The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

(pavlina) #1
READING YOUR BLOOD TEST RESULTS

half^115 yet that fact seems to have gone unnoticed in Western
medicine.
Unfortunately, eating more protein does not significantly
raise T.p. You must improve your liver by removing cobalt and
vanadium from it.
When albumin goes up, globulin is expected to go down, to
keep the T.p. fairly constant. But if globulin goes up due to a
mutation, and albumin does not go down, the T.p. can rise too
high. Stopping the mutations is a much faster route to lowering
T.p. than chemotherapy.
Another force pulling the albumin up or down is the calcium
level. Yet all these legitimate forces and relationships can go
astray. If albumin is mortally low, you cannot wait. Clinical
help is advised. IVs of albumin and calcium are needed.
Albumin, as injectable, in 8.0 or 12.5 gram bottles, should
be given without delay. Two bottles are needed if albumin lev-
els are below three. Each albumin bottle should be sterilized to
kill bacteria and Ascaris eggs by adding ½ cc of ethyl (grain)
alcohol through the stopper, then shaken for ten seconds to pre-
vent precipitation. Filtering alone does not remove the Cox-
sackie viruses that accompany Ascaris eggs. Many bottles also
contain traces of benzene, isopropyl alcohol, copper, cobalt, and
vanadium and malonic acid (from antiseptic contamination, no
doubt). We customarily discard about twenty-five percent of all
bottles for such reasons. You must weigh the need for IVs
against the risk of these toxins being present.
Getting a few days of injected calcium and albumin can save
your life and give you just enough time to do your dental ex-
tractions, parasite killing, new diet, new lifestyle, and supple-
ment routine. Encourage your caregiver to use this time wisely
for you.
Injections of calcium by IV should also be accompanied by
magnesium to keep them in balance. Additionally about 25
grams (one entire bottle) of vitamin C should be given to bal-


(^115) Roshchin, I.V., Toxicology of Vanadium Compounds Used in Modern Industry,
Hygiene and Sanitation, v. 32, 1967, pp. 345-52.

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