Breakthroughs in Natural Medicine 2020 Lecture Notes

Page 1

Breakthroughs

2020

by

Steve Nenninger

Health Philosopher 1


Breakthroughs in

Natural Medicine 2020

Salt Cannabis

Drugs

Autoimmunity Cancer Allergy Testing

Hookworm Therapy 2


once upon a time…

all of the following should be taken as a fictional story….

I do not have clients of patients or treat anybody for anything….

I am going to give you fictional stories about how a fictional health philosopher may look at some fictional people that don’t feel well……. 3


your problem is

your a

Neanderthal

I already told you you’re a viking.

4


Neandethal Genes

Lupus, biliary cirrhosis, Crohn's disease, altered optic-disc size, smoking, and type 2 diabetes, depression, bladder/UTI/cystitis, skin cancer, vitamin deficiency

= IL-18 levels (inflammation) 5


Drug companies now targeting neanderthal genes.

6


Unfair Comparisons with Neanderthal • • •

Previous studies of Neanderthal trauma have been largely anecdotal and based on case studies of individual Neanderthal skeletons. Often, Neanderthals’ injuries were compared to modern human populations instead of Ice Age humans. UIT’s study, however, is the first known largescale analysis comparing fossil records of Neanderthal injuries to those belonging to early 7 humans.


8


Neanderthal liaisons bestowed

virus-fighting genes on humans Interspecies mating helps to protect Homo sapiens against viruses.

Neanderthals shared their viruses with Homo sapiens humans — but also passed on their genes for coping with these pathogens.

9


• • • • • • •

Here, we show that Neanderthal DNA affects the following in present-day Europeans.

skin tone

hair color

height

sleeping patterns

mood

smoking status

10


Neanderthal Hyper-immunity • The emphasis here (on the above heat maps)

is on Toll-like receptor (TLR) genes – TLR1, TLR6, and TLR10, part of our innate immunity

• They may detect and respond to such things

as bacteria, fungi, and parasites

• The TLRs stimulate our inflammatory and antimicrobial responses, and activates an adaptive immune response.

Neanderthal genes are more likely to appear within the TLR genes than in other areas of the coding genome. [12][13]

11


Neanderthal Parasites • • •

Sistiaga suggests that Neanderthal digestion worked with the help of bacteria similar to the ones at work in our own guts.

Neanderthals had parasites, such as hookworms, similar to the ones afflicting modern and other ancient people.

We were told that people with [as] many parasites as we saw [in the samples] would be very sick.

• Neanderthal survived for 400K years. 12


Neanderthal Clotting Genes These Neanderthal variants appear to induce thrombophilia = CLOTTING

Whereas such variants might have been lifesaving in ancient hunter societies, they now seem only to contribute to our current epidemic of thromboembolic disease.

If you have Neanderthal genes do you need the same parasite level to compensate? 13


Neanderthal Clotting Genes These observations suggest that Neanderthal genes have persisted in European genomes and might influence the risk for disease. These Neanderthal variants appear to induce thrombophilia.

Whereas such variants might have been lifesaving in ancient hunter societies, they now seem only to contribute

to our

current epidemic of thromboembolic disease.

14


wormy inhibits clotting Hookworms of the genus Ancylostoma secrete an anticoagulant that both inhibits the clotting of human plasma and promotes fibrin clot dissolution. It is hypothesized that the parasite uses this enzyme to prevent blood clotting while feeding on villous capillaries. 15


Take Home Point

• •

If you have Neanderthal Genes.

• •

Or you will be sick:

or clotting diseases such as strokes, clots and heart attacks.

You have to have Neanderthal worms levels. with inflammatory diseases such as anxiety, depression, lupus, crohns, colitis, arthritis

16


Do our neanderthal genes need special food to turn on or o? But based on evidence from ancient bones, spears, and porridge, our Stone Age cousins likely boiled

their food.

He suggests that Neanderthals boiled using only a skin bag or a birch bark. Are we

deficient in birch bark?

2021 17


18


and you’re a

gorilla

and a monkey 19


Gorillas •

finding that they are 98% similar to humans at a genetic level, which makes them more similar to us than previously thought.

•

branches flip to humans being most similar to gorillas.

