This explains it somewhat. I think it can increase effectiveness of Fenben also because it will carry it through the digestive tract without any of it being destroyed.
As this article points out, it readily crosses the blood-brain barrier making it especially helpful in treating brain cancers.
Here is one reference I found in the document "The persecuted drug" by Dr. Stanley Jacobs linked above.
The drug is known as DMSO, or dimethyl sulfoxide (a liquid). It has been championed by reputable physicians as capable of healing or palliating many ailments. It has been represented as a "wonder drug" or a "miracle drug". It is abundant; it can be extracted from such sources as coal, oil, or most commonly lignin, the material nature uses to cement cells together in trees; it is cheap; it is most often administered by simply dabbing it on the skin, and, alone or as a carrier for other drugs, which DMSO often potentiates, it penetrates the skin to enter the blood stream where it is borne to all parts of the body.
This explains it somewhat. I think it can increase effectiveness of Fenben also because it will carry it through the digestive tract without any of it being destroyed.
As this article points out, it readily crosses the blood-brain barrier making it especially helpful in treating brain cancers.
Here is one reference I found in the document "The persecuted drug" by Dr. Stanley Jacobs linked above.
The drug is known as DMSO, or dimethyl sulfoxide (a liquid). It has been championed by reputable physicians as capable of healing or palliating many ailments. It has been represented as a "wonder drug" or a "miracle drug". It is abundant; it can be extracted from such sources as coal, oil, or most commonly lignin, the material nature uses to cement cells together in trees; it is cheap; it is most often administered by simply dabbing it on the skin, and, alone or as a carrier for other drugs, which DMSO often potentiates, it penetrates the skin to enter the blood stream where it is borne to all parts of the body.