Guest guest Posted December 24, 2005 Report Share Posted December 24, 2005 , Hematoxylon is a very common at the lab supply houses. It used in making various microscopic stains. Try the below webpage as one source: http://www.laddresearch.com/General_Catalog/Chapter_2/LMStains/lmstains.html It can be found at a number of other companies. The above is sold as 10g powder for $18.95. If, by chance you are interested in gong the " dilute HCl acid therapy " route, let me know, I can help you out. Read about the past work done with HCl at the below websites: http://www.alternative-cancer-therapies.org/hydrochloric_acid_therapy.html http://www.alternative-cancer-therapies.org/acid_mineral_chlorides.html I have used dilute HCl on animals to very good use in combating systemic infections. I think it could be equally valuable with cancer. doug DMSO Hematoxylon ratio for Doberman with cancer > Hello, could anyone provide information on where I can get > hematoxylon? My neighbor is a large animal vet and she will help me > with an iv drip for the DMSO mixture. She nor I know what hematoxylon > is or where you get it. Any information on experiments would be > helpful. My dog is a 65 dobie with lung cancer. The mass is not that > big and it's on one side so I'm hoping it's not beyond wellness. I am > also rifing him. He's 10 yrs old. > Thanks, > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 24, 2005 Report Share Posted December 24, 2005 Doug, Thank you for your reply. Have you heard many good things about dmso/hem.? Does gong seem to work better? I've never heard of it so I will look at the links. Since gong helps with systemic infections does it work for candida? I have a young mare that I believe may have candida. She was on strong antib. for about 2-3 mos. as a 3 yr. old. I am very interested. I have a neighbor who is a large animal vet and she will help me with anything I uncover. Thanks for your help. Best, > > , > > Hematoxylon is a very common at the lab supply houses. It used in making > various microscopic stains. Try the below webpage as one source: > > http://www.laddresearch.com/General_Catalog/Chapter_2/LMStains/lmstains.html > > It can be found at a number of other companies. The above is sold as 10g > powder for $18.95. > > If, by chance you are interested in gong the " dilute HCl acid therapy " > route, let me know, I can help you out. Read about the past work done with > HCl at the below websites: > > > > http://www.alternative-cancer-therapies.org/hydrochloric_acid_therapy.html > > http://www.alternative-cancer-therapies.org/acid_mineral_chlorides.html > > I have used dilute HCl on animals to very good use in combating systemic > infections. I think it could be equally valuable with cancer. > > doug > > > > > DMSO Hematoxylon ratio for Doberman with cancer > > > > Hello, could anyone provide information on where I can get > > hematoxylon? My neighbor is a large animal vet and she will help me > > with an iv drip for the DMSO mixture. She nor I know what hematoxylon > > is or where you get it. Any information on experiments would be > > helpful. My dog is a 65 dobie with lung cancer. The mass is not that > > big and it's on one side so I'm hoping it's not beyond wellness. I am > > also rifing him. He's 10 yrs old. > > Thanks, > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 25, 2005 Report Share Posted December 25, 2005 , I have only read that DMSO/hematoxylon seems to be an effective combination as discussed in Dr. Morton 's " DMSO Nature's Healer " . Not sure what you mean by " gong " . If you are referring to Dilute Hydrochloric acid therapy, I can't say it will work better than DMSO/Hematoxylon, but it certainly can be another solution to a hopeless cancer situation. I have been a student of both Dr. Fergusson and Guy for some years now. I have all of their published books and journal articles on HCl acid therapy. I purchased some Dilute HCl N.F. a few years ago and experimented with it. My nephew had a goat nanny that accidentally amputated part of her lower front digit in an accident. I injected her IV with a 1:1000 dilution of HCl and it kept her stump, infection free, in a dirty barnyard situation. I was most impressed! We later sent her to market, so, I didn't get to follow her progress. I am still waiting to try it on sicker livestock, but have yet to find any here on the farm. An interesting therapy with much potential! It was also used by Dr. Fergusson and Guy on many and varied cancer cases with very good luck. Certainly it might be something to try on a terminal canine cancer condition, if all else fails. In theory, it should, indeed work for all types of infections. I think the basic concept of HCl as put forth by Dr. Ferguson goes something like this: " In health, the acid balance is maintained by the normal production of hydrochloric acid in certain cells of the stomach; should this production fall short of bodily necessity, the balance must be made up. Other acids, which are the products of decomposition in the body, such as lactic acid, fatty acids, carbonic acid, uric acid and others, are called in to fill the HCl deficiency. These however being abnormal consitituents of the great chemical laboratory of the body (HCl is the only normally produced acid of the body), are ill-adapted to the requirements, for they are unable to keep in solution many of the salts which must be thrown off as waste matter in bodily excretions, the sweat, the expired air, the urine and the feces. In the effort for the body to provide acid of some sort these harmful acids, become a monkey-wench in the machinery and the condition known as " acidosis " results with symptoms of general systemic poisoning. Conversely, when the hydrogen-ion concentration of lymph falls into the acid side, due to excess production of lactic acid, fatty acids, carbonic acids, uric acid and like poisons, there is an effort on the part of the body to neurtralize these with alkaline salts, such as calcium, sodium, postassium, ammonium and others. These also, being foreign to bodily economy, produce the condition known as " alkalosis " , but often attended with general collapse. " doug Re: DMSO Hematoxylon ratio for Doberman with cancer Doug, Thank you for your reply. Have you heard many good things about dmso/hem.? Does gong seem to work better? I've never heard of it so I will look at the links. Since gong helps with systemic infections does it work for candida? I have a young mare that I believe may have candida. She was on strong antib. for about 2-3 mos. as a 3 yr. old. I am very interested. I have a neighbor who is a large animal vet and she will help me with anything I uncover. Thanks for your help. Best, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 2005 Report Share Posted December 26, 2005 This is lovely. NikkiHurd's Cornstoves wrote: Here is a poem that may help... found at http://www.cree77.com/farm.html (natural health alternatives, chickens, goats and more) Love, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 2005 Report Share Posted December 26, 2005 Hi Vicki, I am so sorry for your loss. Our Henry was like your Rio. We lost him when he was 9. That was over 20 years ago. His urn always sits in our shop where we shared so many of our days and a wax replica of his head looks over the bed where he slept with us.. I would be perfectly happy to have an urn next to him when my time comes. If it is good enough for Henry it is plenty good enough for me. It is hard to let a loved one go. We have put down 2 horses in the last couple of years. It was so hard, but I think of their pain-free gallop across the rainbow bridge and try to be happy for them. Blessings, NikkiVicki wrote: Thanks Garnet...Rio was very special....it really hurts, but then anytime you have to separate from a loved one....it hurts. I am glad of the time we had. He would of died for me....and would NEVER let anyone hurt a hair on my head. -- Re: DMSO Hematoxylon ratio for Doberman with cancer I am so sorry to hear that Vicki. It is not ever easy to lose them, evenfor someone like me who believes they are always still around and comeback to us. They lived a long time, but it is never long enough!{{hugs}}GarnetVicki wrote:> I just had to put my 2 Dobe's down last saturday. It almost killed me to do> so....they were going down hill very fast & my 104# male got down in the> back yard & couldn't get up. That was the first time it happened....and the> last. The female was having huge problems as well.... they were 11 & 12 yrs> old. I really miss them. This week hasn't been the best one for me.> Vicki > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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