•

Some things that apply to their health apply to ours. 20


Animal Share Hookworms Humans and Great Apes Cohabiting the Forest Ecosystem in Central African Republic Harbour the Same Hookworms We conclude that Necator hookworms are shared by humans and great apes co-habiting the same tropical forest ecosystems. 21


Therapeutic Helminth Infection of Macaques with Idiopathic Chronic Diarrhea Alters the Inflammatory Signature and Mucosal Microbiota of the Colon Idiopathic chronic diarrhea (ICD) is a leading cause of morbidity amongst rhesus monkeys kept in captivity. Here, we show that exposure of aected animals to the whipworm Trichuris trichiura led to clinical improvement in fecal consistency, accompanied by weight gain, in four out of the five treated monkeys

22


Monkey Response to Worms • • • •

less bacteria attached to their intestinal wall

a reduced inflammatory response to the gut bacteria.

gut bacteria was restored close to normal after treatment with whipworms. parasitic worms may improve the symptoms of intestinal inflammation, by reducing the

immune response against intestinal bacteria. 23


Cancer

trophoblasts

Vitamin B17

Vitamin B 15 24


Trophoblast

Theory of Cancer 25


Baby grows very rapidly up until 8 weeks with trophoblast cells.

At 8 weeks the baby starts producing pancreatic enzymes and the rapid growth stops.

(Dr. Beard 1905)

26


Trophoblast Enzymes are used to break down the protein coat.

Cancer is lowest in the intestine where the pancreatic enzymes are highest.

27


Trophoblasts

Baby growth.

Wound healing.

Cancer. 28


Modern HCG Studies

Methods

Patients diagnosed and treated for ovarian tumors from 1990 to 2002 were included.

HCG-positive sera were found in 26.7% of patients with benign and 67%

of

patients with malignant ovarian tumors.

In addition, significantly higher hCG serum concentrations were observed in patients with malignant compared to benign ovarian tumors (p = 0.000).

Ovarian cancer tissue was positive for hCG expression in 68%. We identified significant dierences in hCG tissue expression related to tumor grade

29


B17 (Laetrile)

B15 30


I had heard about Laetrile in the 1970’s

…and like most other people I believed it had been tested….it hadn’t.

31


Dr. Richardson

Was harassed his entire professional life for his belief in and use of Laetrile.

This included a coordinated eort by the Government to have him sued in multiple states at the same time.

He even spent a year in prison for his beliefs in this approach.

32


Doctors against Laetrile (B17) were also paid by the tobacco companies

to promote smoking and dissuade believe that smoking caused cancer.

Both died of smoking related causes. 33


Laetrile

1953 report headed by opponents.

1963 California declared the inaccurate study valid.

When the 1953 study was reviewed it was actually positive. 34


Nature’s Chemotherapy • • •

Glucosidase enzyme is 100X more concentrated in cancer cells.

This breaks B17 into a molecules that are toxic to the cancer cell.

Creates cyanide and benzaldehyde 35


B17 B17 is converted to B12 (thiocyanate) in a healthy cell.

B17 is converted to cyanide and benzaldehyde in a cancer cell. 36


• •

Dr. Sugiura

Laetrile (B17) was tested by a senior lab researcher from 1972 to 1977.

His conclusion was that it works to inhibit primary tumors. 37


• B17 (Laetrile)

•

exists in the pits and seeds of apricots, cherries and peaches.

The Hunza are one of the longest lived people on the planet and eat 40 per day.

38


Dierence Between

Cancer & Healthy

Healthy cells have high Rhodanese

Cancer cells have high Glucosidase 39


Is cancer a deficiency disease? When the body detects cancer it turns o all estrogen in the area as a first response.

A good cancer screening test is a pregnancy test.

Because they are the same kind of cells.

40


I have been in practice for 25 years and never realized that there was a “seed” inside of the apricot “pit”.

Knowing what I do now I would say they are essential for health

41


ApricotPower.Com This is the supplement that I use to get B17 and B15.

42


A healthy diet is not enough to prevent cancer. You need the actual nutrient that fights cancer cells.

43


Depending

On how the laetrile is cut by the cell yields either a nutrient or a toxin.

44


B17 Conversion

A healthy cell converts B17 into nutrients for the cell.

A cancer cell converts B17 into a toxic oxygen species.

45


Prevents fatty liver.

Vitamin B15

Methyl donor for MTHFR Reduces cholesterol and fat in the blood. Improves tissue respiration, Relieves fatigue. Reduces the craving for alcohol. Prevention of cirrhosis in the liver. promotes the excretion of toxins. Prolongs life of cells.

46


Vitamin B15 * In 1965 the Russian Academy of Science 205 * * * *

page report.

