Posted July 30, 2021: by Bill Sardi
This report about autoimmune disorders focuses on a family of three human enzymes called ten-eleven translocation (TET) enzymes.
Vitamin C stimulates production of TET proteins (ten-eleven translocation enzymes), important in the control of the immune system and in particular heading off autoimmune disorders.
Lo and behold, a recent report entitled “Harnessing The Combined Power Of Vitamin C And Tet Proteins May Give Scientists A Leg Up In Treating Autoimmune Diseases,” says “You can’t make a banana split without bananas and you can’t generate stable regulating T-cells (thymus cells) without vitamin C or enzymes called TET proteins.”
This has been known for almost a decade now, but researchers act like it is a new revelation. In fact, these same researchers say they are “looking for more small molecules to stabilize TET enzymes that regulate T-regs,” when vitamin C is almost completely overlooked in treatment plans for autoimmune disorders.
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Posted May 31, 2021: by Bill Sardi
Prior Negative COVID-19 Vitamin C Study, Halted Prematurely Because of Alleged Ineffectiveness, Found to Increase Rate of Recovery by 70% Upon Reanalysis
Where was the peer review? Where were the trained medical journalists to take researchers to task over prematurely halting a vitamin C/COVID-19 symptom study when both statistical and meaningfully clinical benefits were readily apparent, when so many American lives were reported to be at stake?
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Posted May 10, 2021: by Bill Sardi
New Gene-Altering Drug Reveals How Drug Companies And Clinicians Use The FDA-Drug Approval Process To Plunder Pools Of Insurance Money While Denying Proven Natural Remedies
The anticipated FDA approval of an injected drug that will lower a risk factor for heart attack which is not addressed by statin cholesterol-lowering drugs has American medicine salivating.
The drug would only need to be injected twice a year. Patients with elevated lipoprotein(a) levels, which is a fatty protein produced in the liver that enters the blood circulation and increases risk for a heart attack, primarily affects 1 in 250 individuals worldwide with a family history. About 60 million Americans have elevated Lp(a) levels. Roughly 1 in 7 heart attacks are associated with high Lp(a) levels, but may not be causal for heart attacks, as you will learn below. Concentrations of Lp(a) vary by 1000-fold between individuals.
Use of this new drug would likely expand to others without a family history but with elevated Lp(a) blood levels, so it could become a bonanza for cardiologists and the drug industry — $1.5 billion sales projected by 2030.
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Posted April 12, 2021: by Bill Sardi
Modern medicine has finally realized its many experiments with laboratory mice have been flawed by the failure to recognize humans do not secrete vitamin C as rodents do. Therefore, many scientific studies performed in mice have little application to humans.
Unlike most other animals, patients with Alzheimer’s disease have a progressive buildup of beta amyloid plaque in their brains and loss of memory. Researchers now think they have found out why.
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Posted March 28, 2021: by Bill Sardi
Acute stress is unique to man. The chart below reveals the amount of adrenal stress hormones (cortisol) released by humans compared to other animals.
There are exceptions: guinea pigs, fruit bats, primate monkeys. These four species share a genetic flaw. Unlike other mammals, these do not synthesize ascorbate from their liver (ascorbate being the medical term for vitamin C).
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Posted May 25, 2020: by Bill Sardi
sdAlmost 8 in 10 Americans rate the quality of their personal health care as “excellent or good.” But compared to what? Most Americans only hear that America spends more on healthcare than any other country and that it has the most advanced healthcare in the world. Yet for all the money spent, the US ranks 38th in life expectancy.
How would patients know how to measure the quality of care they receive unless they have something to compare it against?
Japan, with the highest overall life expectancy from birth of 84.5 years, compared to 78.9 years in the U.S., has a completely voluntary vaccination program and according to the Japanese Society for Orthomolecular Medicine, has over 400 trained practitioners at “vitamin C clinics” dotted across Japan’s five main islands. This author can only count 1 vitamin C clinic in the U.S. (Riordan Clinic, Wichita, Kansas)
For the want of a single vitamin, Americans may be losing out on the best healthcare in the world. While American physicians continue to embrace the cholesterol paradigm of health, Japan has turned to vitamin C.
