Share this comment
another information trail to go down ..... IV vitamin c, high dose / divided doses of vitamin c (orthomolecular.org, select Library, select News Releases) .... Riordan Protocol for cancer ...used by 1000 doctors in Japan use this protocol for cancer .......... Wichita, Kansas ....
The Power of Intravenous Vitamin C…
© 2025 2nd Smartest Guy in the World
Substack is the home for great culture
another information trail to go down ..... IV vitamin c, high dose / divided doses of vitamin c (orthomolecular.org, select Library, select News Releases) .... Riordan Protocol for cancer ...used by 1000 doctors in Japan use this protocol for cancer .......... Wichita, Kansas ....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7NoUcktt58
The Power of Intravenous Vitamin C with Dr Ron Hunninghake
Lisa Tamati
13.7K subscribers
16,188 views Sep 18, 2020
Dr Ron Hunninghake is the Chief Medical Officer of the prestigious Riordan Institute in Witchita, Kansas.
In this episode Dr Ron explains the uses and mechanisms of action of Vitamin C both oral and intravenous Vitamin C and it's uses in cancer, sepsis, pneumonia, shingles, hepatitis to schizophrenia and mental illnesses.
They also discuss the problems facing functional medicine/orthomolecular medicine vs allopathic medicine and the pharmacological model dominant in our system today.
https://medicine.uiowa.edu/content/grant-will-fund-cancer-clinical-trials-test-high-dose-vitamin-c
Grant will fund cancer clinical trials to test high-dose vitamin C
Date: Monday, November 19, 2018
Cancer researchers at University of Iowa Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center have received a five-year, $9.7 million grant from the National Cancer Institute to test the use of high-dose, intravenous (IV) vitamin C in the treatment of cancer.
The integrated project, led by Joseph Cullen, MD, UI professor of surgery, and Douglas Spitz, PhD, UI professor of radiation oncology, is designed to evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of adding high-dose IV vitamin C to standard cancer treatments for three of the deadliest cancers affecting the U.S. population: pancreatic cancer, non-small cell lung cancer, and glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), an aggressive type of brain cancer.