Reading up on the pharmokinetics, it's not shocking. It breaks down a key structure involved cell division. The mitotic spindle. Programmed cell death is triggered and housekeeping ensues.
Cancer cells divide with on an accelerated clock and will rush into the trap at a higher ratio to healthy cells. Even more true in the brain. Even more more true with a glioblastoma that's maybe trying to divide almost on a 24 hour clock VS neurons that typically DO NOT divide at all in adults.
Parts of your body will die off in percentages according to what was trying to divide while the mebendazole is in your system, but the tumor might well get hit in its entirety over a 48 hour period.
Seems worth it if you're far along with this kind of brain tumor. But please don't be taking this prophylactically. I'd imagine doing so would cause die offs in faster cell lines like your bone marrow. Treat this like chemotherapy, especially if you're injecting it. If you're eating it, it doesn't absorb all that well and kills intestinal parasites.
Good on you. I'm all for these kinds of drugs, I just want to give my read on them in case someone uses the wrong tool at the wrong time.
Ivermectin, for example, is a low grade protease inhibitor outside of its on label anti-parasitic properties. Excellent for cancers and viruses that rely on protease (COVID-19 being one of them). That one can be taken prophylactically in low doses or at least in periodic cycles and cleanses. Fenbendazole should only be part of cleanses though because of what's involved in metabolizing it. It's pretty hepatoxic but livers are pretty tolerant so long as they aren't relentlessly scarred and, if you have a cancer cell line that fenbendazole interferes with, sacrificing a percentage of your liver to clear cancer is worthwhile.
Reading up on the pharmokinetics, it's not shocking. It breaks down a key structure involved cell division. The mitotic spindle. Programmed cell death is triggered and housekeeping ensues.
Cancer cells divide with on an accelerated clock and will rush into the trap at a higher ratio to healthy cells. Even more true in the brain. Even more more true with a glioblastoma that's maybe trying to divide almost on a 24 hour clock VS neurons that typically DO NOT divide at all in adults.
Parts of your body will die off in percentages according to what was trying to divide while the mebendazole is in your system, but the tumor might well get hit in its entirety over a 48 hour period.
Seems worth it if you're far along with this kind of brain tumor. But please don't be taking this prophylactically. I'd imagine doing so would cause die offs in faster cell lines like your bone marrow. Treat this like chemotherapy, especially if you're injecting it. If you're eating it, it doesn't absorb all that well and kills intestinal parasites.
Thanks for saying that. I don't use it for either me or dogs. I use Ivermectin and Fenbendazole for parasites.
Good on you. I'm all for these kinds of drugs, I just want to give my read on them in case someone uses the wrong tool at the wrong time.
Ivermectin, for example, is a low grade protease inhibitor outside of its on label anti-parasitic properties. Excellent for cancers and viruses that rely on protease (COVID-19 being one of them). That one can be taken prophylactically in low doses or at least in periodic cycles and cleanses. Fenbendazole should only be part of cleanses though because of what's involved in metabolizing it. It's pretty hepatoxic but livers are pretty tolerant so long as they aren't relentlessly scarred and, if you have a cancer cell line that fenbendazole interferes with, sacrificing a percentage of your liver to clear cancer is worthwhile.
Thank you.