In 1968 the report was ratified and production began in Russia.

Russian athletes have been given large doses especially in their olympic participation.

Rats given B15 swim much longer.

Soviets discussed its eectiveness in circulation, heart, cholesterol, skin, arteries, asthma, diabetes, healing. 47


Cancer and Enzymes

48


Cancer cells protect themselves with a coating.

This coating has a negative charge as do white blood cells. 49


Enzymes

High dose pancreatic enzymes are used to break down the protective coating of the cancer cell.

This changes the charge of the cancer cell

Now the positive and negative attract.

50


Cancer cells have a negative charge due to a coating on their surface.

This can repel the immune system and keep the cancer protected.

51


Enzymes destroy the sialomucin coating of cancer cells.

This is the enzyme approach to

dissolving cancer

52


Proof in 2004 that pancreatic enzymes improve pancreatic cancer in mice.

53


In 2019 proved again that pancreatic enzymes work.

“We concluded that (pro)enzymes treatment is a valuable strategy to suppress the CSC population in solid pancreatic tumours.�

Research done in Spain of course.

54


Modern Practitioners & Obstacles This is about a doctor, trained at Sloan Kettering under the then President there who has treated 1000’s of patients, (including me who saw him for metastatic cancer in the liver who is well 25 years later) written a number of books, and who presents an argument backed up by some evidence for a remarkable treatment that may cure many advanced cancers. And all you do is assign someone to write an article that is essentially little more than character assassination. - author unknown

CanCure.Org seems like a good place to start. It would be close to impossible to get the best cancer care in the United States.

Not because the doctors aren’t good, but because they are not free, and neither are you. 55


Mexican Cancer Clinic Freedom and Options 56


Fenbendazole Unexpected Antitumorigenic Eect of Fenbendazole when Combined with Supplementary Vitamins Ping Gao, Chi V Dang, and Julie Watson

Abstract Diet containing the anthelminthic fenbendazole is used often to treat rodent pinworm infections because it is easy to use and has few reported adverse eects on research. However, during fenbendazole treatment at our institution, an established human lymphoma xenograft model in

mice failed to grow.

A $7 per week drug for pinworms in mice prevents the growth of microtubules in cancer cells.

57


Fenbendazole + Vitamins

58


Marijuana 59


Nature’s beautiful plant Cannabis Flower

60


Cannabis Marijuana AKA Vitamin “M� You will desire it when you are low the same way people desire fruit when they are low in vitamin C.

61


Symptoms of Vitamin M deficiency 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

insomnia anxiety depression inflammation autoimmune disease cancer 1.

cancer story.

62


Smoking Whole Flower is Best. Dried, whole natural flower was associated with greater symptom relief than the use of other types of products‌.

C. indica

Products made from pure strains were more effective than products made from C. sativa, matching patient-reported preferences for the former for treating conditions such as pain and insomnia. 63


Fertility and MJ

64


Marijuana Creates more sperm.

Due to special chemical… called “chill the fig out” 65


People all got better on cannabis

66


THC (real whole weed is best).

67


What is in Cannabis Cannabinoids Marijuana contains more than 100 so-far identified cannabinoids, including the well-known compounds tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the intoxicating compound that elicits euphoric effects, and cannabidiol (CBD). These cannabinoids interact with your body’s native endocannabinoid system, a regulatory network that keeps many of your functions in homeostasis. Sharing a similar chemical makeup as the endocannabinoids that are synthesized naturally by the body, cannabis-derived cannabinoids are able to interact with the endocannabinoid system’s cannabinoid receptors to stimulate the chemical reactions to produce natural beneficial effects.

Terpenes Responsible for giving marijuana flowers their flavor and aromatic diversity, terpenes have also shown to work with cannabinoids to enhance their natural balancing properties in what’s called the “entourage effect.” Like cannabinoids, terpenes bind to receptors to stimulate wide-ranging effects, and alter the release of neurotransmitters like dopamine and serotonin.

Flavonoids Flavonoids are phytonutrients that contribute to the plant’s color, taste, and smell. They also work together with the other compounds to encourage a wide variety of health benefits. Flavonoids unique to cannabis are called “cannaflavins,” and research has already discovered that they offer some promising properties.

68


Flower is the smokable part of the plant. Indica/ Sativa 69


Study Finds No Link Between Marijuana Use And Lung Cancer Marijuana smoking also did not appear to increase the risk of head and neck cancers, such as cancer of the tongue, mouth, throat, or esophagus, the study found.

