Guest guest Posted November 3, 2009 Report Share Posted November 3, 2009 Hi , Hold up and good luck. With kind regards, Slavek. VGammill wrote: > > > > List: > > It has just been confirmed that I have rectal cancer. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 Sorry to hear of your cancer diagnosis. I wish you all the best in your treatment. phine > > List: > > It has just been confirmed that I have rectal cancer. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 Hi , I don't post alot but enjoy your imput in this formum. Sorry to hear about your cancer, but no one is more equiped to deal with it then you are. Knowledge I have learned from this site, and you has been very valualble in dealing with the Chorodial melanoma Cancer in my body. I have no doubt you will overcome this as well. Goes to show in this toxic world no one is immune from getting cancer. All the best with your treatment in China. Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 I am sorry to hear. If there is one person in this earth that can take care of this malady is you. If there is a group that can support you is us. Is so easy to confort someone else that I always feel a bit of a hypocrit when I write messages like this one but I do mean it. Warm regards. [ ] Re: Rectal cancer > > > > > Wow . What a shock. I wish you all the best as you take > this journey. Keep in touch when you are in China. If anyone > knows how to beat this, you do. > > > > > > >> >> List: >> >> It has just been confirmed that I have rectal cancer. I highly >> suspected it for some time, but my HMO misdiagnosed it for six months >> claiming that it was nothing but internal hemorrhoids. I have easy >> access to virtually anything I need for medical purposes, but I >> thought I was being prudent by letting my HMO take care of anything >> that insurance covered. It has been quite an experience. I had a CT >> scan done in Mexico which my US HMO refused to look at because it >> wasn't done at the HMO. I had the radiology report from Mexico which >> they refused to look at because it was in Spanish. They didn't see >> fit to do a simple digital exam to feel the invasive 5.5 cm tumor >> because their gastroenterologist did a colonoscopy in April and told >> me I have hemorrhoids and to come back in ten years. I requested a >> CEA (blood tumor marker test) but they turned me down because they >> say this test is for assessment and not diagnosis. If I were anyone >> else I would be outraged, but my opinion of US conventional medicine >> was already so low, that all I can do is shake my head. >> >> Every one of my HMO docs was really nice as they told me they did not >> do this and they couldn't do that. A couple of days ago I received a >> 25 item questionnaire from my HMO asking me to rate my last visit to >> my primary physician. Every one of the questions pertained to >> doctor-patient interactions, e.g., Did he/she give you enough >> time? Did they listen to you carefully? Did they try to answer all >> your questions? Was the receptionist cheerful? I had to rate my >> physician extremely high on everything according to this >> questionnaire, but if they had asked questions about competence I >> would have had to flunk him. One of my board members informed me >> that although the HMO is a non-profit, the physicians that work for >> them are for-profit, thus all the money they save from not doing >> tests goes into their own pockets. I'll look further into this. >> >> Now I have been sent to the HMO oncologist who recommends chemo and >> external beam radiation. I asked what they do to protect immune >> function (nothing), to protect against multiple drug resistance >> (nothing), to protect against lymphedema (nothing), to protect >> against impotency (nothing), and to protect against anal canal >> fibrosis (nothing). Halfway through the treatment they will see if I >> am in danger of dying from hemolytic uremia. If so they are willing >> to consider reducing the dose. >> >> I asked the oncologist about doing medical treatments in China >> including neutron beam (what's that?), BSD-2000 hyperthermia (what's >> that?), photodynamic therapy (what's that?), fulguration (what's >> that?), sub-unit vaccines for SCC (what's that?), but he offered me >> plenty of pain killers and stool softeners. >> >> I told the HMO oncologist that I immediately started myself on rectal >> Newcastle virus (what's that?), on dithiodinicotinic acid (what's >> that?) on CaPterin (what's that?), on GcMAF (what's that?), on >> Miltefosine (what's that?), on benzaldehyde (what's that?), on >> artemether (what's that?), on hyperthermia with Lonidamine and >> dipyridamole (what's that?) and on cimetidine to help prevent >> metastasis (he didn't respond), and reticuloendothelial detox (what's >> that?). I invited him to my seminars. I am probably making early >> headway as the bleeding has stopped. >> >> The nature of this cancer had eluded me for some time as I have no >> known risk factors. I have no stress, no emotional trauma, I don't >> smoke, never any STDs, I'm exclusively heterosexual, my diet isn't >> the worst. There is plenty of cancer in my family though. Squamous >> cell carcinoma (SCC) of the rectum is rare and often starts from an >> unknown primary such as a head and neck cancer. >> >> If there was ever a person on this planet not to feel sorry for, it >> is me. I have access to almost everything and can make about >> anything, and of all the things I could worry about at least I don't >> have to worry about me suing myself. Does this mean I'm out of the >> woods