Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
And I do a nasal saline spray (Ayr) since the netti pot and I don't agree. Also, warm salt water gargle. L -Original Message- From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of dlg...@windstream.net Sent: Tuesday, March 16, 2010 9:34 PM To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org Cc: wendy Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell WHEN MY SINUSES ACT UP, THE FIRST THING I TAKE IS l-lYSINE AND 1000 UNITS OF C. ALL THE DOCTOR'S ANTIBIOTICS DO NOT WORK. THE VIRUS I THINK HAS MUTATED AND IS NOW IMMUNE TO THEM. DORLIS wendy wrote: > Sally, > > I am a huge believer in Vit C, not only for animals, but humans as well. > This week I have been fighting off a cold since Friday, and popping 1000 mg > of Vit C every 1-4 hours, on and off. Had I not been popping the Vit C, I > know from past experience I'd already have been to the doc. My friend's > family owns an alternative treatment center here in the town where I live, > and they do Vit C IV therapy on their patients. I also believe in the value > of L-lysine as an anti-viral, although we've had some very interesting > conversations here debating that fact. > > :) > Wendy > "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change > the world - indeed it is the only thing that ever has!" ~~~ Margaret > Meade ~~~ > > > > > > > > > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org ___ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org ___ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
WHEN MY SINUSES ACT UP, THE FIRST THING I TAKE IS l-lYSINE AND 1000 UNITS OF C. ALL THE DOCTOR'S ANTIBIOTICS DO NOT WORK. THE VIRUS I THINK HAS MUTATED AND IS NOW IMMUNE TO THEM. DORLIS wendy wrote: > Sally, > > I am a huge believer in Vit C, not only for animals, but humans as well. > This week I have been fighting off a cold since Friday, and popping 1000 mg > of Vit C every 1-4 hours, on and off. Had I not been popping the Vit C, I > know from past experience I'd already have been to the doc. My friend's > family owns an alternative treatment center here in the town where I live, > and they do Vit C IV therapy on their patients. I also believe in the value > of L-lysine as an anti-viral, although we've had some very interesting > conversations here debating that fact. > > :) > Wendy > "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change > the world - indeed it is the only thing that ever has!" ~~~ Margaret > Meade ~~~ > > > > > > > > > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org ___ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Where can pure ascorbic acid in powder form be purchased? -Original Message- From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of S. Jewell Sent: Wednesday, December 23, 2009 2:56 PM To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell Thanks for sharing your interest and experience, Wendy. I appreciate your positive feedback. FYI, several thousand mg of pure ascorbic acid taken hourly for 24 hours at first notice of any cold symptoms will work even faster to eradicate the cold before it gets any kind of foothold. This also applies to animals, as I give mine both oral vitamin C daily and subcutaneous vitamin C injections at the first sign of a sneeze or sniffle, which is now rare. It is virtually impossible to take too much or give them too much. Interestingly, from a bowel standpoint the body can tolerate (and needs) thousands more milligrams of vitamin C when under stress from illness. The minimum daily intake of vitamin C for prevention of illness and heart disease is 3,000 mg, according to Linus Pauling, so it's easy to see why there is so much illness in this country when the RDA for C is only 70 mg. Most animals (except cats and dogs) make nearly 10,000 mg of vitamin C daily in the liver, while humans make none, and cats and dogs make only the human equivalent of 2800 mg daily. I had a severe rotator cuff tear last year that would put me on the ground writing in pain until it dawned on me that I should be taking three times the amount of vitamin C that I was It is important to note that the best kind of vitamin C to take for this purpose is pure ascorbic acid in powder form without excipients, preservatives, or fillers. Tablet vitamin C is really only intended to be taken at the levels written on the bottle because of these additives and it is really not safe to take drugstore vitamin C at the high levels that Pauling recommended as required by the human body on a daily basis for collagen synthesis and protection from viruses and heart disease. Also, the buffered forms of vitamin C (Ester C, sodium ascorbate, calcium ascorbate, magnesium ascorbate, etc.) are not nearly as potent or effective orally as ascorbic acid. Before my work in this area I had a cold every month all winter long. I have now had only one cold in the past 10 years and that was only because I was away from home and without my C. Despite exposure to others with colds, flus, etc., including my children who don't always want to take their C, I have never come down with any of it, and when I feel like I might be, I start dosing C by the thousands of mg each hour and it always works. The health we have seen in the past 10 years has certainly made me understand and appreciate Linus Pauling's expression, "Never be without your C, not even for a single day." Truly, I could not survive without it, nor could the animals in my care. Sally Snyder