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The most effective therapy is ozone therapy. Search this site for

references.

Leo

==================================

>

> I have a dilema. My father (72 years) was given a Zoladex 3 month

> implant injection to reduce testosteron production. Also 2 months ago

> I have put him thru' Dr 's " 21 day program " . After that his PSA

> has gone down from 74 to 7 which made us happy.

>

> However his orthodox doctor (not familiar with Dr ) recommends

> another 3 month Zoladex injection.He doesn't know about " 21 day

> program " or any kind of alternative medicine. I'm worried that the

> injection will have side effects on his bones etc. Has anyone been

> thru' this dilema and can advise? I want to put him thru' another " 21

> day program " in December. Should he take the injection again as well

> as " 21 day program " ?

> Wojtek

>

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Hi Leo,

I did not see a link for this site, maybe you could resend it? Thank

you, I would like to forward this to a friend who is very interested.

Thanks,

Karin

=============

The most effective therapy is ozone therapy. Search this site for

references.

Leo

=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D

=3D=

=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D

>

> I have a dilema. My father (72 years) was given a Zoladex 3 month

> implant injection to reduce testosteron production. Also 2 months ago

> I have put him thru' Dr 's " 21 day program " . After that his PSA

> has gone down from 74 to 7 which made us happy.=20

>=20

> However his orthodox doctor (not familiar with Dr ) recommends

> another 3 month Zoladex injection.He doesn't know about " 21 day

> program " or any kind of alternative medicine. I'm worried that the

> injection will have side effects on his bones etc. Has anyone been

> thru' this dilema and can advise? I want to put him thru' another " 21

> day program " in December. Should he take the injection again as well

> as " 21 day program " ?

> Wojtek

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It didn't come through for me either.  Would love to see it.  Hope you get these

and resend.  thanks for the tip.

From: summer@... <summer@...>

Subject: RE: Prostate Cancer

Dr

Date: Wednesday, November 19, 2008, 11:19 AM

Hi Leo,

I did not see a link for this site, maybe you could resend it? Thank

you, I would like to forward this to a friend who is very interested.

Thanks,

Karin

============ =

The most effective therapy is ozone therapy. Search this site for

references.

Leo

=3D=3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D

=3D=

=3D=3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D=3D= 3D=3D

>

> I have a dilema. My father (72 years) was given a Zoladex 3 month

> implant injection to reduce testosteron production. Also 2 months ago

> I have put him thru' Dr 's " 21 day program " . After that his PSA

> has gone down from 74 to 7 which made us happy.=20

>=20

> However his orthodox doctor (not familiar with Dr ) recommends

> another 3 month Zoladex injection.He doesn't know about " 21 day

> program " or any kind of alternative medicine. I'm worried that the

> injection will have side effects on his bones etc. Has anyone been

> thru' this dilema and can advise? I want to put him thru' another " 21

> day program " in December. Should he take the injection again as well

> as " 21 day program " ?

> Wojtek

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I will try again. Scroll back on this list to Dec 27/07 and you will

see stories on ozone as Dr. used it, specifically message no.

19162. Also, go to

ozonetherapy/?yguid=40873506

for a Q & A list moderated by Dr. Pressman. Very good info.

Let us know how you make out.

Leo

-------------------------------

> >

> > I have a dilema. My father (72 years) was given a Zoladex 3 month

> > implant injection to reduce testosteron production. Also 2 months ago

> > I have put him thru' Dr 's " 21 day program " . After that his PSA

> > has gone down from 74 to 7 which made us happy.=20

> >=20

> > However his orthodox doctor (not familiar with Dr ) recommends

> > another 3 month Zoladex injection.He doesn't know about " 21 day

> > program " or any kind of alternative medicine. I'm worried that the

> > injection will have side effects on his bones etc. Has anyone been

> > thru' this dilema and can advise? I want to put him thru' another " 21

> > day program " in December. Should he take the injection again as well

> > as " 21 day program " ?

> > Wojtek

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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  • 6 months later...
Guest guest

>

> Cline where you on 4.5mg of LDN , where can the vat. k3 be found

>

> Thanks,

>

> **************Download the AOL Classifieds Toolbar for local deals at your

> fingertips.

>

(http://toolbar.aol.com/aolclassifieds/download.html?ncid=emlcntusdown00000004)

>

yes on 4.5 and web site for K3/C attached, web site for info. on

K3/C - http://advancedprostatecancer.net/?p=302

http://www.iherb.com/life-enhancement-prosstay-180-capsules/12321?utm_source=gb & \

utm_medium=f3 & at=0

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  • 3 months later...

Thanks , this has been one concern of mine with my Dad. I

have recently found out my best friend in Scotland, her father is diagnosed

with prostate cancer and her Mum has recently been put in to a home as she

suffers from Alzheimers. Any responses I’d welcome hearing them.

