What a time to be alive.
Ivermectin Fenbendazol HCQ and others have been known to cure cancer for some time now.
We are the news now!
What a time to be alive.
Ivermectin Fenbendazol HCQ and others have been known to cure cancer for some time now.
We are the news now!
A surprisingly large number of natural supplements (and some OTC and Rx pharma products) fight cancer. None of these are magic bullets but all of them have shown some efficacy at preventing, slowing, or even eliminating existing cancer from some patients.
Cancer is an extremely complex disease and cancer cells often mutate (that's one reason that chemo treatments often drop off in effectiveness). There are also different types of cancer; "breast cancer" can be one of several types and the same is true for cancer in every organ. A treatment that helps with one cancer line may have little or no effect on another.
Some things that studies show help prevent cancer and fight existing cancer include curcumin (an extract of turmeric), grape seed extract, resveratrol, cruciferous vegetable (broccoli, cabbage, etc) extracts -- in fact, almost every fruit or vegetable extract seems to have some anti-cancer activity. Cranberry, for instance, has been known (for decades) to help prevent urinary infections, and that's the ONLY thing I ever heard about it, but recently (in the last few years) it's been found that cranberry has anti-cancer activity also. Melatonin is known for helping (some) people get to sleep and to help reset the circadian rhythm but, in larger doses (20 mg for instance) it also fights cancer.
Of popular Pharma products, Cimetidine (generic or brand name Tagamet; a heartburn medication) fights certain types of cancers; metformin has been shown to reduce cancer incidence and for that matter, one study found that diabetics on metformin lived longer than non-diabetics who weren't taking the drug; metformin is now in trials as a life-extension therapy.
There's more -- a LOT more -- but this is a quick comment, not a detailed article. CAVEAT -- This isn't medical advice; it's just some text on the internet. Do your own research.
Metformin (for type-2 diabetes) actually causes peripheral neuropathy, and any diabetes Dr will tell you the diabetes caused it. I'm aware of the cancer studies, BUT guess what they give you for peripheral neuropathy? Lyrica or Gabapentin. (Made by Pfizer btw). Oh, didn't Pfizer mention Lyrica kills brain cells (neurons) AND is addictive? Miss a dose and voila!!! ANXIETY ATTACK DELUXE!! Quick, prescribe xanax...do I effin need to go-on??? So if you're stuck with Type-2 diabetes and must take your Metformin...take a big dose of B-12 with it to help your neurons from losing their coating giving the P-Neuropathy. I lived that path and Lyrica is my last of 13 prescriptions. I'm weaning-off, but the anxiety it produces w/out it is a b1tch. Here's another fun fact...now Pfizers full contract to make Lyrica ran-out a couple years ago so generic Pregabalin from India took most of Lyricas footprint away AND...it's so much less refined than Lyrica the Pregabalins side effects are tons worse. FU BIG PHARMA & GTH!!! 🖕🏻
🙏
I've been on metformin for decades; no peripheral neuropathy. Diabetes itself IS a major cause of peripheral neuropathy, this is well established. Alpha-lipoic acid (or even better, R-lipoic acid, the active of the two isomers) has long been used, successfully in my case and many others, to prevent or lessen that symptom. From https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/labs/pmc/articles/PMC6723188/. :
You seem to be on to something about the B12 issue; those using Metformin should probably supplement with B12. Here's the Abstract from https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20134380/ :
Yeah I lost the source but a Dr did a video about Metformin & B-12…and the ties to P-Neuropathy. Anyway I also now use Alpha Lipoic Acid AND Benfotiamine (precursor to all B Vitamins). Good to go! My A1C has been at about 5.7 for 2 years…diabetes gone since losing 65 lbs post chemotherapy. Great comments 👍🏽
Losing that much weight is seriously impressive, not to mention your A1C level.
I supplement with B-12 (and a huge number of other things) but I'm glad you brought it up; I know others on metformin and I'll pass your info along to them. Most people are borderline-deficient in B-12 as it is, metformin or no. Benfotiamine showed a dramatic positive effect at 1050mg/day in one study and I've been taking that much ever since; didn't know it was a precursor to other B vitamins though. Carnosine is another strong inhibitor of glycation that works best at higher doses; I take about 2,000mg.
Keep on staying healthy; you're a great resource here.