Jewell Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk- > boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of wendy > Sent: Wednesday, December 23, 2009 12:26 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Sally, > > I am a huge believer in Vit C, not only for animals, but humans as > well. This week I have been fighting off a cold since Friday, and > popping 1000 mg of Vit C every 1-4 hours, on and off. Had I not > been popping the Vit C, I know from past experience I'd already > have been to the doc. My friend's family owns an alternative > treatment center here in the town where I live, and they do Vit C > IV therapy on their patients. I also believe in the value of L-lysine > as an anti-viral, although we've had some very interesting > conversations here debating that fact. > > :) > Wendy > "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens > can change the world - indeed it is the only thing that ever > has!" ~~~ Margaret Meade ~~~ > > > > > > > > > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felinele ukemia.o > rg > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felinele ukemia.o > rg ___ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Thanks for sharing your interest and experience, Wendy. I appreciate your positive feedback. FYI, several thousand mg of pure ascorbic acid taken hourly for 24 hours at first notice of any cold symptoms will work even faster to eradicate the cold before it gets any kind of foothold. This also applies to animals, as I give mine both oral vitamin C daily and subcutaneous vitamin C injections at the first sign of a sneeze or sniffle, which is now rare. It is virtually impossible to take too much or give them too much. Interestingly, from a bowel standpoint the body can tolerate (and needs) thousands more milligrams of vitamin C when under stress from illness. The minimum daily intake of vitamin C for prevention of illness and heart disease is 3,000 mg, according to Linus Pauling, so it's easy to see why there is so much illness in this country when the RDA for C is only 70 mg. Most animals (except cats and dogs) make nearly 10,000 mg of vitamin C daily in the liver, while humans make none, and cats and dogs make only the human equivalent of 2800 mg daily. I had a severe rotator cuff tear last year that would put me on the ground writing in pain until it dawned on me that I should be taking three times the amount of vitamin C that I was It is important to note that the best kind of vitamin C to take for this purpose is pure ascorbic acid in powder form without excipients, preservatives, or fillers. Tablet vitamin C is really only intended to be taken at the levels written on the bottle because of these additives and it is really not safe to take drugstore vitamin C at the high levels that Pauling recommended as required by the human body on a daily basis for collagen synthesis and protection from viruses and heart disease. Also, the buffered forms of vitamin C (Ester C, sodium ascorbate, calcium ascorbate, magnesium ascorbate, etc.) are not nearly as potent or effective orally as ascorbic acid. Before my work in this area I had a cold every month all winter long. I have now had only one cold in the past 10 years and that was only because I was away from home and without my C. Despite exposure to others with colds, flus, etc., including my children who don't always want to take their C, I have never come down with any of it, and when I feel like I might be, I start dosing C by the thousands of mg each hour and it always works. The health we have seen in the past 10 years has certainly made me understand and appreciate Linus Pauling's expression, "Never be without your C, not even for a single day." Truly, I could not survive without it, nor could the animals in my care. Sally Snyder Jewell Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk- > boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of wendy > Sent: Wednesday, December 23, 2009 12:26 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Sally, > > I am a huge believer in Vit C, not only for animals, but humans as > well. This week I have been fighting off a cold since Friday, and > popping 1000 mg of Vit C every 1-4 hours, on and off. Had I not > been popping the Vit C, I know from past experience I'd already > have been to the doc. My friend's family owns an alternative > treatment center here in the town where I live, and they do Vit C > IV therapy on their patients. I also believe in the value of L-lysine > as an anti-viral, although we've had some very interesting > conversations here debating that fact. > > :) > Wendy > "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens > can change the world - indeed it is the only thing that ever > has!" ~~~ Margaret Meade ~~~ > > > > > > > > > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felinele ukemia.o > rg > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felinele ukemia.o > rg ___ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Thanks for sharing your interest and experience, Wendy. I appreciate your positive feedback. FYI, several thousand mg of pure ascorbic acid taken hourly for 24 hours at first notice of any cold symptoms will work even faster to eradicate the cold before it gets any kind of foothold. This also applies to animals, as I give mine both oral vitamin C daily and subcutaneous vitamin C injections at the first sign of a sneeze or sniffle, which is now rare. It is virtually impossible to take too much or give them too