Cancer
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Did anyone here encountered cancer(in your self/in someone close to you). If so, what you did/doing to cure it? If you didn't, but you have some knowledge - what would you do to cure it? I know that different cancer need different approach - but hey, it's still cancer.
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Articles by Ray Peat on cancer
Interviews
Antioxidant Theory and Continued War on Cancer
Ray Peat KMUD: 7-15-16 The Metabolism Of Cancer Full Interview
“Progesterone, thyroid, and carbon dioxide all protect against the cancer-promoting actions of calcium, and they do this by increasing respiratory energy, which favors intracellular magnesium over calcium. Adequate magnesium in the diet is extremely important. It is counterproductive to eat a calcium-deficient diet, since that tends to increase the intracellular calcium at the expense of calcium taken from the bones.” Ray Peat - Progesterone, Thyroid, Cancer - Newsletter Nov 2002
Another thread on cancer
https://bioenergetic.forum/topic/459/cancer/31?_=1711054617116
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Cyproheptadine and cancer
“I think cyproheptadine is the most pleasant way to take antiserotonin drugs because it comes with antihistamine effects. And those, both antiserotonin and antihistamines are also anti-cancer agents. And there have been studies using cyproheptadine against various cancers showing positive effects. So I think aspirin and cyproheptadine are generally protective against the toxic effects of chemotherapy.” Ray Peat
One study found that a small dose of cyproheptadine was effective against lymphoma.
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Topical Olive oil for skin Cancer
Caller: Well, my grandmother, 96-year-old, sedentary, indoors a lot. I just learned to use, she might suffer from vitamin D deficiency. She had a squamous cell in her nose, very persistent, from a scab that would fluff off and, you know, was bothering her. It was causing a lot of itching. And, you know, excising was the doctor's recommendation. We opted against that because it would remove her entire nose, frankly. So, we applied cannabis oil in an olive oil suspension. And within two weeks, it went away. So, I'm wondering if you have any comments about the possible efficacy of the cannabis or was it the olive oil that did it?
Ray Peat: “Yeah. I'm inclined to think it's the olive oil that's therapeutic because it has so many anti-inflammatory effects. I think the cannabis oil has some potentially pro-growth, pro-inflammatory components or effects.”
Andrew Murray: Do you think that's the oleanolic component of the olive oil or do you think there's only one thing about it?
Ray Peat: The things related to the cannabis, the characteristic, what are they called, the endogenous cannabinoids, anandamide I think is the endogenous one, it is a metabolite of a very unsaturated fatty acid and the effects that I've seen really are along the line of the polyunsaturated fatty acids themselves which as a group are amplifiers of the estrogen effect.
Andrew Murray: So not positive at all but you think the components within olive oil could well be beneficial.
Ray Peat: Yeah. There are several things in it that I think can have a protective anti-cancer effect.
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On lactic acid and cancer
Andrew Murray: What do you think of lactate testing as a means to ascertain whether somebody truly is under stress and what would be the best way to do it? I mean, at what time of the day or would that have a bearing on how much lactate was present in a blood sample?
Ray Peat: Yeah, probably the time that you're feeling the stress would be the best time to measure it. If you do it when you're fasting, you're going to get a different measurement. You just have to know what time of day and what the circumstances are. But it's increasingly being used, for example, to diagnose cancer and monitor the progress. When the cancer is being regressed, the lactic acid in the serum goes down.
Andrew Murray: Do you have any idea what kind of state of development of a tumour that lactic acid would be increased?
Ray Peat: It starts showing up in the blood at a very early stage. At a certain point, I don't remember the exact concentration, but it in itself causes an inactivation of the immune system that should be helping to correct the cancer. Even before that, it can be seen as a product of cancer.
Andrew Murray: I expect somebody would probably have to have not just one spot check, but several over a period of weeks, just to see whether or not the level of lactic acid in the body was holding fairly stable, it was stably high, or whether a high reading may be just an aberration due to something.
Ray Peat: Since everyone over the age of 50 has cells that can be diagnosed as cancer, it's a good idea not to be panicked by any measurement that could indicate cancer. It's simply a sign. For example, if you ate something very disagreeable, your lactic acid would go up just from the general inflammation. So you want to take everything in context. Even if it's being produced by a cancer, most cancers don't kill people. In adults, if you look carefully enough, you can find cancer-like cells everywhere in everyone of middle age or more. So it's something that's naturally being cured spontaneously.
Andrew Murray: And this is in the same vein that cells are constantly communicating with each other. They're not blind or dumb. They're completely autonomous and are actually able to communicate with each other and change the environment in which that particular area is subject to.
Ray Peat: I think that same thing applies to the degenerative nerve diseases and all of the age-related, stress-related diseases. I think there's not an all-or-nothing definition of the disease. If you notice a trend starting that doesn't look favourable, then it's time to change the way you live.
Andrew Murray: Okay. So if carbon dioxide is analogous to an antilactate, as you've mentioned, what would be the best method to raise this and how long does that effect last?
Ray Peat: Everything that keeps your free fatty acids from being released, and those are released by too much adrenaline, for example, many of the hormones, pituitary hormones in general help to increase the toxic free fatty acids. And everything you can do to lower the stress hormones, aspirin, for example, is a good anti-inflammatory, anti-stress agent. Vitamin E is another protective, ascorbic acid. Ordinary foods provide abundant amounts of ascorbic acid, so I don't recommend that as a supplement in general.
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“Cortisol elevates blood glucose and would inhibit the thyroid. Since there is evidence of thyroid deficiency in various cancers, and since thyroid supplementation reduces the incidence of spontaneous or induced tumors in animal studies, thyroid therapy would be desirable in cancer, especially if there is cachexia. Gerson,2 Tallberg,3 and others have reported good results from using thyroid as part of supportive therapy.” Ray Peat - From PMS to Menopause
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yes. High doses of THC (cannabis extract as FECO, or full extract cannabis oil) in a rectal suppository, 250mg, 3 times a day, can I believe get rid of almost all forms of cancer and it doesn't make you high. You can use fenbendazole and ivermectin and lots of other things, but the high dose THC gets rid of cancer. I think it turns the cells into normies again so there is no massive toxic reaction or necrosis or apoptosis.
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@Ecstatic_Hamster Dr. Peat didn't seem to like cannabis much. What do you think he would say of this idea?
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@attempting he did not study endogenous cannabinoids. Sadly.
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Dr Peat was asked how THC and CBD are understood in a bioenergetic view?
“I've been looking for the real beneficial effects and it's always very ambiguous as far as I can see. It is sedative and in some circumstances anti-inflammatory, but not always. And for many years I haven't been able to resolve the ambiguity to have a definite opinion.” Ray Peat
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@Peatly Thanks Peatly & Hamster. THat is interesting stuff. I think a lot of us wish he had paid more attention to cannabis. FWIW, I think he would have found THCv very interesting.
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@attempting Dr Peat wasn’t shy of research. When he said, ‘I've been looking for the real beneficial effects’ I take that to mean he made considerable effort. The question of cannabis came up frequently in interviews. He was a curious man and I trust that if there was something worth finding he would have found it.
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As a seasoned pot user I can sympathise. It's a vast subject for the variance in composition of herbs, isolates and vehicles to consume them. Literature search for THC/CBD isolates is tricky and they vary. To weigh that with literature search for "natural" product and turn it in to some kind of practical advisory... difficult.
And then there's the 21st century corporatisation of it. More context. More tricky.
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@Ecstatic_Hamster this is fascinating. Where did you hear of this?
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