Guest guest Posted February 28, 2001 Report Share Posted February 28, 2001 I am sending this to cures for cancer , and maybe somebody will answer you. Feel free to join the list by sending email to cures for cancer-subscribe . Bob Hurt At 05:48 PM 2/27/01 -0600, you wrote: >Name: Graham Sheppey >Email: christinesheppey@... >Comments: My mother has a tumor that has spread to her brian and iam >contacting you to see if there are any treatments in that would be >avalible to us.She has been given a short time to live.She has had >radiotherpy and drugs please contact asap to help.Thanks Graham Sheppey >London England > >This message was sent to you from: > >205.188.193.179 > >Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 5.01; AOL 5.0; Windows 95; fs_ie5_04_2000i) >Tue, Feb27, 2001 >17:48 CDT > ****** bobhurt@... ****** Bob Hurt, Clearwater, FL 33766 ***** http://www.bobhurt.com ***** This message and attached files are confidential and intended solely for those to whom they are addressed. Notify the sender if you receive this in error. ****************************** Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 6, 2004 Report Share Posted February 6, 2004 I have enjoyed and benefited from your list an will return in several months. Thank you for all of the information. Cliff. Malignant Melanoma Hi, I'm new here. My husband has just had a malignant melanoma removed from his shoulder and in two weeks has to have more removed. They are not sure they got the lot as there are signs of regression. I see this as a positive as it shows that his immune system was strong enough to kill the cancer cells. He believes he doesn't have anymore cancer (which is great). He has a lump in his neck which has been swollen and a little uncomfortable for some months. We thought nothing of it as he had no signs of a melanoma at that stage. The melanoma was discoverred when he went for a checkup. He is very optimistic and we both believe that the lump in his neck is unrelated to the melanoma. He is scheduled to have a cat scan on Monday and then possibly a needle biopsy on Tuesday to find out what the lump is. My question is: what can he do to increase his chances of keeping the cancer at bay? What foods should he eliminate from his diet and which ones should he eat more of? He already comsumes copious amounts of fruit. And what else can he do to improve his chances? Thanks believer Get HUGE info at http://www.cures for cancer.ws, and post your own links there. Unsubscribe by sending email to cures for cancer-unsubscribeegroups or by visiting http://www.bobhurt.com/subunsub.mv Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 7, 2004 Report Share Posted February 7, 2004 Hi Believer, i am a lymphoma sufferer and sirvivor of 25yrs,i have sirvived 5reocurrances in that time. You said that your husband consumes a lot of fruit, that is a good start, he can also keep his immune system strong by cutting out any preservatives and additives, sugar, coffee, soda, white bread and white flour, alcohol and nicotine. Salads and steamed vegs are great and also 6 table spoons of cold pressed flaxseed oil mixed well with one third cup of low fat cottage chees daily should help him greatly.It has certainly helped me. For further info on flaxseed oil go to,flaxseedoil2 .Regards J.Atkins. Malignant Melanoma > Hi, I'm new here. My husband has just had a malignant melanoma > removed from his shoulder and in two weeks has to have more removed. > They are not sure they got the lot as there are signs of > regression. I see this as a positive as it shows that his immune > system was strong enough to kill the cancer cells. He believes he > doesn't have anymore cancer (which is great). > > He has a lump in his neck which has been swollen and a little > uncomfortable for some months. We thought nothing of it as he had > no signs of a melanoma at that stage. The melanoma was discoverred > when he went for a checkup. > > He is very optimistic and we both believe that the lump in his neck > is unrelated to the melanoma. > > He is scheduled to have a cat scan on Monday and then possibly a > needle biopsy on Tuesday to find out what the lump is. > > My question is: what can he do to increase his chances of keeping > the cancer at bay? What foods should he eliminate from his diet and > which ones should he eat more of? He already comsumes copious > amounts of fruit. And what else can he do to improve his chances? > > Thanks > believer > > > > Get HUGE info at http://www.cures for cancer.ws, and post your own links there. Unsubscribe by sending email to cures for cancer-unsubscribeegroups or by visiting http://www.bobhurt.com/subunsub.mv > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 7, 2004 Report Share Posted February 7, 2004 Dear believer, I like optimism and I'm glad to hear your husband believes he doesn't have any more cancer. My experience with this disease (my wife has ovarian cancer at the present time and I have watched friends/neighbors deal with it) has taught me some lessons. One of them is that the methods available to " measure " whether a person is cancer-free or not are not very good; actually, in my opinion, they are quite poor. The " tumor marker " numbers may or may not be a true indicator of the disease. If one waits until an X-ray or CAT Scan shows cancer, obviously it is large enough to be visible - which means it contains millions of cells already! In other words, though blood tests are done, they are NOT looking for cancer cells. I think most people, myself included, thought that somehow this happens. Too bad it doesn't, for then we would have " early warning " in a true sense. Soooo, when they say " we got it all " ...or you are " cancer free " , what they are saying is that this is true with the instruments and methods