Thanks,

Jayne

Jayne Crocker

Chairperson, LDNNow

www.ldnnow.com <- click on petition link to support LDN as a

front line treatment

Dr Steele, ITV's This Morning supporting LDN

tel: +44 (0) 7877 492 669

From: low dose naltrexone [mailto:low dose naltrexone ]

On Behalf Of Donnelly

Sent: 10 October 2009 13:39

low dose naltrexone ; blueribbon1@...; Sheila

Donnelly

Subject: [low dose naltrexone] prostate cancer

Hi

All

This

is an email from my cousin in Auckland and he really needs our help. I would

think the first thing he needs to do is contact Dr Berkson.

How

does a patient contact Dr Berkson and what are the charges

" No

chemo as they decided the disease would not benefit from this but would make

him worse and it had spread from outside the prostate. We are seeing a

Radiation oncologist on Monday for some radiation to the tumor in his prostate

which is giving him quite a bit of pain. He also has bony metastisis in this

pelvic region, upper thighs and hot spots throughout is ribs/spine. He is

taking a drug called Biaclutamide which is a hormone treatment for the prostate

cancer. Also a zoladex injection every three months but this has not really

helped as his PSA keeps climbing. He has numerous pain killers which are

Oxycontin 40mg morning and night to maintain pain relief, Oxynorm 10mg for

break-through pain with paracetmol, takes this when needed, Nortriptyline 10mg,

once a day, Diclofenac 75 mg, once per day, Metoclopramide 3x per day and

Laxol to relieve constipation from all these bloody pills! "

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I think this was meant for the group

From: Charley [mailto:thisdance@...]

Sent: 10 October 2009 20:13

jaynelcrocker

Subject: RE: [low dose naltrexone] prostate cancer

I would like to know more about PSA I just got my blood

work back and my PSA is 4.9

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Do you know what your PSA was at the last testing?

It may be an infection of a nearby organ or something more serious.

You can read more about it here.

http://www.prostatecancerwatchfulwaiting.co.za/PSA101.html

>

> I think this was meant for the group

>

>

>

>

>

> From: Charley [mailto:thisdance@...]

> Sent: 10 October 2009 20:13

> jaynelcrocker

> Subject: RE: [low dose naltrexone] prostate cancer

>

>

>

>

> I would like to know more about PSA I just got my blood work back and my PSA

> is 4.9

>

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While a 4.9 PSA is considered slightly elevated it doers not necessarily mean anything. Normal PSAs are usually under 4.0, but there are some studies that confirm a small percentage of this as an indicator for cancer. On the other hand, a higher PSA can be normal for you. As we age our PSAs get higher, or prostatitis can elevate those numbers. We had a patient who had PSAs over 10 every year and no sign of cancer. PSA is NOT the be all-end all of diagnosis, but is a tool that can give us directions to further studies. A digital Rectal exam is also an associated test that can diagnose abnormal lumps in the prostate. If your PSA ramains high, your doctor may want you to get a prostate biopsy, a small spring loaded device goes through the perineum usually and gets a small piece of tissue in less than a second.

This will give a definitive diagnosis. But once again, a good history will help determine WHY your PSA is 4.9.. What was it before? If you don't know, probably a second test in a few months is appropriate.

In one of my departments we used to run a yearly prostate screening and test upwards of 400 men a year. Only saw 1 case of prostate CA in 5 years, and a LOT of PSAs were over 4.

Relax, this is only a warning sign so far. Talk to your doctor about it.

From: jaynelcrocker <jaynelcrocker@...>Subject: FW: [low dose naltrexone] prostate cancerlow dose naltrexone Date: Saturday, October 10, 2009, 4:35 PM

I think this was meant for the group

From: Charley [mailto:thisdance] Sent: 10 October 2009 20:13jaynelcrockerSubject: RE: [low dose naltrexone] prostate cancer

I would like to know more about PSA I just got my blood work back and my PSA is 4.9

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Thanks and thank you to others. My dad had his prostate removed and that was the end of sex for him and his older brother died from it and refused to have it removed. I have other health probablem with hepatitis c. I'm 64 but dad was 86 and died on his birthday.

From: jaynelcrocker <jaynelcrocker@...>Subject: FW: [low dose naltrexone] prostate cancerlow dose naltrexone Date: Saturday, October 10, 2009, 4:35 PM

I think this was meant for the group

From: Charley [mailto:thisdance] Sent: 10 October 2009 20:13jaynelcrockerSubject: RE: [low dose naltrexone] prostate cancer

I would like to know more about PSA I just got my blood work back and my PSA is 4.9

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Hi everyone,

My husband has had an enlarged prostrate for some time.with a PSA reading of

up to 6.9. Recently had a biopsy with 12 samples taken......all negative. He

has been taking a vitamin /herb concoction sold over the counter in the

pharmacy with a slight reduction in PSA .