The findings were a surprise to the researchers. "We expected that we would find that a history of heavy marijuana use--more than 500-1,000 uses--would increase the risk of cancer from several years to decades after exposure to marijuana," said the senior researcher, Donald Tashkin, M.D., Professor of Medicine at the David Geen School of Medicine at UCLA in Los Angeles.

70


Study: Smoking Marijuana Not Linked with Lung Damage Marijuana smokers performed better on tests of lung function compared to nonsmokers and cigarette smokers

By Maia Szalavitz @maiaszJan. 10, 2012 71


Cannibus Research

But Tashkin argues that specific properties of marijuana also matter. He says that THC has anti-inflammatory and immune suppressing properties, which may prevent lung irritation from developing into chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

As for cancer, he says, “the THC in marijuana has well-defined anti-tumoral effects that have been shown to inhibit the growth of a variety of cancers in animal models and tissue culture systems, thus counteracting the potentially tumorigenic effects of the procarcinogens in 72 marijuana smoke.”


• • • • • •

Marijuana Law Get a medical card. QuickMedCards.Com Recreation Marijuana in not legal in NY. Dried Flower is not legal in NY. It does not matter if you have your medical marijuana card. Yes…the safest most effective form of marijuana is not legal. 73


Hookworm Therapy & Autoimmune 74


A worm is the most intelligent thing you can put in your body.

75


Plants 700M Years / Animals

76


Life

Plant needs cooperation from the environment. to grow, from fungus, bacteria and WORMS. Humans need the same support. We bring our soils inside that body‌ including

WORMS. 77


Priorities

emotional?

repair?

prevention?

anxiety?

weight loss?

autoimmunity?

testosterone?

78


Calming the

Immune System Slide of hookworm

“elevating� natural immune suppressing immune signals. 79


Every worm is different

Overall, the prevailing pattern is that there are few commonalities between the genomes of independently evolved parasitic worms, with each parasite having undergone specific adaptations for their particular niche. 80


Hookworms can live for Decades Many parasitic worms can live within their host for decades, without getting expelled, and without causing excessive pathology. Recorded cases include patients with more than 30 years of Schistosoma mansoni infection (Harris et al. 1984), and a record 53 years for E. granulosus infection (Spruance, 1974).. There is however no doubt that helminths can efficiently manipulate the host immune system; inducing an overall suppression of the immune system, inducing strong regulatory T (TReg)-cell activity, and a relative increase of TH2 immune response to TH1 response (Maizels and Yazdanbakhsh, 2003). This allows the parasite to both minimize the inflammation caused, and avoid pathology from developing, resulting in an uneasy truce where the hosts efforts to expel the parasite decreases and infection becomes chronic. 81


Dog have hookworms also.

82


We conducted a clinical trial where we obtained gut biopsies from people experimentally infected with hookworms and present here the first report of the immune response by healthy human gut tissue to a parasitic worm. We show that hookworms

suppress the production of pro-inflammatory molecules and promote the expression of anti-inflammatory and wound healing molecules in the gut, providing a potential mechanism by which parasitic worms reside for long periods in their human hosts and suppress inflammation associated with auto-immune diseases.

83


Hookworms Create Tolerance

Furthermore, in repeatedly administered experimental human infections, even with as much as 250 L3, initial intestinal symptoms seem to vanish with every newly applied infection [29]. In our view, this indicates time- and dosedependent mechanisms of hookworm immunosuppression with decreased intestinal inflammation, resulting in parasite persistence. 84


Worm Infection Decreases Multiple sclerosis

RESULTS: During a 4.6-year follow-up period, parasiteinfected MS patients showed a significantly lower number of exacerbations. 85


Hookworms treat Inflammation

Gastrointestinal parasites, hookworms in particular, have evolved to cause minimal harm to their hosts when present in small numbers, allowing them to establish chronic infections for decades. They do so by creating an immunoregulatory environment that promotes their own survival, but paradoxically also benefits the host by protecting against the onset of many inflammatory diseases.

86


A Billion Years of Worms

87


2017 Hookworms Treat Chronic Inflammation Nematodes, and hookworms in particular, have been shown to ameliorate chronic inflammatory diseases by promoting regulatory immune circuits,

particularly the induction of regulatory T cells and the modification of the intestinal microbiota.

