The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

(pavlina) #1
THE TRUE STORY OF...

aged, but no dental surgeon could be reached on Saturday afternoon. Her
flight left on Sunday.
The day her plane left she could walk normally and didn’t need hands to
help her out of chairs. But her focus, as well as ours, was on the tumor. Was
it shrinking or would it wait on completion of the last dental work? She
agreed to get another CT scan a week after her arrival at home.
Such plans go awry easily. As rational as they sound at our clinic, no
doctor at “home” wants to abide by anyone else’s bidding. And often do not
want to listen to a patient’s request. The patient is powerless in the US. The
doctor is following his or her own agenda for the patient. Jessie kept trying
to get a new CT scan but each time got “postponed” by her doctor. The effort
was just not worth it. So, she simply waited to return here. Besides, she had
more aching teeth and her painful arthritis was back, too. This time, though,
it did not panic her. The connection between infected teeth and skeletal pain
was plain to see. But had all this delay stalled her tumor shrinkage? That was
the gnawing question.
She returned on March 1, half full of anticipation and half full of anxi-
ety. These were her initial test results: mercury and thallium, both Positive at
teeth, breast and lymph nodes. Obviously she had an amalgam tattoo some-
where. Rhodanese enzyme Negative at the breast, should be Positive—it is a
detoxifying enzyme. Glutathione Negative at the breast. 20-
methylcholanthrene Positive at the breast.
She was being challenged continuously by this endogenous carcinogen
(20-methylcholanthrene)! This was due to lack of rhodanese which otherwise
might detoxify it. And rhodanese was absent for lack of iron. And iron was
low due to competition with copper [and germanium ] from a tiny bit of
metal or plastic left somewhere in her mouth.
With copper present, glutathione would be absent. With glutathione ab-
sent, the bacteria could thrive. So metals and bacteria could go hand in hand,
anywhere. They had chosen her armpit and breast. Clostridium botulinum,
Clostridium sporogenes, Rhizobium leguminosarum, Rhizobium meliloti
were all Positive at the breast.
DNA was Negative at breast. At least the tumor could not be growing.
This was a cherished result for Jessie. Did these bacteria not make DNA? In
most other circumstances they do. What was different? Can bacteria switch
on or off their DNA-making enzymes? This waits for more research.
Jessie had less than a week to stay this time; just long enough to extract,
clean cavitations, and learn to drink raw milk once a week (properly steril-
ized) to get back the lactoferrin she was missing and long enough to get the
new CT scan that was tantalizing her.
She brought it in for review, not quite believing the radiologist’s Span-
ish comments which she thought translated to “He could not find it!” We
taped it up to the window immediately. It was as the radiologist said. There
was nothing there! The adenoma was gone.
Her arthritis was gone, AGAIN, too.

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