continued...
The test was arranged, and
we travelled to Brisol for mum to have a blood
sample taken, which was immediately despatched
to Greece.
The results came back within
10 days, with surprising results. Out of the
orthodox treatments, one or two combinations
of chemotheraphy did indeed cause a sensitivity
(cancer cell death). However, they were very
tough side effect drugs, and resistance would
be inevitable. Out of the biological modifiers
(alternative treatments) B17 (Laetrile) cause
86% reduction in cancer cells within the culture.
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) caused 45% reduction
in the cancer cells, Quercetin (a natural flavanoid)
caused 40% reduction in cancer cells, Poly MVA
caused 35% reduction in cancer cells.
I took the test result with
me to our next Christie Hospital appointment.
We were happy and optimistic about the results,
especially with the alternative treatments.
The Oncologist looked at me in a disapproving
way, and asked to view the papers. He skimmed
through the first line or so, shook his head
from side to side and handed it back to me saying
“Complete rubbish, I cant believe this
doctor has even suggested undergoing such a
test, it is total rubbish”. He basically
made me feel a fool, and insisted that mum undergo
a new combination of chemotherapy drugs “that
had shown good results with patients with similar
cancers”. Yet again, our trust was swayed,
and mum began a chemotherapy combination of
Capecitabine and Mitomycin C. I left the office
that day, despondent and very untrustworthy
of the system.
Occasionally mum still kept
getting the lower back pain; she explained it
to be like severe pressure, and sometimes she
could hardly walk. The pain usual disappeared,
but one morning she sat up and experienced an
agonising pain in her spine, so much that she
couldn’t get up. We contacted Christies
immediately, who said yet again “it is
nothing to do with the treatment, most probably
the illness." How could it be the illness
in her lower back, the tumors are in her liver?
Extremely concerned, we attended our next appointment
where they suggested mum undergo a bone scan.
Eventually the results came back as NO cancer,
but Osteoporosis. Apparently one of mums vertebre
had collapsed. She was then given one IV treatment
of a Bisphosponate drug to lower her calcium
levels. Mums calcium levels remained stable
some months after.
www.wrongdiagnosis.com/news/chemotherapy_may_induce_osteoporosis.htm
(summary of medical news story as reported by
The Washington Times): A woman started to develop
bone soreness after 8 months of chemotherapy
for colon cancer. Doctors suspect the chemotherapy
may have caused the osteoporosis.
www.washingtontimes.com
www.news.bbc.co.uk
www.globalrph.healthology.com