much. Interestingly, from a bowel standpoint the body can tolerate (and needs) thousands more milligrams of vitamin C when under stress from illness. The minimum daily intake of vitamin C for prevention of illness and heart disease is 3,000 mg, according to Linus Pauling, so it's easy to see why there is so much illness in this country when the RDA for C is only 70 mg. Most animals (except cats and dogs) make nearly 10,000 mg of vitamin C daily in the liver, while humans make none, and cats and dogs make only the human equivalent of 2800 mg daily. I had a severe rotator cuff tear last year that would put me on the ground writing in pain until it dawned on me that I should be taking three times the amount of vitamin C that I was It is important to note that the best kind of vitamin C to take for this purpose is pure ascorbic acid in powder form without excipients, preservatives, or fillers. Tablet vitamin C is really only intended to be taken at the levels written on the bottle because of these additives and it is really not safe to take drugstore vitamin C at the high levels that Pauling recommended as required by the human body on a daily basis for collagen synthesis and protection from viruses and heart disease. Also, the buffered forms of vitamin C (Ester C, sodium ascorbate, calcium ascorbate, magnesium ascorbate, etc.) are not nearly as potent or effective orally as ascorbic acid. Before my work in this area I had a cold every month all winter long. I have now had only one cold in the past 10 years and that was only because I was away from home and without my C. Despite exposure to others with colds, flus, etc., including my children who don't always want to take their C, I have never come down with any of it, and when I feel like I might be, I start dosing C by the thousands of mg each hour and it always works. The health we have seen in the past 10 years has certainly made me understand and appreciate Linus Pauling's expression, "Never be without your C, not even for a single day." Truly, I could not survive without it, nor could the animals in my care. Sally Snyder Jewell Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk- > boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of wendy > Sent: Wednesday, December 23, 2009 12:26 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Sally, > > I am a huge believer in Vit C, not only for animals, but humans as > well. This week I have been fighting off a cold since Friday, and > popping 1000 mg of Vit C every 1-4 hours, on and off. Had I not > been popping the Vit C, I know from past experience I'd already > have been to the doc. My friend's family owns an alternative > treatment center here in the town where I live, and they do Vit C > IV therapy on their patients. I also believe in the value of L-lysine > as an anti-viral, although we've had some very interesting > conversations here debating that fact. > > :) > Wendy > "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens > can change the world - indeed it is the only thing that ever > has!" ~~~ Margaret Meade ~~~ > > > > > > > > > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felinele ukemia.o > rg > > > > > ___ > Felvtalk mailing list > Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felinele ukemia.o > rg ___ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Sally, I am a huge believer in Vit C, not only for animals, but humans as well. This week I have been fighting off a cold since Friday, and popping 1000 mg of Vit C every 1-4 hours, on and off. Had I not been popping the Vit C, I know from past experience I'd already have been to the doc. My friend's family owns an alternative treatment center here in the town where I live, and they do Vit C IV therapy on their patients. I also believe in the value of L-lysine as an anti-viral, although we've had some very interesting conversations here debating that fact. :) Wendy "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change the world - indeed it is the only thing that ever has!" ~~~ Margaret Meade ~~~ ___ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org ___ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
You're more than welcome, Susan. Always happy to help. Sally Snyder Jewell, Marketing Director Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk- > boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Sander, Sue > Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 12:46 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Hi Sally, Thank you for this information. > > Susan > > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org > [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of S. > Jewell > Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 12:20 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Hi, Susan, > > Intravenous ascorbate is vitamin C in the form of sodium > ascorbate > administrated intravenously (directly into the animal's veins) at > high > doses in veterinary medicine. It is typically mixed with sodium > chloride and administered over the course of a few hours, > depending on > how much vitamin C the cat will be receiving. > > I have used it with my FeLV cat Linus for his lymphoma and was > able to > put him into remission for going on two years now when the > diagnosing > vet had told me he had about 4-6 weeks to live in early 2008. > We > administered it over the course of a year (2x a week for three > months), > six months off, then 2x a week for three more months). We did > not > reverse