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Re: Seel post# 5566

Sunday, 09/09/2012 4:46:19 PM

Sunday, September 09, 2012 4:46:19 PM

Post# of 403038
If I understand correctly, cancer cells thrive because the p53 gene has mutated and no longer functions correctly to tell the cell when to die. So Kevetrin goes in and corrects that p53 mutation, thus turning the cancer cell back into a cell that says "oh s%#t, I've been alive for way too long, time to die" And the cancerous growth starts lossing cells and reduces in size, hopefully continuing to nothingness...

So yes, Kevetrin fixes p53 in all cells, healthy and cancerous, and therefore protects all cells from being cancerous (due to a p53 mutation), among other additional nice things Kevetrin does for cells

Anyone else, please speak up if my understanding is misled

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