Such_Saturation
Member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2013
- Messages
- 7,370
It was DHEA (I think).
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Blossom said:I was just going to puncture a life extension vitamin k and use the contents of that tonight. I'll probably cover it with a bandage.Peata said:Blossom said:Well since I have some vitamin k on hand I will probably try that first. I ordered some minocycline from farmacia that should arrive in a couple weeks but I'm wondering if it would work the same as tetracycline? I would think it so but maybe haidut will chime in with his thoughts?Peata said:Blossom said:Thanks Peata! I will report back on my results. Please tell us how it goes with your cherry angiomas dd99!
just to be clear, Blossom, are you using tetracylcine or vitamin k for moles?
OK, when you come up with a way to use the vitamin K topically (I assume you mean you'll open a capsule and use the powder or dissolve a pill of it), let us know.
narouz said:I remember him specifying that when treating moles/spots topically with...I believe it was progesterone...
that one should place the progesterone adjacent to the spot/mole.
Not right on it.
I can't remember how he explained this.
haidut said:Based on this analysis, we now show that 4-to-5 different classes of FDA-approved drugs can be used to eradicate cancer stem cells, in 12 different cancer cell lines, across 8 different tumor types (breast, DCIS, ovarian, prostate, lung, pancreatic, melanoma, and glioblastoma (brain)). .
haidut said:So, depending on the potency ratio you should be able to achieve what tetracycline does by taking say a higher dose vitamin K. However, the studies with vitamin K show potent anti-cancer effects both for prevention and treatment in human doses 100mg-150mg daily, which is suspiciously close to the therapeutic doses of doxycycline (100mg+ daily). That makes me think that for cancer prevention and treatment vitamin K may not be that much "weaker" than the tetracyclines.
natedawggh said:haidut said:So, depending on the potency ratio you should be able to achieve what tetracycline does by taking say a higher dose vitamin K. However, the studies with vitamin K show potent anti-cancer effects both for prevention and treatment in human doses 100mg-150mg daily, which is suspiciously close to the therapeutic doses of doxycycline (100mg+ daily). That makes me think that for cancer prevention and treatment vitamin K may not be that much "weaker" than the tetracyclines.
Vitamin K available to consumers is all measured in mcg, not mg, so I'd have to take an entire bottle of vitamin K for every dose to achieve the same effect? Or am I understanding this wrong?
jaa said:Any idea if that would help with psoriasis? I find your liquid vitamin AEDK supp works great, but I attributed that mostly to vit d and e.
burtlancast said:haidut said:Based on this analysis, we now show that 4-to-5 different classes of FDA-approved drugs can be used to eradicate cancer stem cells, in 12 different cancer cell lines, across 8 different tumor types (breast, DCIS, ovarian, prostate, lung, pancreatic, melanoma, and glioblastoma (brain)). .
Doesn't this confirm spectacularly the validity of Coley, Rife, Koch, Livingston, Naessens, etc....work, arguing for cancer being caused by microorganisms ?
We might need some time to see if antibiotic resistances don't appear and cause a cancer relapse.
Haidut, how does vitamin K act like an antibiotic? I asked this question on the first page and you didn't answer. Then everyone blindly believed you. I didn't find any studies that show it does.haidut said:Such_Saturation said:To be technical, many chemotherapy molecules are called antibiotics. Well, off to stockpile some tetracycline.
One of the authors rubbed some tetracycline on a mole and it disappeared. Several stores online sell tetracycline ointments without prescription so maybe not a bad idea to buy some and try on some moles for people prone to getting moles/spots.
Ben said:Haidut, how does vitamin K act like an antibiotic? I asked this question on the first page and you didn't answer. Then everyone blindly believed you. I didn't find any studies that show it does.haidut said:Such_Saturation said:To be technical, many chemotherapy molecules are called antibiotics. Well, off to stockpile some tetracycline.
One of the authors rubbed some tetracycline on a mole and it disappeared. Several stores online sell tetracycline ointments without prescription so maybe not a bad idea to buy some and try on some moles for people prone to getting moles/spots.
Also, I took a whole dropper of Thorne vitamin K orally yesterday afternoon and another at night, and my bacterial overgrowth is not better in the least. I had restless muscles to the point of almost yelling upon waking up, like usual. Very expensive and no results.
piotr_zarach said:post 107806 Haidut mg to mg doxy is stronger than tetracycline ?
haidut said:post 107837piotr_zarach said:post 107806 Haidut mg to mg doxy is stronger than tetracycline ?
It's more fat soluble than tetracycline but Peat thinks tetracycline is safer. Doxycycline has some reports on liver toxicity, but it's still very rare. Most of the studies on cancer are with doxycycline though.
piotr_zarach said:post 107869haidut said:post 107837piotr_zarach said:post 107806 Haidut mg to mg doxy is stronger than tetracycline ?
It's more fat soluble than tetracycline but Peat thinks tetracycline is safer. Doxycycline has some reports on liver toxicity, but it's still very rare. Most of the studies on cancer are with doxycycline though.
How long you could use tetra and what is a max dose ? (in your interview with Danny you said antibiotics should be taken longer to clean guts)
Blossom said:post 68508 I'm going to try this for mole removal.