Another cancer therapy I would try would be the megavitamin treatment of cancer. In 1936 the agriculture industry met with the government and told them that the ground was depleted of minerals. I believe we all have some form of "dinner table heredity". In that if the mother was deficient in a vitamin or mineral when pregnant, the offspring will "inherit" that deficiency and the disease that that deficiency brings. Intravenously administered Vitamin C seems to work well with advanced stages of cancer. Although depending on which stage the cancer was at, I would first try the oral Vitamin C, along with Vitamin B-3, Vitamin E, Vitamin A, Folic Acid, Coenzyme Q10, Selenium, Calcium and Magnesium, Zinc & Copper.
Sheila
Visit Doctor Yourself
Or: Intravenously administered vitamin C as cancer therapy:
9/24/07
megavitamin cancer therapy
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Labels: cancer, natural cure, prevention
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Interesting information. I have been reading about the vitamin C therapy. My father-in-law has stage 3 cancer and has been considering this as one of his alternatives. He wants to try several different things, I will pass on the link information to him as well.
Thanks for the information, all of it so far has been enlightening.
Vitamin C in oral form has been shown ineffective. The synthetic kind especially. It is unlike calcium in this respect because it is hard to reproduce naturally? How can this be a curative?
Hi Paticem, there is also another site, which lists all the alternative cancer therapies. It is www.bccancer.ca/PPI and click on the left side, unconventional therapies. That is great that your father-in-law is going to fight this, there is so much information out there. In this day and age, no one should die of cancer.
Hi anonymous, the only site that says that Vitamin C is ineffective is the propanda perpetuated by the cancer society. Of course they don't want you to know there is a cure. However will they get their funding for their useless studies? We know that Vitamin C cures scurvy, it that a myth too? The best organic Vitamin C, that I'm aware of, it from Garden of Life, unfortunately, their product only comes in 250 mg. AOR sells a brand with 920 mg, the higher the mg, the less fillers they use.
Science Daily — Nearly 30 years after Nobel laureate Linus Pauling famously and controversially suggested that vitamin C supplements can prevent cancer, a team of Johns Hopkins scientists have shown that in mice at least, vitamin C - and potentially other antioxidants - can indeed inhibit the growth of some tumors ¯ just not in the manner suggested by years of investigation.
The conventional wisdom of how antioxidants such as vitamin C help prevent cancer growth is that they grab up volatile oxygen free radical molecules and prevent the damage they are known to do to our delicate DNA. The Hopkins study, led by Chi Dang, M.D., Ph.D., professor of medicine and oncology and Johns Hopkins Family Professor in Oncology Research, unexpectedly found that the antioxidants' actual role may be to destabilize a tumor's ability to grow under oxygen-starved conditions. Their work is detailed this week in Cancer Cell.
"The potential anticancer benefits of antioxidants have been the driving force for many clinical and preclinical studies," says Dang. "By uncovering the mechanism behind antioxidants, we are now better suited to maximize their therapeutic use."
"Once again, this work demonstrates the irreplaceable value of letting researchers follow their scientific noses wherever it leads them," Dang adds.
The authors do caution that while vitamin C is still essential for good health, this study is preliminary and people should not rush out and buy bulk supplies of antioxidants as a means of cancer prevention.
The Johns Hopkins investigators discovered the surprise antioxidant mechanism while looking at mice implanted with either human lymphoma (a blood cancer) or human liver cancer cells. Both of these cancers produce high levels of free radicals that can be suppressed by feeding the mice supplements of antioxidants, either vitamin C or N-acetylcysteine (NAC).
However, when the Hopkins team examined cancer cells from cancer-implanted mice not fed the antioxidants, they noticed the absence of any significant DNA damage. "Clearly, if DNA damage was not in play as a cause of the cancer, then whatever the antioxidants were doing to help was also not related to DNA damage," says Ping Gao, Ph.D, lead author of the paper.
That conclusion led Gao and Dang to suspect that some other mechanism was involved, such as a protein known to be dependent on free radicals called HIF-1 (hypoxia-induced factor), which was discovered over a decade ago by Hopkins researcher and co-author Gregg Semenza, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Program in Vascular Cell Engineering. Indeed, they found that while this protein was abundant in untreated cancer cells taken from the mice, it disappeared in vitamin C-treated cells taken from similar animals.
"When a cell lacks oxygen, HIF-1 helps it compensate," explains Dang. "HIF-1 helps an oxygen-starved cell convert sugar to energy without using oxygen and also initiates the construction of new blood vessels to bring in a fresh oxygen supply."
Some rapidly growing tumors consume enough energy to easily suck out the available oxygen in their vicinity, making HIF-1 absolutely critical for their continued survival. But HIF-1 can only operate if it has a supply of free radicals. Antioxidants remove these free radicals and stop HIF-1, and the tumor, in its tracks.
The authors confirmed the importance of this "hypoxia protein" by creating cancer cells with a genetic variant of HIF-1 that did not require free radicals to be stable. In these cells, antioxidants no longer had any cancer-fighting power.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health.
Authors on the paper are Dean Felsher of Stanford; and Gao, Huafeng Zhang, Ramani Dinavahi, Feng Li, Yan Xiang, Venu Raman, Zaver Bhujwalla, Linzhao Cheng, Jonathan Pevsner, Linda Lee, Gregg Semenza and Dang of Johns Hopkins.
Note: This story has been adapted from material provided by Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions.
Fausto Intilla
www.oloscience.com
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