I have started him on a low dose of Naltrexone ....(29th Sept ) 1.75mls

of made up liquid. Next blood test is in two months. I will let you know his

latest PSA reading when taken to see if there is an improvement.

Geraldine (Australia)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thanks , this has been one concern of mine with my Dad. I have recently

found out my best friend in Scotland, her father is diagnosed with prostate

cancer and her Mum has recently been put in to a home as she suffers from

Alzheimers. Any responses I'd welcome hearing them.

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I hope you saw my earlier post on high PSA. After 12 negative biopsies, you should stop worrying about it. A high PSA DOES NOT necessarily mean cancer. In addition, it really does not necessarily relate at all to his BPH. Taking all sorts of concoctions to try to reduce the PSA level is probably not going to have any significant effect. It's not like cholesteral or triglycerides. The PSA is more of a marker, and can fluctuate frequently based on many factors. if one has a lot of recent sexual activity before the test, it will go up. Prostatitis will increase the numbers also, testosterone levels can make it fluctuate. So trying to manipulate the numbers is a fruitless endeavor. you'll have no idea what changed thiose numbers. If he had other lower PSA tests in the past and it

suddenly shot up, then biopsies are recommended, but you have already had these and fortunately they were negative.

I do not recall any evidence of LDN having any effect on PSA or BPH. If anyone has any experience with this, please jump in here to this conversation and add to our knowledge.

bottom line is that you should spend your time doing more for the symptoms of BPH than fretting about the PSA (many treatments, both surgical and non-surgical are now available) . best

Bob C

From: Geraldine <jezzo@...>Subject: Re: [low dose naltrexone] prostate cancerlow dose naltrexone Date: Tuesday, October 13, 2009, 10:55 PM

Hi everyone,My husband has had an enlarged prostrate for some time.with a PSA reading of up to 6.9. Recently had a biopsy with 12 samples taken......all negative. He has been taking a vitamin /herb concoction sold over the counter in the pharmacy with a slight reduction in PSA .I have started him on a low dose of Naltrexone ....(29th Sept ) 1.75mls of made up liquid. Next blood test is in two months. I will let you know his latest PSA reading when taken to see if there is an improvement.Geraldine (Australia)~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~Thanks , this has been one concern of mine with my Dad. I have recentlyfound out my best friend in Scotland, her father is diagnosed with prostatecancer and her Mum has recently been put in to a home as she suffers fromAlzheimers. Any responses I'd welcome hearing them.

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  • 2 months later...

I have treated prostate cancer and other different type of cancers.I am

Dr.Jayanthy Menon specialized in naturopathy,nutrition and ayurveda.I

treating every disease that has found failure in medical science.I have an

experience of 15 yrs in this field.But like you wanted I am not in the U.S. but

in

India.So if you want pls contact me personally.

Thanks

Dr.Jayanthy Menon.

On Fri, Jan 1, 2010 at 9:46 PM, <jpking@...> wrote:

>

>

> Will anyone please advise the best natural clinics and the best holistic

> medical doctors for treating prostate cancer in USA.

> Thanks.

> Jim

>

>

>

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jpking@... wrote:

> Will anyone please advise the best natural clinics and the best holistic

> medical doctors for treating prostate cancer in USA.

Where in the US is the person?

I would try to find a doctor who offers hyperthermia.

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The person is in Central Flordia.

Thanks.

Jim

In a message dated 1/3/2010 12:29:27 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,

leonardleonard1@... writes:

jpking@... wrote:

> Will anyone please advise the best natural clinics and the best holistic

> medical doctors for treating prostate cancer in USA.

Where in the US is the person?

I would try to find a doctor who offers hyperthermia.

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  • 3 weeks later...

Hi folks:

I decided to check to see whether the apparent association of milk with prostate

cancer extends also to cheeses.

In my search I came across the following site. I know nothing about the author,

or whether his comments fairly reflect the papers he references. But it does

reference quite a number of studies regarding the possible causes of prostate

cancer, which may be of interest.

In particular, there is discussion about the relationship between calcium intake

as a possible factor.

http://www.yourhealthbase.com/prostate_cancer_risk_factors.html

Rodney.

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  • 1 year later...
Guest guest

For cancer, along with LDN, it is always recommended to start on Alpha Lipoic

Acid (two 300mg capsules per day on an empty stomach.) LDN is seldom a

stand-alone treatment and for cancer of any sort, ALA is always added to the

mix. As for stopping the LDN, I can't imagine why you would even consider it. It

can do no harm, and you have no idea how much good it might be doing in spite of

the reoccurrance of cancer markers.

My opinion is that he, and you, should be on it for the rest of your lives.

