The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

(pavlina) #1
THE TUMOR

I find cancer sufferers are usually not dying of cancer
(tumor formation), as such, but of metal and dye toxicity! And
of mis-biochemistry. This means that as glad as you will be to
see your tumors shrink, you must not become complacent! You
must also remove the toxins!


Copper combines with 1,10-phenanthroline, as well as iron.
Copper-phenanthroline complexes cause wholesale chromo-
some breaks^51. Cobalt activates the clostridial enzyme that
makes DNA out of RNA,^52 and it activates arginase,^53 an en-
zyme that supplies polyamines, necessary for growing tissues.
Toxic germanium stops protecting us from p53 and hCG muta-
tions. Even the normally beneficial iron can join the harmful
metals when it produces oxygen radicals.^54 Vanadium combines
with abnormally exposed nucleic acids. Normally phosphate
combines with nucleic acids to form “nucleoside phosphate
complexes” called nucleotides. But the chemistry of vanadium
is rather similar to phosphate. So it forms “nucleoside vanadyl
complexes.” Vanadyl complexes are well known to molecular
biologists as synthetic RNAse inhibitors, which I observe dis-
place your natural ones.
I have discovered that vanadyl complexes do one more
thing: they cause p53 mutations. p53 is the gene that makes our
“policeman” protein.^55 It stands guard over our nucleic acid
threads. It can recognize mutations, like intercalation, and stop
those cells from multiplying. It allows no further gene duplica-
tion until the mutation has been “fixed.” The PAH or other
mutagen must be pulled or snipped out from between the bases


(^51) Pope, L.M., Reich, K.A., Graham, D.R., Sigman, D.S., Products of DNA Cleavage
by the 1,10-Phenanthroline-Copper Complex, Journal Of Biological Chemistry, v.
257, no. 20, Oct. 25, 1982, pp. 12121-28.
(^52) Zubay, p. 231, discusses how cobalt activates ribonucleotide reductase.
(^53) Liquier-Milward, J., Tracer Studies on Cobalt Incorporation into Growing Tumors:
Uptake of Radioactive Co^60 by Normal and Malignant Cells, Can. Res., 1957, p. 843.
(^54) Weinberg, E.D., The Role of Iron in Cancer, European Jour. of Cancer Prevention,
v. 5, 1996, pp. 19-36.
(^55) The Cancer Killer, Newsweek, Dec. 23, 1996, pp. 42-47.

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