Guest guest Posted February 6, 2001 Report Share Posted February 6, 2001 > http://www.nationalpost.com/home/story.html?f=/stories/20010206/466134.html > > New life for vitamin C as cancer treatment > Articles say early studies of its value were prejudiced > Brad Evenson > National Post > > Sakuma, The Associated Press > Linus ing was an early believer in vitamin C's power. > > > Scientists might have blundered 20 years ago when they rejected vitamin C > as a cancer treatment, researchers say. > > Two articles published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal > suggest the cancer doctors failed to properly test the sugar-like > molecule, partly because of a prejudice against " alternative " cures. > > " In 1971, even saying that vitamin C could be useful was so outlandish > that a conversation would stop between scientists and physicians, " says > author Dr. Hoffer, a professor of medicine at McGill University. > > " What's changed now is ... a commitment on the part of agencies to study > alternative cancer therapies. " > > If the vitamin C theory is correct, it could restore the lustre to the > reputation of the renowned American chemist Dr. Linus ing. A two-time > Nobel Prize winner, Dr. ing died in 1994, embittered that the medical > establishment had scorned the idea, which he had championed. > > The controversy began in 1974 when two ish doctors reported that a > handful of patients with advanced, " incurable " cancer had an extraordinary > response to high doses of injections and pills of vitamin C. One of the > doctors confessed he had never seen anything like it. > > Dr. ing, whose 1970 book Vitamin C and the Common Cold set out his > theory that megadoses of the vitamin could cure disease, urged medical > scientists to test it on terminal patients. > > However, two clinical tests at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota found the > vitamin did not alter the course of disease and the notion was abandoned. > Dr. ing attacked the studies, arguing they were designed to fail. > > " He felt that the failure to even examine the possibility reflected > close-mindedness on the part of the medical establishment, " says Dr. > Hoffer, who knew Dr. ing. > > Dr. Hoffer said his own speculation is the Mayo researchers " wanted a > quick and decisive way to disprove the treatment. " > > Last year, at a research workshop in Montreal, scientists began > re-examining the methods used to test high-dose vitamin C against cancer. > > Experts suspect the Mayo Clinic, which tried the treatment for only 10 > days, abandoned it too soon. > > Another theory, proposed by U.S. molecular scientist Dr. Mark Levine, is > that the Mayo Clinic erred by giving only oral vitamin C, instead of > injecting it intravenously. > > Taken orally, much of the vitamin is lost in urine instead of accumulating > in the body's tissues. > > " We should rigorously explore the anti-cancer effects of vitamin C, when > administered intravenously at high doses, in patients with well-documented > cancer, " Dr. Levine writes in a separate article published today in the > Canadian journal. > > Molecular scientists think vitamin C might protect cells from free > radicals, which are damaging chemicals that make the cells vulnerable to > cancer. > > In speeches, Dr. ing would draw a test tube full of the vitamin C a > goat produces and uses every day. Humans produce none, which he argued may > be why goats get less disease. " I would trust the biochemistry of a goat > over the advice of a doctor, " he said. > > Dr. ing, who took 10 milligrams of vitamin C daily, died of cancer at > age 93. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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