Sunday, July 12, 2009

[cancercured] Re: Has anyone heard from Jim McElroy?



Thank you Vincent!

I do what I can. Thank you greatly for your suggestions. Could you put together some sort of hypothetical protocol for some hypothetical colon cancer patient which I would promise nver to use?

I had the luxury of being cantakerous at one time when I was feeling better. I no longer have this luxury.

Vincent -- please -- some practical advice for me? Some hope?

--- In cancercured@yahoogroups.com, VGammill <vgammill@...> wrote:
>
> Jim,
>
> Thanks for posting.
>
> Your "heavy hitters" don't seem to be doing much for you, though they
> may have bought you some time. LDN is quite mild and slow
> acting. It is unclear where it is most beneficial. I don't expect
> much from it when it is crunch time. Artemix and various artemesia
> derivatives don't seem to work that well. I am starting to
> categorize them with the great many conventional and alternative
> treatments that selectively kill or inhibit some cancer cells and
> give the rest free rein to grow.
>
> I went to the sutherlandia site
> http://www.sutherlandia.org/cancer.html which seems more honest than
> most. They only say it is a quality-of-life tonic and it helps appetite.
>
> I have not seen IP6 perform that well in humans. It may be because
> the producers mostly use inexpensive calcium phytate, but the
> research was done with sodium phytate or phytic acid. This is used
> with inositol, but it would probably work better if the inositol was oxidized.
>
> If you are not averse to the use of conventional meds (crunch time is
> a good time for reconsiderations) you might consider mitomycin C and
> magnesium valproate. I usually include parthenolide (from feverfew)
> but it is better if you find ways to solubilize it, e.g., as a guest
> molecule in inclusion compounds. Hydroxyurea is relatively non-toxic
> and it will stop ribonucleotide reductase.
>
> Cimetidine should almost always be used with colon cancers. Be
> cautious if your liver is inflamed.
>
> There are a number of conventional and research treatments for colon
> cancer that far outperform the formulary protocols that are currently
> imposed on patients. An example would be the use of AZT (there are
> tricks where you can use lower doses), dipyridamole (one of my
> favorites), xeloda (with potassium oxonate), and pluronic 85. This
> can whittle colon cancer tumor load down to virtually nothing.
>
> These strategies and others can kick down colon tumors, but the most
> important things are the prevention of metastasis and keeping the
> door open for future immune therapies. In the near future the price
> will come down on many treatments that are currently
> underground/unapproved, such as the subtraction of soluble receptors of TNFa.
>
> Jim, you can continue telling list members how you treasure them
> while you cock an eye for a low swinging chariot, or you can go down
> fighting. You seemed to be doing ok when you were a bit cantankerous.
>
> Vincent
>

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