88


Worms Help Us Heal Disease Blocking Hyaluronidase helps heal multiple sclerosis. A family of enzymes called hyaluronidases can degrade Hyluronic Acid.

he scientists later found that the HA fragments are responsible for instructing immature oligodendrocytes’ myelin genes to stay inactive.

They hypothesized that blocking hyaluronidase could promote remyelination.

Hookworms secrete hyaluronidase blocking factor.

89


Tools We can help wormy work better. What is the body expecting? What did the past provide that is lacking now? 90


Hookworm Rash

91


More worms Less Reactive Immune System

92


Pregnant Woman Worms in Kenya

multiple worms are normal.

93


Autoimmune disease follows the Vikings

94


Where the Worms are.

95


Altzheimer’s Map

96


Parkinson’s Starts in the Gut

97


From genes to latrines: Vikings and their worms provide clues to emphysema Date: February 4, 2016 Liverpool Sch. of Tropical Medicine The key to an inherited deficiency, predisposing people to emphysema and other lung conditions, could lie in their Viking roots. Archaeological excavations of Viking latrine pits in Denmark have revealed that these populations

massive worm infestations. The way that their genes developed suered

to protect their vital organs from disease caused by worms has become the inherited trait which can now lead to lung disease in smokers. 98


Viking Lung Syndrome also known as COPD. Worm Defense gene enzyme called A1AT. 99


The Brain as

Friend and Enemy 100


Inflammation causes Anxiety Inflammation negatively correlates with amygdala-ventromedial prefrontal functional connectivity in association with anxiety in patients with depression: Preliminary results.

101


Inflammation and the Brain

102


Amygdala is activated by inflammation. All addiction is inflammation. All chronic disease is also. 103


Rethinking

Salt 104


Salt warnings not only wrong but dangerous.

105


106


107


108


109


110


111


Rethinking Salt A careful reading of the research shows The greatest percentage of people are salt deficient. 112


All people desire 3-4 grams per day. The kidneys can excrete 10x’x more salt than we eat. (sea) Early hominids had taste for fish. (salt and fat). Insects and nuts high in salt. Aldosterone stores salt, cortisol releases salt.

113


Average Roman consumed 25 grams per day. 18th century 70 grams per person. 16th century Sweden approached 100 grams. Heart disease did not rise in relation to salt consumption.

114


Historical Salt Consumption Average Roman consumed 25 grams per day.

Your Kidneys process a pound of salt per day.

18th century 70 grams per person.

A teapoon is too high yet we process that every 5 minutes.

16th century Sweden approached 100 grams. Heart disease did not rise in relation to salt consumption.

Salt supports all aspects of sex and reproduction. Japan high salt longest lived people. 115


Minerals In Sea Salt

116


117


Salt and Acne •

• • •

Body raises aldosterone to conserve salt.

Spironolactone is an aldosterone antagonist (BLOCK) and diuretic.

It is one of the top 3 acne meds.

You can treat yourself with salt. 118


Potassium 2 grams in a teaspoon Humans need 4 grams per day. Add one teaspoon per gallon. 119


IgG and IgA

Allergy Testing 120


Person with Anxiety IGG

121


Person with cancer IGG

122


Colitis IGG

123


Arthritis IGA

124


Person #1

Person #2

125


Other Lab Testing We are always looking for the best data at the best price.

126


Hidden

127


128


129


•

•

Gluten Reactions The emphasis on Celiac disease as the main manifestation of Gluten-Reactivity has been questioned. It is now

accepted that Gluten-Reactivity is a systemic illness that can manifest in a range of organ systems. The Gluten-Reactivity has been proposed to include not only CD, but also non-celiac gluten sensitive (NCGS) patients without mucosal lesions. From the skin (Dermatitis Herpetiformis, Psoriatic arthritis, Alopecia areata, Dermatomyositis, Cutaneous vasculitis, to the muscles (inflammatory myopathies), to the brain (Gluten Ataxia, altered neurotransmitter production, Schizophrenia, peripheral neuralgias, idiopathic neuropathies and beyond, pathology to gluten exposure can occur in multiple systems without evidence of an enteropathy. 130


Multiple Gluten Reactive Protiens

131


What should

we eat? 132


You could make yourself sick with a lot of dierent food toxins. How do you know if your eating your toxic foods?

? 133


What is the ideal diet? Could we get closest by eating what our ancestors ate?

134


Studies of ancient bones from ten thousand years ago show that nordic people ate mainly fish and other sea animals.

