The Great Alzheimer’s Scam and The Proven Cures They’ve Buried for Billions

• Alzheimer’s disease is commonly thought to result from abnormal plaque buildup in the brain that gradually destroys brain tissue. As a result, almost all Alzheimer’s research has been directed toward eliminating amyloid, even after the basis for much of this work was shown to stem from fraudulent research.

•As such, despite decades of research and billions of dollars spent, this model has completely failed to produce useful results. The costly “groundbreaking” Alzheimer’s drugs only slightly slow dementia progression—at the expense of causing brain bleeding and swelling in over a quarter of those treated.

•In contrast, numerous affordable treatments have been developed for Alzheimer’s disease that target the root causes of the disorder, producing significant benefits at a fraction of the cost and without any toxicity.

•One neurologist, for example, proposed that amyloid serves a protective function in the brain and treats Alzheimer’s by identifying the underlying process causing dementia (which can often be diagnosed through symptoms). Remarkably, despite the method being proven in clinical research, awareness of it or the fact there are completely different types of “Alzheimer’s disease” which require different treatments remains almost nonexistent.

•Likewise, a strong case can be made that impaired cerebral circulation, along with impaired venous and lymphatic drainage, plays a pivotal role in Alzheimer’s disease.

•This article will review the common causes of cognitive impairment and dementia (e.g., cells becoming trapped in a shocked state where they no longer function) along with the forgotten treatments for neurodegenerative disorders—some of which, like DMSO, have extensive evidence supporting their use.

Keep reading

DMSO Heals the Lungs and Cures Chronic Respiratory Diseases

Since childhood, I have known numerous smokers who had slow agonizing deaths from COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), which were often quite traumatic for their family and friends, particularly as they became increasingly disabled from their loss of respiratory function.

Once I entered medicine, I saw the other half of this and lost count of how many COPD patients were subjected to the same medical protocols (which they often could not refuse as people will do anything to be able to not suffocate), and then be hospitalized either for a COPD exacerbation or pneumonia (a common COPD complication) making them unable to breathe, and before long enter a cycle of ever more frequent repeat hospitalizations until they die.
Note: steroids are frequently used to manage COPD and slow the destruction of the lungs. Steroids have a variety of side effects, including suppressing the immune system, which coupled with the reduced respiratory turnover seen in COPD (which reduces their ability to clear bacteria from the airway), makes them much more vulnerable to pneumonia.

As such, when I later learned that the lungs concentrate a coating of glutathione (at levels 100 times that in other parts of the body) to protect them from damage, and that restoring this coating with nebulized glutathione could (without side effects) prevent further progression of COPD, I was overjoyed (e.g., see this study and this study or the even more dramatic results when used for a COPD exacerbation).
Note: in chronic lung diseases, the lung’s glutathione tends to be depleted.

Unfortunately, this idea never caught on, and most of my conventional colleagues were not open to it (although I’ve come across many integrative doctors and naturopaths over the years who offer it for both COPD and chronic damage from wildfire inhalation).

To some extent, this is to be expected, as, like many businesses, medicine revolves around recurring sales, and COPD is one of its core markets (as COPD patients are on medications for life and often need more of them as the disease progresses). This in turn, helps to explain why chronic diseases of the respiratory tract are the fourth most common cause of death in the United States, and in the United States alone, 24 billion dollars was spent on COPD in 2023. In short, this is not a market that the medical industry will ever willingly relinquish, regardless of the suffering that is created.

Note: pneumonia and COPD are two of the most common reasons for hospital admissions. Asthma is in a similar situation, as while not fatal or anywhere as likely to send one to the hospital (admissions for asthma exacerbations are around 0.7% of hospital admissions), it requires the chronic consumption of similar medications, makes over 40 billion a year (and increasing at 4.4% annually, is a frequent source of hospital admissions (for asthma exacerbations), and despite all the money that’s been poured into it, asthma rates keep going up (e.g., in 1999 9.1% of Americans had ever been diagnosed with asthma whereas in 2022 44.2 million Americans had).

Keep reading

DMSO – The Forgotten Medicine Making A Comeback

I first heard about DMSO about 15 years ago, around the same time I began my studies into Chlorine Dioxide. I was working at a local health food store, and one of my colleagues was very well versed on alternative, “suppressed” therapeutics. He showed me that Chlorine Dioxide (Cl02) can be used topically when mixed with DMSO acting as a carrier to draw the Cl02 into the body.

I went down to local feed store and picked up a bottle of DMSO, specifically wanting to use it with Cl02 and unknowing of all the potentials of DMSO itself. This bottle was originally made for horses, but there is a carryover between some supplements made for humans and animals. Granted, I’m not sure if the processing on this DMSO was the most pure, and being packaged in plastic and made for horses it may have had some contaminants in it – these days there are much more pure DMSO products available specifically for human use, and packaged more securely in glass containers.

I had used this DMSO a few times, but eventually it wound up in the back of my supplement cabinet for years. It may even still be back there somewhere. I had mostly forgotten about DMSO until the last 6 months when a resurgence of interest took place on social media. Alternative doctors like the Midwestern Doctor and health-focused influencers like Vigilant Fox have written articles on it, and I’ve been asked by quite a few of my own followers if I’m familiar with DMSO or where they can find a good source – so I’ve gone back down the DMSO rabbit hole, and have learned some new things along the way.

Keep reading

DMSO has been proven to protect and heal the heart, lungs, liver, kidneys and prostate, and treat infertility

The therapeutic actions of DMSO, or dimethyl sulphoxide, make it well-suited to treat challenging conditions throughout the body, including many internal organs, such as the heart, liver, lungs, pancreas, kidneys and others.

DMSO has been proven to treat various diseases and conditions, including heart attacks, liver cirrhosis, gallstones, ARDS, lung damage from inhaling smoke, pulmonary fibrosis, pancreatitis, diabetes, nephritis, kidney stones, polycystic kidney disease, cystitis, epididymitis, genital pain, prostatitis, urethral syndrome, enlarged prostates, tubal infertility, endometrial inflammation and fibrosis.

In the article ‘How DMSO Protects and Heals the Internal Organs‘, A Midwestern Doctor (“AMD”) reviewed DMSO treatment protocols for conditions of our internal organs and provided general DMSO information for those looking to use it for their own health. 

The following is a summary of AMD’s article on protecting and healing our internal organs.  We encourage our readers to want to know more to refer to AMD’s article as in the summarising of it, details will get lost in translation. 

In a summary of another article in AMD’s DSMO series we previously published on strokes and neurological damage, we attached a PDF copy of AMD’s article because it is easier to search for specific terms in a PDF file.  We have done the same with this article, see the PDF below.

Keep reading