The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

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THE TRUE STORY OF...

sons given for the various treatments without pitting them against each other.
He fused them and found success. I have since been asked where the initial
scans are. He took them home. Yet having in my possession his final scans
that show nothing, is success, no matter what was on the initial ones.


24 Sonja Eckenroth Lymphatic/Lung Cancer


Sonja Eckenroth, a tall stately woman of about fifty, arrived (with her
daughter’s help) extremely emaciated, but not in a wheelchair. She originally
had lung cancer, diagnosed in 1990. She had the usual treatments, but had a
recurrence in 1993. It spread through the lung again, this time to lymph
nodes.
In the last two months she had severe shortness of breath, weight loss,
insomnia, and pain down her left arm. This arm and fingers would frequently
go numb. A lump on her neck was called a thyroid “cyst”. Sonja’s daughter
was determined to get her mother well, hovering over her with the supple-
ments, checking supplies, and asking questions. This was fortunate because
Sonja had a do-as-I-please approach and often this meant late afternoon arri-
val when there was no time left for an IV. We engaged the nurse for over-
time work for her.
She had received one series of chemotherapy, but was given only six
months to live even if she completed the other two, so she “jumped ship” and
headed for Mexico. She had already been on the Kelly program which uses
large doses and varieties of digestive enzymes to digest tumors. A glance at
her first blood test shows she was still in fair condition.
Her electrolytes were normal. Kidney function was good, although cre-
atinine was much too low, probably due to a shortage of glycine, arginine,
and methionine. Two liver enzymes were very good, but the GGT was “out
of sight” (254). Her calcium level was extremely low and this would con-
tribute to permeability of her tissues that were already letting fluids seep out
and also fan the flames of tumor growth. But her liver could still make
enough protein, though barely. If this didn’t improve in a few days, we
would put albumin in her IV.
Her tumor activity level, judged by LDH, was quite low, though judged
by alk phos was extremely high. [Evidently, she was suffering from DAB, not
Sudan Black B dye toxicity.]
Copper [or germanium ] toxicity is easily seen in the very low iron level
(27), but her nutrition was still adequate, in spite of her emaciation. She
should be able to get well, provided no accident happened, like hemorrhage.
The platelet count, at 448, looked dangerously like evidence of minute
bleeding. The low RBC reinforced this idea, though of course the bleeding
might be anywhere, not necessarily in the lung. Our policy has never been to
scan from head to toe, although such knowledge would be very welcome. We
started her immediately on the Chinese herb, Yunnan paiyao, to help

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