we have. How much you want to trust these instruments and methods is up to you, but I have become very skeptical. I had a friend with malignant melanoma. He went to Sloan Memorial Kettering. They removed a malignant wart on his belly and some lymph nodes, then sent him home saying they would " monitor " him and then treat him further IF the cancer reappeared. I tried to get him to aggressively treat himself (with diet, supplements, etc.) AS IF he still had cancer...just in case. I felt he probably did, but I'm not a doctor and I didn't want to scare or discourage him. Maybe I should have been more forceful in my approach, but I wasn't. Well, the cancer DID return in just a matter of months - and it quickly became out of control. He lived for about 3 more months, 9 months after the initial diagnosis. He was in his early 40's and left behind a wife and two young daughters. I was sick over it. I did not like the way his doctors handled it and I questioned my own approach to handling him as well. When I saw your posting, I ran into the same dilemma of not wanting to scare you and/or your husband, but also wanting you both to realize the potential danger of this disease and the limitations of the science that is supposedly " treating " this disease. There is a LOT of work to determining what needs to be done, but there are some very knowledgeable folks on this list that can help. They know a lot more than I do about the details than I. I hope this helps in some way and I wish you the very best. Bob B. Malignant Melanoma > Hi, I'm new here. My husband has just had a malignant melanoma > removed from his shoulder and in two weeks has to have more removed. > They are not sure they got the lot as there are signs of > regression. I see this as a positive as it shows that his immune > system was strong enough to kill the cancer cells. He believes he > doesn't have anymore cancer (which is great). > > He has a lump in his neck which has been swollen and a little > uncomfortable for some months. We thought nothing of it as he had > no signs of a melanoma at that stage. The melanoma was discoverred > when he went for a checkup. > > He is very optimistic and we both believe that the lump in his neck > is unrelated to the melanoma. > > He is scheduled to have a cat scan on Monday and then possibly a > needle biopsy on Tuesday to find out what the lump is. > > My question is: what can he do to increase his chances of keeping > the cancer at bay? What foods should he eliminate from his diet and > which ones should he eat more of? He already comsumes copious > amounts of fruit. And what else can he do to improve his chances? > > Thanks > believer > > > > Get HUGE info at http://www.cures for cancer.ws, and post your own links there. Unsubscribe by sending email to cures for cancer-unsubscribeegroups or by visiting http://www.bobhurt.com/subunsub.mv > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2007 Report Share Posted July 28, 2007 I just found out that my cat has malignant melanoma in her lower jaw bone. Is there anything I can do for her with the QXCI? Any help would be appreciated. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2007 Report Share Posted August 6, 2007 About Melanoma, For Pets or People, The liver is one place to look for any issues pertaining to the skin be it melanoma or eczema. See what issues come up in the test (in red) that indicate liver stress. Help the body by toning up the digestive system with the iridology program, body viewer, short sarcodes. Check on any nutritional inbalances like vitamins, minerals, essential fats. Make sure the organs of elimination( kidneys, bowel, lungs, skin, etc...) are all flowing properly, give support where it is lacking with herbs that tone and cleanse the whole body like burdock, plantain, dandelion, milk thistle, marshmallow root, calendula. Increased hydration, a must for all liver conditions because it cools and dilutes the toxins the body is trying to process and sends toxins to other places to be eliminated besides the liver. If there isn't enough hydration the liver heats up even more resulting in more skin inflammation and problems. Dry skin brushing on non inflamed areas helps slough off dead skin and remove toxins that the liver will have to deal with if the skin is clogged up. I love the herb Turmeric for melanoma. I have also used Pau De Arco, Ceanothus (Redroot) and Yerba Matte for skin cancer. One thing that makes cancer worse is low quality oils in the diet. For any person or pet with a skin problem only organic oils like olive, coconut, fish (heavy metal free!), or evening primrose, and the fresher the better. Keep oils in the refrigerator and check the dates. If the cat is eating cheap cat food switch to a higher quality or better yet look up the native diet of cats and try to provide it for your pet. This may mean some raw meats or fresh vegetables. Be open to the changes that create balance. Keep parasites in check because they add to the over loading of the body. I have been working on animals allot lately and I am seeing allot of emotional issues. The NLP is great for releasing negativity and re instilling a positive self image whether human or other. Melaonoma is the end result of a long term lack of balance. Treat the body as a whole system in order to get the best results. Modify the lifestyle to shift all the energies to balance and the melanoma may disappear. Kim Phelps Master Gardener, Herbalist, Doula, CBT, CBS and Mother of five! On 7/28/07, evmp4u <evmp4u@...> wrote: I just found out that my cat has malignant melanoma in her lower jaw bone. Is there anything I can do for her with the QXCI? Any help would be appreciated. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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