I just wanted to post this here. There is a man that goes to church w/ my mom full blown cancer. They told him they couldnt do anything else for him at the cancer hospital here and sent him to MD Anderson. They tried treatments on him at MD to no avail. They basically sent him back home to die. He started taking ivermectin and the cancer is gone 100%. Shocked the Drs when he went in for a check up. My Mom was shocked even though I had told her last year that ivermectin cures all kinds of stuff. He stood up at church on Sunday and let them all know 😉 The Truth is coming my friends! Hang in there!
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I’m assuming your friend had colon CA if he had a section of his colon removed?
Yes and he’s a great man. Can get you in touch w him if you want specifica
Oh no, I don’t need specifics. ☺️ I’m a nuclear medicine tech and primarily do PET/CT scans all day every day on cancer patients. People can definitely “recover” from colon CA. However, it’s for sure on the list of “if you absolutely have to have CA, but you got to pick which kind you’d have, these are the ones you DON’T want to pick ever!” 😬 It can also be very tricky to treat once it’s metastasized. Granted, I’m going off of the way western medicine treats patients, but for now, that’s the reality of the treatment that the majority of patients go through. Anyways, all that to say that I’m impressed and glad that he was CA free after his last PET scan. ☺️ I’d say to keep doing whatever he’s doing, when CA reoccurs, it seems to come back with a vengeance. 😔
Out of curiosity, which are the cancers that if you HAD to choose one, you would choose?
So off the top of my head, basal cell skin cancer that A LOT of people develop as they get older and your dermatologist finds during yearly skin checks. As long as you get it taken care of right away, it’s generally fine with just being surgically removed and just making sure you have clear margins. Papillary thyroid CA, super treatable! Then HODGKIN’S lymphoma or Diffuse large B cell lymphoma..but I’d say that’s starting to get into dicey territory b/c while a lot of people respond really well to treatment, depending on the kind of Non-Hodgkins you have, you might struggle w/ fighting it for years w/o ever really going into remission. I know it’s a weird topic/thing to talk about choosing your CA, but it’s definitely understood in our world that there is a hierarchy of cancers and we’d all take our chances w/ some type of Lymphoma over pancreatic. 🤷🏼♀️😬