in resolving the root causes), with persistence and worsening of symptoms and the gradual appearance of new ones, compromising her quality of life and well-being.
She was then referred to me and underwent the “AET Method” and today reports feeling much better in everything, striving to optimize her lifestyle habits more and more and using less and less medication.
The most curious thing is that, when she felt this way, she went back to her “specialist” and he told her that she should choose whether to go with him or with me, since the “approaches are incompatible”, and the patient reported that he was somewhat irritated by some points of the AET Method that she now follows. She herself reports that she found his nervous, even angry, behavior unpleasant and unnecessary, and that he was unwilling to cooperate and join forces for her benefit.
What could be the reason for the doctor's reaction? Could it be that he knows the AET and disagrees with some point? Wouldn't it be better to talk about it, in the legitimate interest of helping the patient?
My comments:
✅ Cholesterol is not the “problem” in most cases; it is not the “villain of the story”... Read/watch and understand: https://icaro.med.br/?s=colesterol
The Essential Approach to Treatment (AET) is the result of applying these 3 pieces of knowledge together in the correct sequence explained here:
🔗 https://icaro.med.br/degrausdasaude/
🔗 https://icaro.med.br/movimento11/
🔗 https://icaro.med.br/construindo-uma-parede-solida/
✅ AET is not an “official” acronym - I just created it to illustrate to you what I think is basic and fundamental to the success and maintenance of good results in any clinical treatment in the office.
AET is not exclusive to me! There are tens of thousands of professionals all over the world approaching their patients under these simple but effective principles, and I've only compiled the strategies and given them this name, but I teach them in detail in most of my courses and lectures, all over the country! In other words, the only people who don't learn and practice are those who really don't want to or are not interested in optimizing patient care.



