Forbidden Cures and Underground Medicine • I

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HSI’s 13 Most Surprising Cures • 159

One woman’s journey from dementia to healthy

with Amyloban 3399—a case study

Lin S. was an 81-year-old woman who’d struggled with depression and
declining cognitive function for years. After several hospitalizations over sev-
eral years, she made her way to the clinic of Dr. Inanaga...and her life was
immeasurably improved.^5


He started her on Amyloban 3399 (added to other medications and herbs
she was taking). And after just two months, he saw ‘notable clinical improve-
ment.’ On a clinical scale, her dementia rating went from a score between 20
and 22 (borderline dementia) to 29—a normal score. And the changes in her
everyday life are even more compelling:



  • Four years earlier, she struggled to name even four vegetables,
    but after Amyloban 3399 treatment she can name as many as
    she’s asked to without hesitation.

  • She couldn’t cook before, and now she can.

  • She can now solve double-digit subtraction problems,
    which she couldn’t before Amyloban 3399.

  • Scary dreams have vanished.

  • And she handles separation from her husband much more easily,
    whereas before treatment she became anxious if he spent more
    than ten minutes bathing.


Aricept: Are the risks worth it?

Aricept (according to the Aricept website) is considered successful if the Alz-
heimer’s patient doesn’t get worse, or if his decline slows down—meaning he’s
still getting worse, but more slowly. And a very lucky few may actually see slight
improvement in symptoms.
But that minimal improvement comes with a very disturbing downside in the form
of pretty scary adverse reactions. Common adverse reactions (taken straight from
Aricept’s prescribing information) include things like extremely slow heartbeat and
fainting, gastrointestinal bleeding, bladder obstructions, and convulsions.
It gets even scarier when you look at the less common reactions: congestive
heart failure, bone fractures, intracranial hemorrhage (that’s bleeding in the brain!),
strokes (a form called TIA), collapsed lungs, and kidney failure...just to name a few.
When you consider the benefits you might see compared to the risks, is it really worth it?
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