even before I start? Not by a long shot. One of the biggest >> and most common mistakes in alternative medicine is to assume that a >> particular treatment/strategy/combination is going to work. The keys >> to beating cancer usually revolve around collecting and weighing >> credible information, careful assessment and analysis, avoiding >> missteps that can't be corrected, timely action, patience. So far >> there has been only one area in which I could have improved: I should >> have made a much greater nuisance of myself at the HMO. >> >> Has any of my thinking changed since being formally diagnosed? There >> has been a bit of a sense of relief that I now have a clear target to >> address. >> >> In about two weeks I plan to go to China for about a month. I will >> conduct my regular seminars and treatment program this coming week, >> November 8th-14th. On November 15 I will watch the LA Lakers beat >> Houston -- but without any beer and pizza. (Who knew that life would >> be this hard..!!!) Then it is off to China. >> >> >> > > > > > ------------------------------------ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 > I requested a CEA (blood tumor marker test) but they > turned me down because they say this test is for > assessment and not diagnosis. That's ridiculous. I think a comprehensive set of tumor markers are an excellent screening tool to access cancer risk at a very early stage, but most doctors refuse to believe it. Maybe they are too heavily invested in other late-stage diagnostic screening like CT, mammography, etc with which cancer can only be detected when it's only well developed. http://www.japaninc.com/mgz_winter_2005_medical_maverick Maybe you can pay Dr Kobayashi a visit in Tokyo when you're in the region. Some of his colleges see him when they have cancer. All the best!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 's posts have more than a 'revelaton' about his situation, he is sharing knowledge few can. Because of his past posts and a long-standing contact with him after he helped me 'turn around' my own situation, I have learned what most of us know, but often forget. " Nothing Works For All People All The Time " . Another phrase I use: " Information is your best friend " and it is his teaching, dedication, warmth and Kindness that usually ends my advice to people to: " Work with someone that Knows what Works and What Doesn't " . Cancer like other diseases, and we've learned this from other sources, doesn't always kill and that isn't even speaking about the 'spontaneous remissions' now being discussed in Medical circles. Even when it does kill it often takes a long time and sometimes longer than if undergoing conventional treatments. We have read statements to the effect that sometimes, aggressive conventional treatment ends up killing people faster than if nothing was done. Not too many people are ready to 'do nothing' however it seems to be a fact. 's advice re Pau d' Arco use was eye-opening to me because it has been a main-line defense for me and one suggested I use. That was because of the facts I presented to him. Suppose my situation was like his and I did not get his help? I might be using Pau d' Arco but better of if I had not used it. We are back to the 'Nothing works for all people all the time " so unless one has a situation that is easily handled, isn't it prudent to work with someone that knows what is going on conventionally as well as Alternatively? Articles and books just do not cover all of the areas such as what last posted about and his reasons for not doing something. As for some comments about 's character and his generosity? I can only say I have personally witnessed it as the result of people I know that have experienced it. Of course economics does enter the picture and today especially.... and there is a limit to anyone's generosity...............before closing one's doors. Stay close on this one folks, this is Advanced Cancer Care 101. Joe C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 In a message dated 11/4/09 11:16:19 AM Eastern Standard Time, vgammill@... writes: > Thanks for your kind offer to help me sort out the dental > component of health care. Graeme, Flurry had gum disease no matter what I did to stop it...I brushed her teeth every day, scaled them, etc..there was no decay and no tarter yet her gums bled and were stinky. What do you think was happening? Best, Mother of Flurry at Rainbow Bridge. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 Graeme, Thanks for your kind offer to help me sort out the dental component of health care. You seem to be doing the same things as all my extra-bright dentist friends. As I am heading for Asia I won't do anything dental till I have a chance to try chewing a betal nut..!! At 02:03 PM 11/3/2009, you wrote: > >Consider a chronic dental infection probably at the front of the mouth >as a likely supect. Can be found with a Thermal Imaging camera or a >Cavitat ultrasound scan. Never seen any such tumour without a dental >infection. You can get on top of the tumour without treating the >infection but unless the infection is treated the tumour is likely to >return. This has been our experience as dentists in this field for over >40 years. >If you have a digital opg x-ray send it to me, perhaps we can see >something (no charge of course) >Graeme Munro-Hall BDS >UK >e-mail <mailto:hallvtox%40dircon.co.uk>hallvtox@... > >PS You trusted an HMO??? