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 Post subject: cat tumor
PostPosted: Mon Jul 13, 2015 2:28 pm 
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Joined: Wed May 27, 2015 10:20 am
Posts: 515
An email from Vikki:




Quote:
"Thought I'd let you know we added the DMSO/Bindweed Tinc to the kitty skin
cancer therapy about 1 month ago. The tumor on her nose had stopped
shrinking so added the tinc you suggested. Tumor has gotten noticeably
smaller and now split again into 2 smaller tumors with healthy tissue
between. I think the DMSO/Bindweed gave quite a boost to her therapy. The
tumor is on her nose, just above the pink tip now. Her pink nose looks
absolutely normal (even where the tumor used to be) but looks like she will
have some scarring on the bridge. I made the tinc with fresh bindweed and
didn't dilute the DMSO and kitty has absolutely NO PROBLEM with it. Seems
it is less annoying to her than the essiac solution that I made for her.

Anyway, just wanted to say THANK YOU and let everyone know that this tinc
seems to work well on this particular skin cancer.




My reply:


This is an excerpt from the Townsend Newsletter (May, 2002):

Quote:
Angiogenesis inhibition derived from bindweed herbal extract - Medical Journalist Report of Innovative Biologics - VascuStatin from Allergy Research:

During the summer of 1987, forty-nine year-old Myrna Simone Corbette, a teacher working in the Tulsa, Oklahoma public school system, was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Because of the malignancy's metastases to other parts of her body, Ms. Corbette's oncologist told her that she had less than one year to live. "My evaluation of your Stage III malignancy," she remembers the cancer specialist saying, "causes me to predict that even with your undergoing chemotherapy or even with surgery, this disease will end your life. I'm sorry that nothing can be done."

Since there was no hope for her, the teacher refused to go through any kind of standard cancer treatment. Instead, she went looking for help in a variety of places which were far removed from the medical mainstream. One of the odder forms of treatment she adopted involved her consulting a renowned shaman (medicine man) tending to the healing needs of some Oklahoma Indian tribes. After listening to her health history, this medicine man gave Ms. Corbette a plant tincture that he had prepared with instructions for her to swallow a few drops of it every day. She faithfully followed the shaman's directions for more than twelve months.

After the first eight days of taking his tincture Ms. Corbette saw that the size of her abdomen, which had expanded greatly due to ascites, was beginning to be less prominent. By the end of three weeks the teacher's cancer symptoms had improved greatly; swelling totally disappeared from her body. And her physical progress continued throughout the entire time that she took the tincture. During one of Ms. Corbette's frequent visits to the shaman to refurbish her tincture supply, she learned that his medicine was derived from the most common of wild growing plants, the ubiquitous Bindweed known botanically as Convolvulus arvensis.

Bindweed, the Most Common of Weeds

Convolvulus arvensis is a nightmare for farmers wherever it grows. Any commercial/phytochemical processing procedure which makes use of the bindweed plant could become worthwhile for people everywhere.

Bindweed flourishes throughout the world, including all over Europe, in China and other Asian countries, and in the western hemisphere from northern Canada to near the southern end of South America. Farmers have actually nicknamed bindweed "the cancer of weeds," because this twining vine from the morning-glory family wraps itself around useful plants such as corn and wheat: It eats up the nutrient supply of worthwhile grain crops and other human food plants. The twining vine chokes them to death.

Therefore to harvest bindweed for some advantageous purpose is an act of great goodness that contributes to living organisms all over the planet. From within the tissues of this ubiquitous killer weed an extract may be produced consisting of a powerful therapeutic component, Proteoglycan Mixture (PGM). It is beneficial for cancerous tumors because PGM is antiangiogenic. The proteoglycan mixture has been tested and found to be more than 100 times more effective by weight against benign and malignant tumors than is shark cartilage. The PGM angiogenesis inhibitor is manufactured as a food supplement and distributed as a commercial nutritional adjunctive capsule under the brandname, VascuStatin.

Bindweed Comes to the Attention of Riordan and Riordan

As I have described, a tincture ofbindweed had restored the Tulsa, Oklahoma teacher, Myrna Simone Corbette, to full recovery, and her diagnosing oncologist later found that just one year after she had last consulted him no sign of ovarian cancer or its metastases remained in her body. She thanked providence and felt blessed that the Indian medicine man possessed the knowledge of bindweed.

Then, in 1994 Ms. Corbette learned about an oncological father-and-son research team to whom she could tell her story. She thought it would be useful for other people to know that an alternative method of healing cancer, something less toxic and unnatural than chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and surgery does exist. So, still teaching and full of joyful living, she related her experience to Riordan and Riordan.

The Father and Son Oncological Researchers

These two highly astute phytochemical researchers for cancer remedies, the father, psychiatrist/orthomolecular medicine specialist Hugh D. Riordan, MD, and his very knowledgeable son, physician's assistant Neil H. Riordan, PA-C, are providing health care professionals with new techniques for combatting cancer. Both of them are now or have been biochemical scientists at the BioCommunications Research Institute, a division of the Center for the Improvement of Human Functioning in Wichita, Kansas. Neil H. Riordan, who worked at the Center for 14 years, currently conducts his separate clinical practice devoted to applying adjunctive nutritional therapy for cancer patients at the Aidan Clinic of Tempe, Arizona.

The Riordans' investigative works-in-progress involve licensing their various discoveries, including (a) the application of vitamin C to eliminate malignancy and (b) the benefits of prescribing certain additional nutrients to dramatically lower the possible LD50 (median Lethal Dose) of IV-C (Intra Venous vitamin C) for doing away with cancer cells. This article discusses bindweed herbal extract, just one of their major anticancer developments. A future Medical Journalist Report of Innovative Biologics column will report on another of the Riordans' nature-derived breakthroughs against mutagenic cell growth, Muramyl Polysaccharide-Glycan Complex (MPGC).

Together, the team of Riordan and Riordan is bringing new medical knowledge of consequence about herbal extracts to oncological therapists and other health professionals internationally.

Angiogenesis Inhibition from Bindweed Herbal Extract

Their joint efforts have uncovered phytochemical components in the leaves of the omnipresent wild-growing Convolvulus arvensis whose leaves are loaded with the previously mentioned cancer-reducing substance, ProteoGlycan Mixture (PGM). This finding by the Riordans is highly significant in tumorogenesis therapy for at least five reasons. They include:

1. Produced as an herbal extract, the PGM of bindweed or VascuStatin inhibits angiogenesis (capillary formation) in malignant tumors;

2. VascuStatin has shown itself to quickly stop abnormal cellular growth in cancerous mice;

3. VascuStatin is potent in its effects in every route of in vivo administration (by oral, subcutaneous, intravenous, and/or intraperitoneal introduction);

4. VascuStatin brings about marked in vitro lymphocyte proliferation and phagocyte activity;

5. VascuStatin exhibits powerful immune stimulating properties.

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 Post subject: Re: cat tumor
PostPosted: Wed Jun 29, 2016 3:12 pm 
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Joined: Wed May 27, 2015 10:20 am
Posts: 515
I just did two web pages on Bindweed. View at:

http://racehorseherbal.net/bindweed.html

http://racehorseherbal.net/DIY%20bindweed.html

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