Guest guest Posted December 11, 2009 Report Share Posted December 11, 2009 Welcome Janine, The most effective alt. treatments I know of specifically for breast cancer (BC) are: PAU D’ARCO, Avé, Artemix, genistein (fermented soy) & CURCUMIN, MELATONIN, and vit. D3, and hyperthermia. The next most effective remedies I know of for BC are vits. C, E; selenium, iodine, mistletoe, astragalus, green tea, poke, kutki, zeolite, pomegranate, CoQ10, I3C/DIM, calcium d'glucarate (CDG), chlorella; sandalwood ( & frankincense & lavender) essential oils, Poly-MVA (expensive), digitoxin; progesterone cream, and Springer vaccine, and IPT. AVOID dairy except for flax oil mixed w/cottage cheese (FSO/CC). Let me know if you have any specific questions. Leonard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2009 Report Share Posted December 11, 2009 I have a question. Would the frankincense & lavender be taken internally? I have read several ways to use them. I am very familiar with taking eo's internally. Cheri > > Welcome Janine, > The most effective alt. treatments I know of specifically for breast cancer (BC) are: > PAU D’ARCO, Avé, Artemix, genistein (fermented soy) & CURCUMIN, MELATONIN, and vit. D3, and hyperthermia. > > The next most effective remedies I know of for BC are > vits. C, E; selenium, iodine, mistletoe, astragalus, green tea, poke, kutki, zeolite, pomegranate, CoQ10, I3C/DIM, calcium d'glucarate (CDG), chlorella; sandalwood ( & frankincense & lavender) essential oils, Poly-MVA (expensive), digitoxin; progesterone cream, and Springer vaccine, and IPT. > AVOID dairy except for flax oil mixed w/cottage cheese (FSO/CC). > > Let me know if you have any specific questions. > Leonard > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2009 Report Share Posted December 11, 2009 is your breast cancer hormone (estrogen) sensitive.if so its slower to grow but harder to treat naturally. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2009 Report Share Posted December 11, 2009 Wow, that is quite a list. Flax seed and flax oil bother me if I have much at a time. I am very sensitive to so many compounds. Drugs, herbs, you name it. I was on astagalus for a few months after chemo, but finally went off it bc of side effects. I have IBS, and so many things will aggravate it. I have tried reishi, but it didn't agree with me. Let's see, what else is sitting up there in the cupboard bc it didn't agree...DIM, beet root and milk thistle--actually, I am trying the milk thistle a little at a time again, and sometimes take some beet root, but I could not handle them daily. I had gallbladder problems, and was trying to treat them naturopathically, but they only got worse, and finally I consented to having it out. I don't like to do that--don't feel any body part is " expendable, " but it was packed with stones and gearing up to make big trouble, so I finally gave up. I have " Smart Food " that someone in my online BC support group sent me, and I like it. I took it regularly the last time I hurt my back (lumbar disk issues) and think it helped me heal faster. It has some algae in it, other stuff I can't remember. I take calcium, vit D3, coQ10, a multi, fish oil (purified) and have other supplements for more occasional, or as needed, use, like acidophelus, S Boulardii, papaya enzymes, slippery elm, chamomile, and various vitamins. I have these Health Valley breakfast bars with Selenium in them, drink organic juice with pomegranate and blueberry juice now and then, and have raw and steamed whole foods, nuts, whole grain breads, and such as part of my diet now. Blueberries and apples are medicine to me, and I am a long-time broccoli and carrots eater--I have learned to steam them instead of cook them. I drink green tea almost every day, but often mixed with black tea, as green tea is bitter to me. I still eat too much sugar, I know it, and more fat than I should. It is hard to change old habits built on years of reinforcement by our society as to what is good food (so very misguided are we). I take a few OTC things if I feel backed into a corner. I tried Tamoxifen, but could not handle it. I am just so senstive to side effects. It was very hard for me to deal with allowing all the drugs--chemo is just one--that I was exposed to during treatment. Not the mention, the radiation. I was so conflicted all the time, and kept finding new studies that contradicted what I was being told, but the whole time the naturopaths said they had nothing for me except to help me through. Can't to progesterone cream right now. The chemo has caused hormone fluxes from heavy menopause symptoms, to heavy non-menopause symptoms (if you get my drift) to back again, to somewhere in the middle, and my onc wants it all stopped with Lupron. My cancer was fed by estrogen and progesterone, and he wants me shut down for good. I had a very high stage, just starting to spread, but not yet known if it went anywhere beyond lymph nodes. It is now both about recovering and rebuilding my health, and trying to keep from recurrence or progression. It has been quite a ride, and I have learned a lot along the way, but am open to learning more. So thank you for your list of suggestions. Glad to see some of my supplements are already there. ~J > > Welcome Janine, > The most effective alt. treatments I know of specifically for breast cancer (BC) are: > PAU D’ARCO, Avé, Artemix, genistein (fermented soy) & CURCUMIN, MELATONIN, and vit. D3, and hyperthermia. > > The next most effective remedies I know of for BC are > vits. C, E; selenium, iodine, mistletoe, astragalus, green tea, poke, kutki, zeolite, pomegranate, CoQ10, I3C/DIM, calcium d'glucarate (CDG), chlorella; sandalwood ( & frankincense & lavender) essential oils, Poly-MVA (expensive), digitoxin; progesterone cream, and Springer vaccine, and IPT. > AVOID dairy except for flax oil mixed w/cottage cheese (FSO/CC). > > Let me know if you have any specific questions. > Leonard > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2009 Report Share Posted December 11, 2009 Yes. It came out high as hormone sensitive. This has ended up being quite a lot of torture for me, as hormones are hard to go off cold turkey, and the chemo did that to me for a good year and a half, with many fluctuations along the way and a lot of heavy, debilitating, menopause symptoms. Then I started to feel better, but it was just my body recovering its abilities to make hormones again. Then my onc said this is no good, gotta put you on a drug to shut them down again. But then the body said, don't bother, here I will shut down again myself, and now I don't know WHAT to do, LOL. Back to the hot flashes and wondering if I will stay in menopause now and solve all problems, so they won't try drugs or surgery, which is the other thing they mentioned. Just yank out the ol' ovaries. I don't think so! ~J > > is your breast cancer hormone (estrogen) sensitive.if so its slower to grow but harder to treat naturally. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2009 Report Share Posted December 11, 2009 Hi Hope, I don't think that hormone positive breast cancer is slower to grow. The younger you are, the more aggressive it seems to be. And I agree, treating it naturally is far too difficult. It's caused me a conundrum, that's for sure. Hence, I did allopathic treatment and will follow up with alternative. Calcium d-glucarate is really working well for me. But you shouldn't take it if you are also taking tamoxifen. ar > > is your breast cancer hormone (estrogen) sensitive.if so its slower to grow but harder to treat naturally. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 12, 2009 Report Share Posted December 12, 2009 " cheri601183 " <cheri607@...> wrote: >Would the frankincense & lavender be taken internally? I would use frankinscense EXTERNALLY (for any type of cancer). Lavender can be used internally, but I imagine that it's generally more effective to apply the essential oil externally to the part of the body where the cancer is. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 12, 2009 Report Share Posted December 12, 2009 Thanks. I do know for certain things taking eo's internally is the best way for others no. Cheri > >Would the frankincense & lavender be taken internally? > > I would use frankinscense EXTERNALLY (for any type of cancer). > Lavender can be used internally, but I imagine that it's generally more effective to apply the essential oil externally to the part of the body where the cancer is. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 12, 2009 Report Share Posted December 12, 2009 How do these work on cancer? ~J > >Would the frankincense & lavender be taken internally? > > I would use frankinscense EXTERNALLY (for any type of cancer). > Lavender can be used internally, but I imagine that it's generally more effective to apply the essential oil externally to the part of the body where the cancer is. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2010 Report Share Posted January 21, 2010 HI janinecmiller, Not sure where you're at with your progress, but thought I'd chime in... I was dx with BC in Jan 2006 (age 37) - it's been 4 yrs. I had been dx with Hodgkin's Disease at age 21... had the works, exploratory laparotomy, spleenectomy, bone marrow biopsy, I shudder to think -- well, I'd always said I wouldn't put my body through that horror again. So, when the surgeon said -- " because of your hx radiation isn't an option and neither is a lumpectomy - we'll do full mastectomy with recon and chemo " .... I disagreed and said " no thanks " . Well, he was upset, angry, etc. but I decided I could take 30 days and do my research then decide... well, I decided to stay away from hospitals, doctors, etc. I have gotten healthier with every passing week, month, year -- Here's the real crux -- no one treatment is right for every person. The key is making the journey to your inner self and figuring out what you need to do for you. Find someone to teach you about muscle testing, order the alt cancer tx test kit from http://alternativecancer.us/#Select === Get the book Heal Your Body Heal Your Life by Louise Hay. Read Ty Bollinger's CANCER Step Outside the Box. Most importantly though - make sure your focus is on ALLOWING HEALTH. What we focus on grows, so thinking about being sick gets more sick. In GOOD HEALTH " janinecmiller " wrote: > > Wow, that is quite a list. > > Flax seed and flax oil bother me if I have much at a time. I am very sensitive to so many compounds. Drugs, herbs, you name it. I was on astagalus for a few months after chemo, but finally went off it bc of > side effects. I have IBS, and so many things will aggravate it. > > I have tried reishi, but it didn't agree with me. Let's see, what else is sitting up there in the cupboard bc it didn't agree...DIM, beet root and milk thistle--actually, I am trying the milk thistle a little at a time again, and sometimes take some beet root, but I could not handle them daily. I had gallbladder problems, and was trying to treat them naturopathically, but they only got worse, and finally I consented to having it out. I don't like to do that--don't feel any body part is " expendable, " but it was packed with stones and gearing up to make big trouble, so I finally gave up. > > I have " Smart Food " that someone in my online BC support group sent me, and I like it. I took it regularly the last time I hurt my back (lumbar disk issues) and think it helped me heal faster. It has some algae in it, other stuff I can't remember. > I take calcium, vit D3, coQ10, a multi, fish oil (purified) and have other supplements for more occasional, or as needed, use, like acidophelus, S Boulardii, papaya enzymes, slippery elm, chamomile, and various vitamins. I have these Health Valley breakfast bars with Selenium in them, drink organic juice with pomegranate and blueberry juice now and then, and have raw and steamed whole foods, nuts, whole grain breads, and such as part of my diet now. Blueberries and apples are medicine to me, and I am a long-time broccoli and carrots eater--I have learned to steam them instead of cook them. I drink green tea almost every day, but often mixed with black tea, as green tea is bitter to me. > I still eat too much sugar, I know it, and more fat than I should. It is hard to change old habits built on years of reinforcement by our society as to what is good food (so very misguided are we). > > I take a few OTC things if I feel backed into a corner. I tried Tamoxifen, but could not handle it. I am just so senstive to side effects. It was very hard for me to deal with allowing all the drugs--chemo is just one--that I was exposed to during treatment. Not the mention, the radiation. I was so conflicted all the time, and kept finding new studies that contradicted what I was being told, but the whole time the naturopaths said they had nothing for me except to help me through......<snip> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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