It is so ridicuulous...basically any natural supplement has more chance of improving chemo than not...it is that ridiculous. If you just threw darts at a board you'd do well. Some of the better ones I would take are:
liposomal vitamin C...like 10 grams a day liposomal ubiquinol (from epic health)...like 400mg a day samento from nutramedix...like 30 drops twice a day Heavy Metal Detox (HMD) ...its a chlorella and other stuff tincture...whatever the bottle says If you can afford it...take LifeOne liposomal cocktail. Passion4Life is my favorite multivitamin at present...take like 4 times the recommended Micellized Vitamin D3 from Klaire Labs...like 10,000 units worth a day Basically anything that improves chemo, ends up treating cancer by itself anyway. For example, here is all stuff that protects from radiation: http://scientificliving.net/2011/03/36-supplements-to-protect-yourself-from-radiation/ Most of those will also apply to chemotherapy. ~David On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Del <d...@altsystem.com> wrote: > Kirsteen: > > I am no expert, but I have done a lot of research on cancer for my sister > and we have a friend on chemo who has also given us good information. > Basically, chemo trashes your immune system, so you have to take > supplements that will fortify you. > The most important one we have found is IP6-Inositol. > Please read this article for information on IP6: > http://jn.nutrition.org/content/133/11/3778S.full > Our friend with cancer was told by her doctor to take this while on chemo > to keep her immune system working. > My wife and I started taking it every day just to strengthen our immune > systems, and my health has shown a visible improvement since. > For cancer patients, they recommend two scoops of the powder per day, but I > can’t tolerate the powder, so I take the capsules – it takes 16 capsules to > equal two scoops, but I only take four to eight per day. > You should also be taking a minimum of 5000 IU of Vit D3 per day and as > much Liposomal C as you can tolerate, which you can buy from Livon Labs or > make it yourself according to the Brooks Bradley method (well documented on > this list). > Here are some resources for those: > > http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/03/10/what-dose-of-oral-vitamin-d-do-you-need-to-prevent-cancer.aspx > http://www.lewrockwell.com/sardi/sardi144.html > You should also consider LDN (low dose naltrexone) to strengthen your > immune system, especially as regards lymphedema, since you will have lymph > glands removed – see the following: > > http://whitakerwellness.com/our-therapies/low-dose-naltrexone/content/story/Improvements-in-Lymphedema.html > Finally, diet and exercise (if possible) are important. You need to > eliminate refined sugar and cut down on carbs. Mercola has a lot of > information on this. > > Hope this helps. > Sorry it is so late. > > Del > > You should also eat an anti-cancer diet (no sugar, low carbs): > > > > *From:* Kirsteen Wright <kirsteen.falcons...@gmail.com> > *Sent:* Tuesday, May 24, 2011 6:39 AM > *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com > *Subject:* CS>OT Chemo advice please? > > Hi All > > I'm about to undergo a course of Chemotherapy and Herceptin followed by > surgery for an aggressive breast and lymph node cancer. > > Can I first of all please ask, no advice not to have it. I find that really > upsetting as it's already a done deal and will be going ahead. What I was > hoping someone could advise me is what to take to mitigate the effects of > the chemo. I already have M.E. so am laid up a lot of the time in bed with > that with accompanying shakes, nausea, dizziness and swollen glands. > Obviously the chemo will make all this worse so is there anything I can take > to ease the side effects? > > Thanks in advance > Kirsteen > >