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Ben Fen's avatar

Excellent! Johns Hopkins scientists have shown that mebendazole disrupts the shield of cells, called the stroma, protecting pancreatic tumors that make therapeutic treatment difficult Williamson, T., de Abreu, M. C., Trembath, D. G., Brayton, C., Kang, B., Mendes, T. B., de Assumpção, P. P., Cerutti, J. M., & Riggins, G. J. (2021). Mebendazole disrupts stromal desmoplasia and tumorigenesis in two models of pancreatic cancer. Oncotarget, 12(14), 1326–1338. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.28014. While mebendazole is effective, Italian scientists have shown that fenbendazole is actually the more effective pancreatic cell killer https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/11/12/2042

Anna Marie's avatar

Yes, great products, great prices. No prescr needed. Thank you.

Doctor Samizdat's avatar

After performing around 400 pancreatic resections (and a similar number of hepatobiliary, gastroesoohageal and rectal resections) and watched disease progression (primarily in the upper GI cancers), I concluded that surgery was not integral to the treatment of most of these cases save for palliation of symptoms and that the future is with systemic therapy. The NCI is (finally) considering an Ivermectin trial but it likely will be too little, too late. I focus on breast cancer and melanoma now, dedicating my time to helping patients avoid radical surgery, as they mostly are also "medical" and not "surgical" cancers. The public's mindset favoring radical surgery is tough to break, however. "Modern" medicine has largely done a disservice to the man on the street.......

The Memory Department's avatar

In the 1980s, my boss used to go to Mexico to smuggle back laetrile (also called vitamin B17) for his daughter who had a brain tumor as it was and still is, I believe, against the law to use for cancer treatment (strange, no?). She has now outlived her parents and siblings.

Wondering if anyone has any thoughts on this.

HHM's avatar

Good for your former boss. Warrior dad!

sadie's avatar

A distant relative did the same thing in the 70s for lung cancer. He died much later from something else.

Thomas A Braun RPh's avatar

Traditional Chemo treatment is a down ward spiral until death occurs. A balancing act. Their mantra is do not interfere with my chemo treatment by providing nutritional support. Most cancer patients die a slow death due to gradual starvation. Never discussed and ignored. In the meantime the US cancer industry uses 7 times as much chemo treatment than Europe with similar outcomes. Time to change the treatment protocol.

Thomas A Braun RPh's avatar

PS: Friends wife was on the Ivermectin protocol and was stable and the radiologist talked them into radiation therapy and it was the end.

Brandon is not your bro's avatar

My Dad was gone in 9 months , early 2000, if we only knew . RIP DAD. 😢

sadie's avatar

Makis needs to get some of his clients to go public with their records so they can be studied and compiled. Same with Tippens. No more of this egotistical attitude that we should just trust them. Too much can be falsely presented these days. Years ago the Oasis of Hope in Mexico would readily put you in touch with people who had gone through their program. No reason we can't have that from any one promoting different modalities.

Deep Diver's avatar

re: archive search feature...are you talking about the Search magnifying glass for your Substack?