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Posted May 3, 2020: by Bill Sardi
La Verne, CA (May 1, 2020): With no approved drugs or vaccines available from modern medicine’s vast pharmaceutical armamentarium, the public, hearing news reports of successful use of vitamins and minerals to treat and prevent COVID-19 coronavirus infection, have literally emptied store shelves of vitamin C dietary supplements.
A similar run on vitamin C pills occurred in 1970 when Dr. two-time Nobel Prize winner Linus Pauling wrote a book entitled VITAMIN C AND THE COMMON COLD. And apparently both produced a similar result: a dramatic drop in coronary artery disease mortality.
Unexpectedly, cardiologists are asking where have all the heart attacks gone? A 40-60 percent reduction in hospital admissions for heart attack is being reported by cardiologists in the wake of the COVID-19 lockdown.
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Posted March 6, 2020: by Bill Sardi
Physicians in Wuhan, China, the epicenter for COVID-19 coronavirus that is now infecting human populations around the globe, report a shortage of test kits for this infectious pathogen. But maybe doctors rather than test for a virus ought to be testing for a viral vulnerability factor – an unstable form of haptoglobin (HAPTO-G), genetically prevalent in Asian populations. Then they wouldn’t be likely to run out of test kits as they are manufactured, in of all places, right there in Wuhan.
What is haptoglobin? (hap-tow-glow-bin) This blood protein binds to hemoglobin, the red protein in red blood cells that carries both oxygen and iron. By virtue of its binding power, haptoglobin mops up hemoglobin and loose iron when red blood cells die off so as to limit the availability of potentially destructive unbound iron. Haptoglobin also reduces the amount of iron lost in the kidneys and recycles it.
Out of three types of haptoglobin (HAPTO-G), one type doesn’t bind as well to hemoglobin, releases excess iron which then increases iron-induced oxidation (rusting), and increases oxidation (hardening) of cholesterol and degradation of vitamin C.
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Posted December 2, 2019: by Bill Sardi
While modern medicine casts a blind eye towards vitamin therapy and even exhibits open disdain for health practitioners and patients who incorporate vitamins into daily health regimens, it now appears a half-million Americans are losing their lives to a mortal bloodstream infection called sepsis that is induced by a deficiency of vitamin C.
After three decades, and more than one-hundred failed clinical trials of synthetic drugs to quell the most common cause of death in American hospitals, modern medicine is dragging its feet over what has now been demonstrated to be obvious — intravenous vitamin C demonstrably reduces death from sepsis. Sepsis patients are being brought back from the precipice of death, enough to make ICU nurses cry tears of joy. But medical overseers have attempted to obscure this fact.
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Posted August 31, 2019: by Bill Sardi
Bile is of one of the humors (fluids) that the Greek physician Hippocrates noted was important to maintain health. Bile, produced in the liver and stored in the gall bladder, facilitates the digestion of fats and oils and the absorption and transport of fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E & K. Modern medicine may have better fulfilled its mission to educate the public about bile rather than cholesterol. Given that as many people have a heart attack with low cholesterol as they do high cholesterol, one wonders how cholesterol became the central paradigm of modern medicine. People over 60 years old who have high “bad” LDL cholesterol live as long or longer than people with low LDL cholesterol. As an aside, calcium pills, antacids, even aspirin, mainstays of medicine, fit into the same category – misdirections in the practice of medicine.
Both cholesterol and bile are secreted from the liver. Bile actually facilitates the degradation (catabolism) and disposal of cholesterol. Bile is described as a “detergent” that enables the excretion of cholesterol. Bile is actually comprised of cholesterol and controls circulating cholesterol levels. A backup of bile in the liver is problematic. A reduction in bile flow due to sludgy, thick viscous bile, can result in abnormally high cholesterol levels.
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