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 Thanks, Mike, You are so right: it is a toxic world and I should never have eaten that last potato chip. Right now I'm leaning toward PDT, neutron beams, miltefosine, and my own PARP inhibitors to use in Shenzhen, China. I will use concurrent and follow-up therapies too. These will be centered around restoring immune function and further detox. I will not use any chemotherapy -- not because it is chemotherapy, but because most trigger several drug resistance changes, most are toxic and have severe side effects, most hamper immune function, I can't risk " chemo brain, " and I have not found any yet that specifically target rectal SCC. Furthermore, my conventional oncologist says that his conventional program will knock me for a loop for about five months, whereas my current strategy means that I'll have a one-month exotic vacation with people I like and who share the same understandings in health care. Follow-up therapy will probably include vaccines that I will make myself and maybe those made by a research oncologist friend at the s Cancer Center in La Jolla. (He was one of the inventors of Melacine vaccine for melanoma.) I am already doing whole body hyperthermia with sensitizers at my retreat center. I have a small hyperthermia unit that is suitable for hemorrhoids that I am trying to amp up, but I am looking for a BSD-2000 in China that I could coordinate with my other therapies. There are many other excellent therapies that I could use but I can't/won't use everything at once as there is a greater likelihood of unwitting conflicts of intention. At 05:02 AM 11/4/2009, you wrote: > >Hi , >I don't post alot but enjoy your imput in this formum. Sorry to hear >about your cancer, but no one is more equiped to deal with it then >you are. Knowledge I have learned from this site, and you has been >very valualble in dealing with the Chorodial melanoma Cancer in my >body. I have no doubt you will overcome this as well. Goes to show >in this toxic world no one is immune from getting cancer. All the >best with your treatment in China. >Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 Hello. My name is Domy and i'm oncologist. I had some case with Rectal cancer and i recomandate an special cure treatment. Drug recomandate have in componence angiogenesis inhibitors - this substance inhibits development of new blood vessels, immunomodulators, anti-inflammatory analgesic and anesthetic substance. We recomandate treatment cure with Isorel, KLT, Ukrain, and DCA administrated in combination for better results. The effects of Isorel are the shaping and the stimulation of the immune system and the toxic citostatic level of tumors. These effects are not found together in any other anti- tumors products, moreover the suppression of the immune system caused by citostatics is well- known. Another advantage is represented by the lack of adverse reactions. The compound is unadvisable in the following circumstances: - A great sensibility to mistletoe compounds, being advisable to hypo sensitization the organism to prevent reactions; - Hyperthyroid, pregnancy and during lactation period. Direct toxicity of citostatics proved in experimental studies is probably based on the Isorel’ s property to decrease in specially the G. A. G. synthesis and the acizi proteoglicani, substances that appear in tumor tissues. UKRAIN® demonstrated not only cytostatic, but also cytolytic activity against all 60 human cancer cell lines tested (brain, ovary, cervical, colon and kidney carcinomas, small cell and non-small cell lung carcinomas, melanomas, leukaemia and lymphoma). UKRAIN® induces apoptosis in pancreas cancer cell lines Jurkat, THP-1, MIA PaCa2, BxPC3 and AsPC1 after cell cycle arrest in prophase and metaphase through stabilization of monomeric tubulin, while the tests on normal peripheral mononuclears revealed no difference in apoptosis rate and cell cycle phases. The tests showed UKRAIN® selectively to induce apoptosis and not to harm normal cells. Within minutes of i.v. administration, UKRAIN® accumulates in tumour tissue, where it is slowly (over 2-3 weeks) eliminated via the kidneys. Experimental studies on animals indicate that UKRAIN® passes the blood-brain barrier. A pilot study on healthy volunteers revealed following pharmacokinetic parameters: area under curve (AUC) 27 mg•min/l, half-life (t1/2) 27.55 min, mean volume of distribution (Vd) 27.93 l, clearance (Cl) 817 ml/min. DCA turns on the mitochondria of cancer cells, allowing them to commit cellular suicide, or apoptosis.Cancer cells shut down the mitochondria, which is the part of the cell that is involved in metabolism and, incidentally, initiates the cell suicide.A non-cancerous cell will initiate apoptosis when it detects damage within itself that it cannot repair. But a cancer cell resists the suicide process. That is why chemotherapy and radiation treatments do not work very well and actually result in terrible side effects… the healthy cells actually die much easier. KLT is a dual-function broad-spectrum antineoplastic agent which can kill tumor cells, promote immune function, provide high energy to patients, minimise toxic and adverse effect of chemotherapy and improve patients survival quality. It is the first time to study the effect of KLT on angiogenesis and the results indicated that the inhibition of neovascularization by KLT played another role in its anti-tumor action. The possible mechanism of KLT to inhibit angiogenesis could be: (1) To inhibit mitosis and migration of vascular endothelial cells. The results obtained from the research of cell cycle progression demonstrated that KLT could arrest tumor cells at G2+M phase, reduce the proportion of cells at DNA synthesis phase (S phase); (2) To inhibit the tumor cells releasing up-regulating factors of angiogenesis; (3) To block the up-regulating factors of angiogenesis or its receptors in form of antibody pattern; (4) To interfere endothelial cells to differentiate into complete capillaries and to prevent newly formed blood vessels anastomized with host blood vessels. It needs further study to confirm through which channel KLT could inhibit angiogenesis and play anti-tumor action. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 She only does skin, neck, and breast cancer. She really doesn't recommend much after treatment besides serrapeptase, drink lots of water, keep moving (nothing too vigorious), and eating " real " food closest to it's original source. Her name is Dr. Antonella Carpenter of Lase Med Inc, in Broken Arrow, OK. She is a Naturopathic Doctor and a physicist from Italy. She has been getting a bad rap, but I love her. ________________________________ From: " szukipoo@... " <szukipoo@...> Sent: Tue, November 3, 2009 6:45:12 PM Subject: Re: [ ] Rectal cancer tarapine writes: > The doctor I see recommends serrapeptase (silk worm enzymes) to help with elimination of dead tissue. Sending good thoughts your way. Tara. That's veyr interesting Tara. Which doctor do you see? What else does he recommend? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2009 Report Share Posted November 4, 2009 I'm leaning toward PDT, neutron beams Sure this radiation is tight band but you are still dowsing oneself in radiation and what is radiation but something that causes cancer and the science if very clear and definite that there is no level of exposure that does not compromise the body in someway. Radiation is the death principle itself, you ever read Dr. Walter Russel on that? Fantastic book of his if you can get your hands on it is ATOMIC SUCICIDE........just imagine burning those tumors with a death ray....nice if it just put the ax on the tumors but is that really realistic? Come on tell me you would rather go up against a partical beam in a foreign country then start enemas with biarbonate? Your going to need the bicarbonate anyway to protect your kidneys from the radiation anyway but why use it for that purpose when you can use it and other things to start getting control now? And then go to China and just have fun. I have some friends who do detox work in the foothills of the Hymalayan Mts in an ancient walled city and everything...And I can assure you they have their own special medicines...... Also this group has it ever talked about Ayuaska...that very alkaline drink from the Amazon in Brasil and Peru..... treats all levels including the soul...often very necessary....and its legal even in the States......though I guess you have to take it in a church because they won it in front of the supreme court under religious freedom issues. I was building my cancer retreat center only 200 yard from such a center here in Brazil but did not finish and will probably sell the place..Just too much hassle...and I live 2,000k away anyway. Mark Re: [ ] Re: Rectal cancer Thanks, Mike, You are so right: it is a toxic world and I should never have eaten that last potato chip. Right now I'm leaning toward PDT, neutron beams, miltefosine, and my own PARP inhibitors to use in Shenzhen, China. I will use concurrent and follow-up therapies too. These will be centered around restoring immune function and further detox. I will not use any chemotherapy -- not because it is chemotherapy, but because most trigger several drug resistance changes, most are toxic and have severe side effects, most hamper immune function, I can't risk " chemo brain, " and I have not found any yet that specifically target rectal SCC. Furthermore, my conventional oncologist says that his conventional program will knock me for a loop for about five months, whereas my current strategy means that I'll have a one-month exotic vacation with people I like and who share the same understandings in health care. Follow-up therapy will probably include vaccines that I will make myself and maybe those made by a research oncologist friend at the s Cancer Center in La Jolla. (He was one of the inventors of Melacine vaccine for melanoma.) I am already doing whole body hyperthermia with sensitizers at my retreat center. I have a small hyperthermia unit that is suitable for hemorrhoids that I am trying to amp up, but I am looking for a BSD-2000 in China that I could coordinate with my other therapies. There are many other excellent therapies that I could use but I can't/won't use everything at once as there is a greater likelihood of unwitting conflicts of intention. At 05:02 AM 11/4/2009, you wrote: > >Hi , >I don't post alot but enjoy your imput in this formum. Sorry to hear >about your cancer, but no one is more equiped to deal with it then >you are. Knowledge I have learned from this site, and you has been >very valualble in dealing with the Chorodial melanoma Cancer in my >body. I have no doubt you will overcome this as well. Goes to show >in this toxic world no one is immune from getting cancer. All the >best with your treatment in China. >Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 5, 2009 Report Share Posted November 5, 2009 Hi I am sorry to hear of your cancer and will be thinking of you and wishing you all the best when you are in china. You have tremendous knowledge about cancer so I am sure you have the skills to beat this. Best wishes always. cheryl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.