There is never a time that you can do without the healthiest immune system that

you can have.

Others might have more suggestions, but these are considered the absolute basics

for cancer -- LDN and ALA.

Here is part 1 of Dr. Burt Berkson on this very important subject. There are 4

parts that you will want to watch:

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WqRwXEnPYKk & playnext=1 & list=PL98E5C71CB28D96F4>

Francie

http://LDN-for-MS.com

>

> my husband diagnosed with prostate cancer and he has been taking LDN for

almost one year and half and some times his PSA is good but recently his PSA

became 5000, i dont know wither i keep giving LDN to him or not?also i need to

know for how long i should be giving to him , please i need your help if any one

can , and do you recommend any other supplement with the treatments

> thank you in advance

>

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Guest guest

I don’t think we can underestimate the power of LDN and OGF has on cancer alone. We have to remember that it was through Dr Zagon’s work for cancer did he discover Naltrexone. For cancer, they increase the inhibitors of the cell cycle - and produce less cells. Am sharing an email from Dr Zagon and attaching the paper he’s referring to:- Dear Jayne: Our discovery of LDN was based on treatment of cancer - look at a paper in Science 1983 - I will include this. In fact, the effect of naloxone - an opioid antagonist like naltrexone - gave us a clue about this matter. Thousands upon thousands are using LDN for cancer right now. This is not a " chemotherapy " . Rather a " biotherapy " . Utilization of the body's own chemistry for treatment - remember, it is the opioid growth factor (met-enkephalin - an endorphin) and its receptor, OGFr, that LDN uses to regulate cell proliferation. Dr. Zagon Am also going to share another email I received from Dr Zagon re LDN/OGF on cancer, and apparently they’re publishing lots of papers re Zagons work “like crazy” so I guess we should all try and keep a look out. Here’s some of the email:- A paper in Head & Neck showing that OGF, LDN, and imiquimod all can change the OGF-OGFr axis and vastly improve these types of cancers. And - get this - LDN and especially OGF - can be taken once/week and you can get the same effect as daily administration. No pre-citation yet. Papers published recently: Naltrexone enters cells by passive diffusion. This means immediately - and shows why this is so fast acting.Passive diffusion of naltrexone into human and animal cells and upregulation of cell proliferation.Cheng F, McLaughlin PJ, Banks WA, Zagon IS.Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2009 Sep;297(3):R844-52. Epub 2009 Jul 15.PMID: 19605761 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] OGF on the other hand enters cells by active transport and takes 15-30 min.Internalization of the opioid growth factor, [Met5]-enkephalin, is dependent on clathrin-mediated endocytosis for downregulation of cell proliferation.Cheng F, McLaughlin PJ, Banks WA, Zagon IS.Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2010 Sep;299(3):R774-85. Epub 2010 Jun 30.PMID: 20592180 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] OGF is fantastic for treatment of pancreatic cancer.Opioid growth factor improves clinical benefit and survival in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. JP, Bingaman SI, Mauger DT, Harvey HH, Demers LM, Zagon IS.One gentleman shared his experience with LDN and prostate cancer on this board back in January which I thought was an excellent example showing how LDN has worked for him. I am sharing an extract of what else he’s taking besides LDN and he has said he is willing to help anyone re LDN and prostate cancer so if you would like his email address, please do let me know:- In addition to LDN I am taking Avodart to shrink my prostate. I am taking 15,000 IU of Vitamin D3, which has brought my blood level from 19 ng/ml to 83 ng/ml. I am taking Pectasol-C 454 modified citrus pectin from www.econugenics.com which has been shown to keep cancers from spreading to other sites. Since inflammation plays a role in cancer formation I am also taking fish oil, green tea, beta glucan, resveratrol, and curcumin. I also take B-Complex, B12, Ubiquinol, and zinc. I have no way of knowing if I need all this but I have been using a shot gun. My experience with LDN has been great. I started with 4.5 mg right off the bat. I don’t know what dose your husband is taking. I noticed this gentleman takes 4.5mg whereas I do believe Dr Zagon would recommend 3mg. I hope you find this information hepful. Jayne Crocker www.LDNNow.comImportant! Please sign our LDN petition to the European Parliament by clicking heretel: +44 (0) 7877 492 669Dr Steele MBE, talking about LDNLDNNow are a political/pressure group of individuals dedicated to getting Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) accepted into modern medicine and trialled for the myriad of uses it shows benefit for. . >> my husband diagnosed with prostate cancer and he has been taking LDN for almost one year and half and some times his PSA is good but recently his PSA became 5000, i dont know wither i keep giving LDN to him or not?also i need to know for how long i should be giving to him , please i need your help if any one can , and do you recommend any other supplement with the treatments > thank you in advance>

1 of 1 File(s)

1983Naltrexone_Response_Neuroblastoma.pdf

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