135


Meat

Our Ancestors were eating meat 3.4 million years ago

But while we used to think that tool-use and meateating were the sole province of our genus, research published today has confirmed a much older date for the first clear evidence of butchery: 3.4

million years ago. fossil animal bones that date to the same time period as the earliest documented stone tools in the region and have provided further proof that stone tools were used to butcher animals well over three million years ago. 136


Meat 5,000 years ago Researchers struck it lucky when the frozen, mummified body of a 5,000year-old man, later named Ötzi, was found in the Alps in 1991. His stomach contents were well preserved by the dry cold — revealing a last meal of goat meat, venison and wheat. 137


Milk

Interestingly, we observe that milk proteins are consistently detected throughout all time periods within this study and are detected in 20 percent of individuals overall in ancient and modern individuals,� Hendy’s team wrote.

Northern Europeans commonly carry a

genetic mutation that allows them to drink and tolerate milk well into adulthood. Scientists believe that the ability to drink milk gave people a survival advantage.

138


Vikings Had the Best Diet They actually had a varied and rich diet of both wild and domestic animals, fruits and grains, fowl, fish, and some other items that they could grow, gather, or hunt from nature. It seems that their diet was much better and more varied than other parts of medieval Europe. That said, studies on the contents of ancient sewers and cesspits have shown that the Vikings suered from intestinal worms and other parasites, and also that they sometimes ingested weeds that were somewhat toxic to humans.

Beached whales were a significant part of Viking diet. Scholars have researched garbage heaps and middens to discover what kind of animal bone were in them, examined lake bottoms and bogs to see what types of plants they ate, and as well read sagas and eddas for indications of their culinary habits and diets.

The Vikings did not fry or roast their meat, but instead boiled it. Some of the meat was game but, particularly in the lower latitudes, they consumed domesticated pork, goats, sheep, horses, and cattle. The most significant type of livestock was cattle, which was noted from bone remnants.. Vikings as well kept chickens, geese, and ducks for eggs and meat. In the northern lands the Vikings hunted more, and took squirrels, boar, and elk.

The Vikings fished the Baltic Sea and Atlantic Ocean for mackerel, haddock, and cod, among other fish. They fished rivers for shellfish, and salmon from salt and fresh water. They hunted seals and porpoises, yet they normally prepared them specially. They would preserve the meat by drying, pickling, fermenting, and smoking it. In the far North they would freeze it throughout the year.

Fruits, vegetables, dairy, and seeds for oil were a large part of the Viking diet. They consumed various kinds of plums, sloes, and apples, preserving them by drying. They grew food in gardens and collected wild vegetables such as radishes, peas, beans, fava, cabbage, celery, spinach, parsnips, turnips, and carrots. They also ate onions, mushrooms, seaweed, and leeks. While they consumed rye, barley, oats, and flatbread, but used most grains to make beer.

There is proof from Dublin that the Vikings used fennel, black mustard, and poppy seeds to flavor their food. The Oseberg burial site exposed their use of horseradish, mustard, cumin, and watercress. Some other spices were garlic, juniper berries, wild caraway, marjoram, thyme, mint, parsley, and lovage.

139


Seal Meat Iron and Calcium

140


Blood Type A

141


Foods Best guess now is to eliminate IgG and IgA allergens and eat a blood type compatible diet avoiding the major avoid foods. 142


Foods can Heal Illnesses

These results show that treatment of rats with papain can prevent passively transferred EAMG without any apparent harm to the animals, and suggest a potential therapeutic use for proteolytic enzymes in myasthenia gravis.

143


Papaya as one example of food medicine.

144


Mushrooms

LSD

for

Depression and

Anxiety 145


146


147


LSD brain rewiring

148


Studies of Microdosing LSD

149


150


Prescription Drug

Dangers 151


âœŚEach time you take a drug, you gamble with your health. âœŚOther than an emergency situation there is not reason to be on a conventional drug. 152


Auto-Immune Disease Created by Drugs

153


Conventional medicine needs to focus on it’s own problems “By far the greatest number of [prescription drug-related] hospitalizations and deaths occur from drugs that are prescribed properly by physicians and taken as directed,” says Donald Light, a medical and economic sociologist and lead author of a 2013 paper that detailed the estimate, entitled “Institutional Corruption of Pharmaceuticals and the Myth of Safe and Effective Drugs.”

