The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

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THE CURE FOR ALL ADVANCED CANCERS

dized useless variety. Selenium, (elemental, toxic!) was in oxidized form,
too. But maleic anhydride was already Negative.
With maleic anhydride absent, no more fluid would be accumulating in
the lung. Would this be enough to improve lung capacity? Would the lung
reabsorb the fluid already escaped? She had already been surgically drained
four times before coming here.
In five days her mood had improved so much she agreed to do dental
work—but amalgam replacement only. The good and bad effects of this
would soon appear. But she was eating well and had appetite. She decided to
go off morphine. The pain in her shoulder and in the breast and skin every-
where intensified. She tried coffee enemas for pain relief, but didn’t get
much.
Two weeks later, on March 4, she was feeling a lot better, but still very
fatigued and pain ridden. New tests showed vanadium Positive at lung; mer-
cury Positive at lung; thallium Positive at lung. This showed there was lefto-
ver amalgam in her mouth. The source of the vanadium was not guessed.
Copper was Negative at lung and liver. Evidently, our chelation-type IVs
were keeping up with the steady stream of copper coming from her dental-
ware. TNF Positive at lung; NADPH, NADH Positive at lung; NADP, NAD
Negative at lung. This means there is no oxidized NAD to enable respiration
to continue. Notice how parts of metabolism can be over-oxidized while
other parts are under-oxidized. The links are missing. Glutathione, reduced
and oxidized Positive at lung; cytochrome C Negative at lung (one of the
links in the respiration chain). Aflatoxin Negative.
Both glutathiones were now present (finally!). But cytochrome C, neces-
sary to “catch” electrons in the respiratory chain is not high enough to appear
positive. This would be an iron problem or a mutation. Iron was much too
low.
This much progress invited a new chest X-ray, scheduled for March 5.
She arrived, X-ray in hand. The tumor was missing! Simply gone. Could
there be a mistake? No. The radiologist’s report stated it clearly. He was
quite certain. But the water-logged condition (pleural effusion) had not
shown much reabsorbtion—she still had difficulty breathing. Yet, there was
too much joy in her husband’s heart to allow any pessimism. She caught
some of his enthusiasm.

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