It deuterium depletion and deuterium depleted water.
From the perspective of the metabolic theory of cancer, deuterium depletion is particularly interesting because it targets a fundamental physicochemical aspect of mitochondrial energy production rather than a single signaling pathway. If future high-quality clinical trials confirm the encouraging preclinical findings, it could become an important adjunctive component of metabolic oncology. At present, however, it should be viewed as an experimental strategy rather than an established standard of care.
The short answer is not directly. Although benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and prostate cancer become increasingly common with age and can coexist in the same patient, BPH itself is not considered a precancerous condition and does not appear to increase the risk of developing prostate cancer.
Another great article but what about enlarged prostates? Is that a factor at all?
Btw, years ago I was told my prostate was enlarged (like my father and younger brother) but I found a Harvard study showing that mice with enlarged prostates were given walnuts to eat and their prostates shrunk over time. Sure enough I started eating some walnut pieces every day. Three months later, my prostate went back to normal size. needless to say I don't have to get up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom like they do or most of my friends. And I am in my late 60s. Love the walnuts! It's a superfood anyway.
Hi Dr. Marik. A family friend of mine, Dr. Iglesias, recommended your work to me to help my dad with his recent Esophageal Cancer diagnosis. I have been reading several medical papers and posts, mainly from yourself and Dr. William Makis. My father has been very open to the advice I have given him, but I am essentially at a battle with getting him to trust my advice vs the advice of oncologists and surgeons at Sloan Kettering. I will attach the protocol that I am currently having him follow, but we met with the medical oncologist today and they are heavily pushing their FLOT + Durvalumab chemo + immunotherapy protocol with 4 rounds pre-surgery and an additional 4 rounds post-op. It is from my understanding that this is a very insensitive protocol and I don’t believe it’s necessary given the success of alternative treatments, his current state of health, and the size/environment of the tumor. Please let me know what you think of my situation, I just want the best future outcomes for my father. Am I crazy to think this is curable without following Sloans advice? The protocol I have him on:
Current Re-Purposed Drug/Metabolic Therapy/Supplements Protocol
Great Review Paul...Dr. Richard Ablin..One of the main Scientists who discovered the PSA Enzyme was horrified to discover that Urologists were using a PSA Test to screen men for Prostate Cancer arguing they were harming many men without much of anything to gain from it. His Book was called The Great Prostate Hoax. I can't believe it's been 7 years since we filmed you about your Sepsis Protocol..Keep up the great work !
You did it! —documented in writing “what you would have done differently”had you known then what you know now. This makes me so happy.
Do you think the “J” or “U-shaped” curve in the association between Vitamin D levels and the risk of prostate CA (and similar situation with Omega-3’s) might be related to the high deuterium content in the supplements people take to increase their levels?
This is what Dr. Patrick Coles (from @Unbekoming on substack) and Dr. Seneff have been researching, and deuterium is the one thing I haven’t heard you bringing into the conversation about cancer yet (CA as a defense mechanism). Just wondering your thoughts on this angle that might explain those “statistical anamolies” you noted: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bpTspYubT1I&ra=m
Thanks...
Continue what you are doing and see how he tolerates the oncology treatment. He does not need to complete if he tolerates poorly.
It deuterium depletion and deuterium depleted water.
From the perspective of the metabolic theory of cancer, deuterium depletion is particularly interesting because it targets a fundamental physicochemical aspect of mitochondrial energy production rather than a single signaling pathway. If future high-quality clinical trials confirm the encouraging preclinical findings, it could become an important adjunctive component of metabolic oncology. At present, however, it should be viewed as an experimental strategy rather than an established standard of care.
Thanks... I need to investigate this..
The short answer is not directly. Although benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and prostate cancer become increasingly common with age and can coexist in the same patient, BPH itself is not considered a precancerous condition and does not appear to increase the risk of developing prostate cancer.
Has not been studied for prevention..
Thanks. Good to know,
Thats funny,
Thanks..
Interesting story
Another great article but what about enlarged prostates? Is that a factor at all?
Btw, years ago I was told my prostate was enlarged (like my father and younger brother) but I found a Harvard study showing that mice with enlarged prostates were given walnuts to eat and their prostates shrunk over time. Sure enough I started eating some walnut pieces every day. Three months later, my prostate went back to normal size. needless to say I don't have to get up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom like they do or most of my friends. And I am in my late 60s. Love the walnuts! It's a superfood anyway.
Thank you, Dr Marik. Dr Clare Craig’s views are also interesting: https://hartuk.substack.com/p/why-jeremy-clarkson-was-well-meaning?r=20pd6j&utm_medium=ios
Hi Dr. Marik. A family friend of mine, Dr. Iglesias, recommended your work to me to help my dad with his recent Esophageal Cancer diagnosis. I have been reading several medical papers and posts, mainly from yourself and Dr. William Makis. My father has been very open to the advice I have given him, but I am essentially at a battle with getting him to trust my advice vs the advice of oncologists and surgeons at Sloan Kettering. I will attach the protocol that I am currently having him follow, but we met with the medical oncologist today and they are heavily pushing their FLOT + Durvalumab chemo + immunotherapy protocol with 4 rounds pre-surgery and an additional 4 rounds post-op. It is from my understanding that this is a very insensitive protocol and I don’t believe it’s necessary given the success of alternative treatments, his current state of health, and the size/environment of the tumor. Please let me know what you think of my situation, I just want the best future outcomes for my father. Am I crazy to think this is curable without following Sloans advice? The protocol I have him on:
Current Re-Purposed Drug/Metabolic Therapy/Supplements Protocol
Diet: Carbs: 9%, Fat: 74% Protein: 17%
GKI on avg consistently <2.5
Glucose on avg consistently between 80-90
Ketones on avg consistently between 2-3.5
Repurposed Drugs:
Ivermectin: 100mg/day
Fenbendazole: 444mg/day
Supplements:
Vitamin D3: 10,000 IU + 100mcg K2/day
Magnesium Glycenate: 160mg/day
Curcumin: 1500mg/day
Berberine: 1000mg/day
Sulforaphane: 70mg/day
EGCg: 450mg/day
Melatonin: 5mg/day
Ashwaganda: 670mg/day
Milk Thistle: 350 mg + 280 mg of silymarin/day
Great Review Paul...Dr. Richard Ablin..One of the main Scientists who discovered the PSA Enzyme was horrified to discover that Urologists were using a PSA Test to screen men for Prostate Cancer arguing they were harming many men without much of anything to gain from it. His Book was called The Great Prostate Hoax. I can't believe it's been 7 years since we filmed you about your Sepsis Protocol..Keep up the great work !
Stop taking vaccinations,.Period
You did it! —documented in writing “what you would have done differently”had you known then what you know now. This makes me so happy.
Do you think the “J” or “U-shaped” curve in the association between Vitamin D levels and the risk of prostate CA (and similar situation with Omega-3’s) might be related to the high deuterium content in the supplements people take to increase their levels?
This is what Dr. Patrick Coles (from @Unbekoming on substack) and Dr. Seneff have been researching, and deuterium is the one thing I haven’t heard you bringing into the conversation about cancer yet (CA as a defense mechanism). Just wondering your thoughts on this angle that might explain those “statistical anamolies” you noted: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bpTspYubT1I&ra=m