“About 2,460 people per week are estimated to die from drugs that were properly prescribed, and that’s based on detailed chart reviews of hospitalized patients,” says Light, who is a professor of comparative health policy at Rowan University School of Osteopathic Medicine in Stratford, New Jersey. The estimate, which didn’t include those who died as a result of prescribing errors, overdose and self-medication, would make taking properly prescribed drugs the fourth leading cause 154 of death in the U.S.


7.5 million prescriptions each year.

155


Cipro Toxicity

Tendon Rupture, Nervous System including chronic nerve pain, Liver or Kidney toxicity, Heart Problems, Diabetes, Damaged Mitochondria, Long-lasting OS destroys the mitochondrial DNA and the newly synthesized proteins creating cytochrome complexes are disturbed in their structure leading to permanent electron leakage and OS. The complexes of FQ with proteins and cations are so stabile that they exist in the cells by many years disturbing energy production and epigenetics. Epigenetic changes in gene regulation become persistent many years of FQ application even in the case of lack of FQ in the cell.

156


Tamiflu for Babies?

157


Safe and Effective? I looked at just one drug Tamiflu… To see that effectiveness…

158


Tamiflu

A 2017 Japanese study of 382 medical staffers who had taken Tamiflu preventively after being exposed to influenza found that 22 percent of those surveyed experience some side effects, including stomach distress, and 0.5 percent had a neuropsychiatric reaction. Postmarketing reports include liver inflammation and elevated liver enzymes, rash, allergic reactions including anaphylaxis, toxic epidermal necrolysis, abnormal heart rhythms, seizure, confusion, aggravation of diabetes, and haemorrhagic colitis and Stevens–Johnson syndrome.

159


Tamiflu Effectiveness Study Withdrawn.

160


Study withdrawn/Inaccurate/?

161


Cochrane Questions Tamiflu From 2010 to 2012, Cochrane requested Roche's full clinical study reports of their trials, which they did not provide. In 2011, a freedom of information request to the European Medicines Agency provided Cochrane with reports from 16 Roche oseltamivir trials. In 2012, the Cochrane team published an interim review based on those reports

162


Tracking down Tamiflu effectiveness

Jefferson, TO; Demicheli, V; Di Pietrantonj, C; Jones, M; Rivetti, D (19 July 2006). "Neuraminidase inhibitors for preventing and treating influenza in healthy adults" (PDF). The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (3): CD001265. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD001265.pub2. PMID 16855962. (Retracted, see doi:10.1002/14651858.cd001265.pub3. If this is an intentional citation to a retracted paper, please replace {{Retracted}} with {{Retracted|intentional=yes}}.)

163


Billions Spent on Ineffective Tamiflu In November 2005, US President George W. Bush requested that Congress fund US$1 billion for the production and stockpile of oseltamivir, after Congress had already approved $1.8 billion for military use of the drug. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who was a past chairman of Gilead Sciences, recused himself from all government decisions regarding the drug.[68] In 2006, a Cochrane review raised controversy by concluding that oseltamivir should not be used during routine seasonal influenza because of its low effectiveness.

164


Researchers had to do a freedom of information request to get the full study reports. From 2010 to 2012, Cochrane requested Roche's full clinical study reports of their trials, which they did not provide. In 2011, a freedom of information request to the European Medicines Agency provided Cochrane with reports from 16 Roche oseltamivir trials. In 2012, the Cochrane team published an interim review based on those reports

165


Drug Companies do not have to Publish all of their research data. Drug companies do not publish all their research data. This report is the result of a colossal fight for the previously hidden data into the eectiveness and sideeects of Tamiflu.

It concluded that the drug reduced the persistence of flu symptoms from seven days to 6.3 days in adults and to 5.8 days in children. But the report's authors said drugs such as paracetamol could have a similar impact.

166


Tamiflu Ad Campaign

167


Money Wasted Around the World Hundreds of millions of pounds may have been wasted on a drug for flu that works no better than paracetamol, a landmark analysis has said. The UK has spent ÂŁ473m on Tamiflu, which is stockpiled by governments globally to prepare for flu pandemics. The Cochrane Collaboration claimed the drug did not prevent the spread of fl u or reduce dangerous complications, and only slightly helped symptoms. The manufacturers Roche and other experts say the analysis is flawed.

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Tamiflu Hidden Data Drug companies do not publish all their research data. This report is the result of a colossal fight for the previously hidden data into the eectiveness and sideeects of Tamiflu.

