Guest guest Posted July 2, 2009 Report Share Posted July 2, 2009 What do you mean by failed resection? Anyone battling this terrible foe????My mom has been for 2 yrs..She is right now in a clinical trial at Md ...avastin and tarceva..it has held it at bay for over a year now after a failed resection at Duke... any experiences out there???? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 2, 2009 Report Share Posted July 2, 2009 Difficult! Best bet is water soluable treatments so liver can handle the therapy I will get back to you Anyone battling this terrible foe????My mom has been for 2 yrs..She is right now in a clinical trial at Md ...avastin and tarceva..it has held it at bay for over a year now after a failed resection at Duke... any experiences out there???? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 2, 2009 Report Share Posted July 2, 2009 karen sykes <mrinurse2004@...> wrote: > Anyone battling this terrible foe????My mom has been for 2 yrs..She is right now in a clinical trial at Md ...avastin and tarceva..it has held it at bay for over a year now after a failed resection at Duke... any experiences out there???? > Hi , People are regularly overcoming advanced cancers, including liver cancer, by following the Budwig Plan for healing. Of course, it doesn't work 100% of the time, but if someone follows the full diet and changes their lifestyle to include sun bathing and stress reduction techniques, they often are successful without drugs or even supplements. In the FlaxseedOil2 group we have over 130 testimonials of success related to a wide variety of cancers as well as other conditions. Below are copies of one member's messages about liver cancer: On Feb. 4, 2009, wrote: Update on my Health-Advanced Liver Cancer I just obtained a copy of the actual report of yesterday's MRI scan. My doctor called me to tell me that there was " no change " since the previous scan, that tumors were stable. Here are excerpts: <<<<< Stable T1 hyperintense, T2 hypointense lesion within the posterior right hepatic lobe (series, image 77), without associated arterial enhancement, most likely a dysplastic nodule. .... These lesions are stable in size since the 5/21/2008 examination (these are not as clearly seen on the most recent scans). no definite T2 hyperintense lesions on the current examination. .... Impression: .... In the setting of cirrhosis, these are favored to represent dysplastic nodules given the lack of associated T2 signal abnormality; however multifocal hepatocellular carcinoma is not completely excluded. Recommend attention on followup. >>>>> Plain english translation: no active cancer tumor in the liver at this point. --------------------- On Oct. 8, 2008, wrote: " I was diagnosed with Hepatitis B, then liver cirrhosis, then primary liver cancer all in about 2 months (April-May 2008)....I read about BP and started implementing around 05/15 and signed up on this group. I had 2 tumors...For primary liver cancer, the main marker in the blood in AFP (Alpha Feto Protein)...These are my AFP numbers: 05/03: 400.1 05/26: 895.7 07/11: 1363.9 07/21: 871.8 08/25: 68.6 09/29: 51.7 I can only say one thing: may God richly reward Johanna Budwig!!.....I declined all cancer related treatments. " ---------- First post to the group, May 29, 2008 " I was diagnosed 2 months ago with liver cirrhosis due to hepatitis B and now with primary liver cancer as well. While the meds were doing their tests, I educated myself about conventional treatments and their poor outcome especially for advanced liver cancers. I determined I will decline chemo and radio when offered. I started implementing FOCC this week...... " ------------- You can learn more about the Budwig plan at FlaxSeedOil2 group and also at http://www.budwigvideos.com Kind regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 3, 2009 Report Share Posted July 3, 2009 her cancer came back shortly after resection....I am looking for folks who are doing conventional treatments ...we have been doing fine with those after 2 yrs she has no decrease in liver function wanted to know if anyone has experience with Theraspheres or any other conventional tx..thanks! 7/2/09, Bret Peirce <patientadvocate> wrote: Difficult! Best bet is water soluable treatments so liver can handle the therapy I will get back to you Anyone battling this terrible foe????My mom has been for 2 yrs..She is right now in a clinical trial at Md ...avastin and tarceva..it has held it at bay for over a year now after a failed resection at Duke... any experiences out there???? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 3, 2009 Report Share Posted July 3, 2009 Theresphere are a tool, are not curative, may miss very small tumors. They are radioactive isotopes that have been around for years but have been refined. It's radiation therapy. People have taken these for colon, prostate, liver, uterine cancer. If you go this route, should be very studious about adjunctive therapy. You can only get so many radio isotopes, and so, please look at it as a one-shot-proposition. Make it a real shot! Leave nothing to chance! Support this treatment with complimentary treatments. After all, what do you go to lose? Bret her cancer came back shortly after resection... .I am looking for folks who are doing conventional treatments ...we have been doing fine with those after 2 yrs she has no decrease in liver function wanted to know if anyone has experience with Theraspheres or any other conventional tx..thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 3, 2009 Report Share Posted July 3, 2009 The treatment using radioactive seeds was utilized for a brief time early on in the last century. It was a failure then as it is now. Radiation causes cancer, it does not eradicate it. This is a metabolic disorder and the only way it can be successfully resolved is via diet and lifestyle changes. Nothing else works. Bret Peirce <patientadvocate> wrote: > > Theresphere are a tool, are not curative, may miss very small tumors. They are radioactive isotopes that have been around for years but have been refined. It's radiation therapy. > > People have taken these for colon, prostate, liver, uterine cancer. > If you go this route, should be very studious about adjunctive therapy. You can only get so many radio isotopes, and so, please look at it as a one-shot-proposition. > > Make it a real shot! Leave nothing to chance! Support this treatment with complimentary treatments. > > After all, what do you go to lose? > Bret Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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