A Breakthrough in Healing: How NIS Now Accesses Your DNA and RNA
2025 marks a pivotal moment in natural health. Dr. Allan Phillips, founder and developer of NIS (Neurological Integration System), has achieved a revolutionary breakthrough: the ability to access and correct dysfunction at the DNA and RNA level. This discovery could transform how we understand and address the root causes of disease.
Why DNA and RNA Matter to Your Health
Think of DNA as your body's master blueprint. This double-helix molecule contains all the genetic instructions needed for your body to develop, function, grow, and reproduce. DNA's structure—a twisted ladder with rungs made of four chemical bases (adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine)—codes for every protein your body creates.
And here's what matters most: everything in your body is built from proteins.
Your skin, bones, enzymes, hormones, nerve cells, organs, and glands—all constructed from proteins made of amino acids. The sequence of these amino acids determines how each protein functions.
This is where RNA enters the picture. RNA (ribonucleic acid) acts as the messenger, copying DNA's genetic code and assembling amino acids into the proteins your body needs to survive.
When the Blueprint Gets Damaged
DNA and RNA damage happens more often than you might think. Internal factors like reactive oxygen species from normal metabolism, combined with external threats like UV radiation, chemicals, and environmental toxins, can alter these crucial molecules. The damage manifests as breaks, modifications to the base structure, or crosslinking.
While your body has built-in repair mechanisms, they're not foolproof. Undetected damage slips through, accumulating over time.
The consequences are serious:
Cancer development – mutations can trigger uncontrolled cell growth
Neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's
Accelerated aging and loss of cellular regeneration
Chronic health conditions stemming from abnormal protein production
Here's a concrete example: hormones are specialized proteins called ligands that bind to receptors to trigger specific cellular responses. When DNA or RNA damage alters a hormone's structure, it can no longer fit properly into its receptor—like a damaged key that won't turn the lock. The result? Hormonal imbalances, dysfunction, and disease.
The Foundation of Health
Proper DNA and RNA function represents the very foundation of health and well-being. When these genetic molecules malfunction, the ripple effects touch every system in your body. In fact, dysfunction at this level is the ultimate cause of nearly all disease.
This is why Dr. Phillips' breakthrough matters.
NIS now provides the tools to detect and correct many types of DNA and RNA dysfunction that conventional approaches miss entirely. By addressing problems at this fundamental level, we can finally target the true source of countless health issues—not just manage symptoms, but restore proper function where it all begins: in your genetic code.
The implications are profound. For the first time, practitioners have a method to access the molecular foundation of health itself.