It concluded that the drug reduced the persistence of flu symptoms from seven days to 6.3 days in adults and to 5.8 days in children. But the report's authors said drugs such as paracetamol could have a similar impact.

The 180 degrees of avoidance 169


Drug Studies Flawed and Misleading "The system that exists for producing evidence on drugs is so flawed and open to misuse that the public has been misled.�

Dr Tom Jeerson, a clinical epidemiologist and former GP, said: "I wouldn't give it for symptom relief, I'd give paracetamol.�

The Cochrane Collaboration researchers have not placed the blame on any individual or organisation,

instead saying there had been failings at every step from the manufacturers to the regulators and government. 170


Tamiflu 2 million times 1% = 20K with severe neuropsychiatric symptoms, for what benefit ?

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2017 Tamiflu Study A 2017 Japanese study of 382 medical staffers who had taken Tamiflu preventively after being exposed to influenza found that 22 percent of those surveyed experience some side effects, including stomach distress, and 0.5 percent had a neuropsychiatric reaction. Postmarketing reports include liver inflammation and elevated liver enzymes, rash, allergic reactions including anaphylaxis, toxic epidermal necrolysis, abnormal heart rhythms, seizure, confusion, aggravation of diabetes, and haemorrhagic colitis and Stevens–Johnson syndrome.

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Reasons previously accepted study were now rejected.

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Schedule for Giving Tamiflu

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Triple Flu Defense A carefully a designed homeopathic without side eects. Formulated every year by a naturopathic doctor with 25 years experience. - Me :) With seasonal adjustments based on input from around the country.

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Tylenol Mechanism of Action is Not Known

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Tylenol Pregnancy Damage

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Winter perfect for intermittent fasting

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Hypertension Hypertension Medicines increase cancer risk. When you starve the body for oxygen you increase cancer risk.

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Drug and cancer risk, not just my observation.

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Medical Errors 3rd leading cause of death in America

Why don’t we let people make their own “mistakes.”

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Prescription Drugs 4th leading cause of death.

We can do better ourselves, making our own choices.

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Random

Slides 185


Berberine Complex Ingredients

2 Veg Capsules contain: Total Carbohydrate <1 g, Barberry (Berberis vulgaris) Root Extract 400 mg, Oregon Grape (Berberis aquifolium) Root Extract 400 mg, Goldenseal (Hydrastis canadensis) Root and Rhizome Extract standardized to contain 5% total alkaloids including berberine, hydrastine, and canadine 100 mg. Other Ingredients: vegetable capsule (modified cellulose), cellulose, magnesium stearate, silicon dioxide.

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Constantly Stressing Muscles is Essential A 75 year old athlete has similar muscle density to that of a younger person.

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Mold Toxicity

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Neurotransmitters

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Hormone Testing Summary

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Hope for millions of men as scientists show no link between testosterone

treatment and prostate cancer Emily Dugan Sunday 2 October 2011 00:00 The "male menopause" has been ridiculed as an excuse for men behaving badly in middle age, but the condition is a real one. Now more than two million sufferers have been given hope of a safe cure. For years, testosterone replacement treatment (TRT) – the most effective known medication for what is officially the andropause – had been linked to prostate cancer. But today clinicians will announce that research has found no link, meaning that for the first time doctors will be able to recommend the treatment without fear.

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Hormone Specific Maca Species

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Maca to raise Testosterone

Maca-OG (Organic Maca Root Concentrate), Capsule - Hypromellose (Plant derived cellulose).

Organic, Kosher, Vegan, Gluten-Free, Pure, Global Trade and Environmentally Friendly: Maca-OG™, the only ingredient in Revolution Macalibrium® is USDA, European Union and JAS (Japan) organically certified, as well as K Star Kosher certified.

Maca-GO is a highly concentrated proprietary formulation for men of different types of maca (Lepidium peruvianum) to bring the body into balance. Maca root is a Peruvian herb and adaptogen that is known for its benefits in balancing hormones. Maca has 13 different

types or phenotypes - that are different colors and have different DNA and most importantly can have different physiological effects in the body.

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M훮nuka honey is a monofloral honey produced from the nectar of the m훮nuka tree, Leptospermum scoparium. The honey is commonly sold as an alternative medicine. ... The word m훮nuka is the M훮ori name of the tree; the spelling manuka (without a macron) is common in English.

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Even the most basic things we think that we know are questionable. This book discourages colonoscopy based on research. 197


Pullups and Pushups

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