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Oh Angie That is great that you are losing . Now just what are you

eating? Did you know we started the same weight? I was where you are now

last year, last summer even and trying desperately to get there again.

Good luck on those last 3 pounds and give me some good advice.

NNN

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Oh Angie That is great that you are losing . Now just what are you

eating? Did you know we started the same weight? I was where you are now

last year, last summer even and trying desperately to get there again.

Good luck on those last 3 pounds and give me some good advice.

NNN

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Share on other sites

Oh Angie That is great that you are losing . Now just what are you

eating? Did you know we started the same weight? I was where you are now

last year, last summer even and trying desperately to get there again.

Good luck on those last 3 pounds and give me some good advice.

NNN

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  • 7 years later...
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, October 4, 2006

VITAMINS FIGHT MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

(OMNS) New research confirms that niacinamide, also known as vitamin B-3,

is a key to the successful treatment of multiple sclerosis and other nerve

diseases. [1] Niacinamide, say researchers at Harvard Medical School,

" profoundly prevents the degeneration of demyelinated axons and improves the

behavioral deficits. "

This is very good news, but it is not at all new news. Over 60 years ago,

Canadian physician H.T. Mount began treating multiple sclerosis patients with

intravenous B-1 (thiamine) plus intramuscular liver extract, which provides

other B-vitamins. He followed the progress of these patients for up to 27 years.

The results were excellent and were described in a paper published in the

Canadian Medical Association Journal in 1973. [2]

Mount was not alone. Forty years ago, Frederick Klenner, M.D., of

North Carolina, was using vitamins B-3 and B-1, along with the rest of the

B-complex vitamins, vitamins C and E, and other nutrients including magnesium,

calcium and zinc to arrest and reverse multiple sclerosis. [3,4] Klenner's

complete treatment program was originally published as " Treating Multiple

Sclerosis Nutritionally, " Cancer Control Journal 2:3, p 16-20. His detailed

megavitamin protocol is now posted for all interested persons to read at

http://www.tldp.com/issue/11_00/klenner.htm

Drs. Mount and Klenner were persuaded by their clinical observations that

multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, and many other neurological disorders

were primarily due to nerve cells being starved of nutrients. Each physician

tested this theory by giving his patients large, orthomolecular quantities of

nutrients. Mount's and Klenner's successful cures over decades of medical

practice proved their theory was correct. B-complex vitamins, including thiamine

as well as niacinamide, are absolutely vital for nerve cell health. Where

pathology already exists, unusually large quantities of vitamins are needed to

repair damaged nerve cells.

Nutritional therapy is inexpensive, effective and, most important, safe.

There is not even one death per year from vitamins. [5]

Vitamin supplementation is not the problem. It is under-nutrition that is

the problem. Vitamins are the solution.

Restoring health must be done nutritionally, not pharmacologically. All

cells in all persons are made exclusively from what we drink and eat. Not one

cell is made out of drugs.

References:

[1] Kaneko S, Wang J, Kaneko M, Yiu G, Hurrell JM, Chitnis T, Khoury SJ,

He Z. Protecting axonal degeneration by increasing nicotinamide adenine

dinucleotide levels in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis models. J

Neurosci. 2006 Sep 20;26(38):9794-804.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?CMD=search & DB=pubmed

[2] Mount HT. Multiple sclerosis and other demyelinating diseases. Can Med

Assoc J. 1973 Jun 2;108(11):1356-1358.

[3] Frederick R. Klenner. " Response of Peripheral and Central Nerve

Pathology to Mega-Doses of the Vitamin B-Complex and Other Metabolites " , Journal

of Applied Nutrition, 1973, http://www.tldp.com/issue/11_00/klenner.htm

[4] Dr. Klenner's " Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C " (which

discusses orthomolecular therapy with all vitamins, not just vitamin C) is now

posted in its entirety at

http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/198x/smith-lh-clinical_guide_1988.htm It

includes a multiple sclerosis protocol, which takes up about five pages. See

also: http://www.doctoryourself.com/klennerpaper.html

[5] WA et al. 2003 annual report of the American Association of

Poison Control Centers Toxic Exposure Surveillance System. Am J Emerg Med. 2004

Sep;22(5):335-404.

http://www.aapcc.org/Annual%20Reports/03report/Annual%20Report%202003.pdf

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