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surfcity128

03/09/13 8:42 PM

#9682 RE: chasjamo #9681

I'm in the same boat. My boss's lifelong friend was just given 6 months. 18 if he does chemo. I'm sure most cancer patients hear "you need to do organic coffee enemas or buy crystals" or other such treatments. Hard to break thru the noise. Steve Jobs tried those things because he didn't like the idea of being cut open. Not saying that some don't have scientific basis.

Personally if I was diagnosed with the big C I would try to make my body as alkaline as possible because I think that has been proven and simple.

My girlfriend's best friend was diagnosed in January with stage4 colon cancer that spread to the liver. She got into a trial of a chemo cocktail. I never suggested Abloc because I know they would never do something that ran counter to the rules of the trial. Thankfully after just three treatments her tumors have shrunk 50%. They did a body scan after blood markers showed the same. Now they say if things keep on that way she would be eligible for surgery. Great news for a 47 year old Mom of a 12 YO boy. And yet, i still feel the need at some point to hand her a stack of printed research.

After her friend's diagnosis, my girlfriend took my wallet, pulled out my health insurance card and made an appointment for a physical, blood work, and a week from Tuesday I get the old Louisville Slugger up the kazoo.

Last bit of FYI. Went into my local GNC, STILL 200 count on the shelves. There was a guy in there who happened to be from GNC corporate. He said yada yada "delivery problems". "Hot seller, just had six boxes stolen from a store in the quad cities today"
I could just imagine some senior citizen buying it off a dealer on the corner in Moline,Il.
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NukeJohn

03/09/13 9:14 PM

#9683 RE: chasjamo #9681

What has a terminal cancer patient got to lose by giving Anatabloc a try? It may not help, but, after all it is a nutraceutical (found in foods in lower concentrations). So, if taken at recommended guidelines, it shouldn't hurt.

First, the patient and his family should do some research on the relationship between NF-kB and Cancer, and they should print out what they can find and share it with the physician treating the patient. Here's a good place to start.

http://naturalsupplementsresearch.org/assets/applets/Inflammation_and_cancer-_how_hot_is_the_link.pdf

excerpts...

Although inflammation has long been known as a localized protective reaction of tissue to irritation, injury, or infection, characterized by pain, redness, swelling, and sometimes loss of function, there has been a new realization about its role in a wide variety of diseases, including cancer. While acute inflammation is a part of the defense response, chronic inflammation can lead to cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular, pulmonary, and neurological diseases. Several pro-inflammatory gene products have been identified that mediate a critical role in suppression of apoptosis, proliferation, angiogenesis, invasion, and metastasis. Among these gene products are TNF and members of its superfamily, IL-1a, IL-1b, IL-6, IL-8, IL-18, chemokines, MMP-9, VEGF, COX-2, and 5-LOX. The expression of all these genes are mainly regulated by the transcription factor NF-kB, which is constitutively active in most tumors and is induced by carcinogens (such as cigarette smoke), tumor promoters, carcinogenic viral proteins (HIV-tat, HIV-nef, HIV-vpr, KHSV, EBV-LMP1, HTLV1-tax, HPV, HCV, and HBV), chemotherapeutic agents, and g-irradiation. These observations imply that antiinflammatory agents that suppress NF-kB or NF-kB-regulated products should have a potential in both the prevention and treatment of cancer. The current review describes in detail the critical link between inflammation and cancer.

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Now....stop and think about what this article just said.

1. Chronic inflammation caused by excess NF-kB transcription can lead to cancer, heart disease, pulmonary disease, neurological disease, etc.

2. Anti-inflammatory agents that suppress NF-kB can be used to prevent and/or treat cancer.

What is commercially available that can reduce NF-kB? The answer is Anatabloc.

Watch this video....



I would also have the person (and his Doctor) google the specific type of cancer and see if it has a high degree of correlation with NF-kB. For example, just have them google "lung cancer NF-kB" or "adenocarcinoma NF-kB" and read several articles (the recent articles will all show the high degree of correlation between the transcription of NF-kB and cancer). Here is a typical article...which admittedly is difficult reading for a layperson.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3032584/

Here are some key excerpts in the above article...

Lung cancer ranks as the first malignant tumor killer worldwide. Despite the knowledge that carcinogens from tobacco smoke and the environment constitute the main causes of lung cancer, the mechanisms for lung carcinogenesis are still elusive. Cancer development and progression depend on the balance between cell survival and death signals. Common cell survival signaling pathways are activated by carcinogens as well as by inflammatory cytokines, which contribute substantially to cancer development. As a major cell survival signal, nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) is involved in multiple steps in carcinogenesis and in cancer cell’s resistance to chemo- and radiotherapy. Recent studies with animal models and cell culture systems have established the links between NF-kappaB and lung carcinogenesis, highlighting the significance of targeting the NF-kappaB signaling pathway for lung cancer treatment and chemoprevention. In this review, we summarize progresses in understanding the NF-kappaB pathway in lung cancer development as well as in modulating NF-kappaB for lung cancer prevention and therapy.


Here is another article about NF-kB and cancer....

http://cshperspectives.cshlp.org/content/1/5/a000141.full.pdf

key excerpt...

Thus, it can be generalized that IKKb dependent signaling to NF-kB in tumor associated inflammatory and immune cells results in the production of cytokines that activate signaling pathways that stimulate the proliferation and enhance the survival of malignant carcinoma cells.

After reading the above articles.... have the cancer victim (and his doctor) watch this youtube video again.



Finally, have the patient and his doctor read the anatabine patent application which lists the types of cancer in the patent claims.

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=83361143


The Doctor can then go to the Anatabloc.com website and register as a physician and see the articles posted about the safety and adverse incident events from taking Anatabloc (no serious side effects reported).

After all this, the patient and the doctor can make an informed decision about whether to try Anatabloc and what dosage might be warranted.


JMHO,

NJ