Post
by dectiri » Tue Mar 21, 2017 12:40 pm
Like you I have searched for alternatives that are ortho and human-friendly to administer... IV-C is beyond my abilities I believe but there is another way to use C that would be our own choice... why? because I found a report of a doctor using hyperbaric o2 and his protocol was simple and comfort-providing... he had the nurse-monitoring set so that if the patient's heart rate rose to 120bpm then they would put the patient into the hbot chamber and do a treatment... the relief for the patient's heart and immune system and brain was clear and the patients given that protocol all survived.
We are aware that hospitals here that have hbot chambers all use the mongo $250grand models like the Secrest but we've also seen that in a recent DOD (traumatic brain injury) study on the use of hbot vs the usual standard of drugs and talk, they used the little portable chambers (about the price of a pickup truck with some used available even lower) as the PLACEBO....
well wouldn't you know, those who did the 'placebo' hbot (like used by athletes) did as well as the big secrests AND both beat the standard drug approach... so the published research advertised that don't bother with hbot b/c "it didn't do any better than placebo !!" imagine such a farce and open fraud... yet the media lapped it up... infuriating!
so what about europe... well I do know that in Europe, the regulators were not as successful at hampering public access to small 'placebo'-type models with levels of hyperbaric pressure like the 1.3ATA used in the USA likely for the 'placebo'... chambers in the EU can do 1.5ATA.. and as I recall, the MS patients of Britain banded together and set up their own network of sites where they charge only $15 or somesuch for a treatment when I read last... so there must be a decent market in used chambers..
Plus for pneumonia patients (IIRC from searching their research, quite extensive, may even have more sepsis data), the Russians added antioxidents, like our own C orally if possible... and anyone feeling poorly should start immediately upping their dose-levels of C... agreed? especially with Irwin Stone's research showing that the levels of the C (ascorbic acid vs DHAA) are predictive of survival of the patient IF THE RATIO IS OVER 1.. imagine that.. taking that extra C pushes the numerator up, automatically making the ratio higher and survival more likely.... and even better, with more C then the DHAA is *likely* less (because DHAA is the total ascorbic acid minus the 'reduced' C that you are adding with your dosing)...
and once you start reading up on hbot you will see that your anticipated chamber has so many other benefits for your family's idea of your own recovery room in your own home that you'll wonder how it's possible that you would ever think it would be unneeded except for a sepsis emergency... broken bones heal better, stroke patients heal, heart attacks can be interrupted, child birth is wholly different and safer, drowning and carbon monoxide... all so compatible with our reading of C and such antioxidants...
And no I don't own stock or sell these favored chambers... we however do have a pair that we use for our cat rescue work and use them regularly, such as post surgery... or pre-surgery even is listed in the benefits..... just like C
hope this helps as we are advocates of using IV-C at the veterinary hospitals BUT JUST DISCOVERED THAT YOU SHOULD **NEVER** USE IT **DURING** SURGERY... NEVER... Dr Thomas Levy, when we talked to him about the results we had seen said he hoped the kittens would forgive us for trying to improve their safety and healing..... only during surgical removal of mercury amalgams in HUMANS would he venture as an exception.. ttyl..
and btw, those kittens are doing well enough, just seemed more *aware* of their trauma than usual.. next time, oral C in the buildup period before surgery (as always), maybe a squirt when we drop them off with instructions to the staff to return our kittens to the carrier (now to be equipped with north-up-magnetic floor to immediately accelerate healing) as soon as they are off the operating table like the staff does for ferals (not risking handling a frightened feral any more than needed as that can be alarmingly disruptive to hospital 'serenity')....