his FeLV with the low dose he was getting (1,000 mg per > pound of > body weight). However, I am going to be trying this therapy more > intensively for the next young FeLV that comes into my care, for I > truly > believe that if I can administer the ascorbate in the early stages > of > the disease before it has a chance to progress too far the > ascorbate > will reverse it. For information on why and how intravenous > vitamin C > kills these viruses, see Dr. Fred Klenner's paper, Clinical Guide > to the > Use of Vitamin C, reprinted in its entirety at this link: > http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/198x/smith-lh-clinica > l_guide_1988.htm > > The writings of retired veterinarian Dr. Wendell Belfield also > cover > many conditions that he used vitamin C for as far back as the > 1960s. > Tragically, few vets paid attention to this paper and the profound > evidence of how well this therapy works in vet medicine. Dr. > Belfield's > paper is > here: > http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/197x/belfield-w-j_int > _assn_prev_med-1978-v2-n3-p10.htm > > The protocol would be rather intensive for a cat with advanced > FeLV but > if the cat is early into the disease I believe that administration of > up > to 2,000 mg per pound of body weight for a number of > consecutive days > (perhaps 10-11) would kill the virus based on Dr. Klenner's > explanation. > I have seen it kill FIP in a young kitten when administered for 11 > consecutive days at nearly 2,000 mg per pound. > > If you intend to try this for your cat, you should contact me and let > me > know so that I can give you more specific directions or give your > vet > the name of my vet. Again, though, I have not yet tried to > reverse FeLV > in a cat who has had it for years and am not sure if it is even > possible. > A lot of it would depend if the virus has progressed to the stage > that > it is already in the cat's bone marrow. Still, being the kind of > person > I am, I will probably still try that just to satisfy my own interest > and, of course, help others to know whether it works. Having just > lost > three companion animals I have just been so overwhelmed with > veterinary > expenses that my funds are too low to consider it right now. But > as > sure as the sun rises in the east, I will. :) > > FYI, I spoke with a nurse in Pennsylvania this week and she said > that > there are definitely vets in Pennsylvania who are doing this > treatment > on animals. It is completely safe and nontoxic for the animal. > > Regarding the Mega-C Plus, it is an excellent supplement and > completely > safe for the cat. It was formulated by Dr. > Belfield himself. People are misinformed about vitamin C in > general, > hence the reason I am getting such a barrage of backlash over > posting > this information. I believe they are just scared and of course, > skeptical based on their misinformation. > > > Sally Snyder Jewell, Marketing Di
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
You're more than welcome, Susan. Always happy to help. Sally Snyder Jewell, Marketing Director Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk- > boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Sander, Sue > Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 12:46 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Hi Sally, Thank you for this information. > > Susan > > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org > [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of S. > Jewell > Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 12:20 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Hi, Susan, > > Intravenous ascorbate is vitamin C in the form of sodium > ascorbate > administrated intravenously (directly into the animal's veins) at > high > doses in veterinary medicine. It is typically mixed with sodium > chloride and administered over the course of a few hours, > depending on > how much vitamin C the cat will be receiving. > > I have used it with my FeLV cat Linus for his lymphoma and was > able to > put him into remission for going on two years now when the > diagnosing > vet had told me he had about 4-6 weeks to live in early 2008. > We > administered it over the course of a year (2x a week for three > months), > six months off, then 2x a week for three more months). We did > not > reverse his FeLV with the low dose he was getting (1,000 mg per > pound of > body weight). However, I am going to be trying this therapy more > intensively for the next young FeLV that comes into my care, for I > truly > believe that if I can administer the ascorbate in the early stages > of > the disease before it has a chance to progress too far the > ascorbate > will reverse it. For information on why and how intravenous > vitamin C > kills these viruses, see Dr. Fred Klenner's paper, Clinical Guide > to the > Use of Vitamin C, reprinted in its entirety at this link: > http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/198x/smith-lh-clinica > l_guide_1988.htm > > The writings of retired veterinarian Dr. Wendell Belfield also > cover > many conditions that he used vitamin C for as far back as the > 1960s. > Tragically, few vets paid attention to this paper and the profound > evidence of how well this therapy works in vet medicine. Dr. > Belfield's > paper is > here: > http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/197x/belfield-w-j_int > _assn_prev_med-1978-v2-n3-p10.htm > > The protocol would be rather intensive for a cat with advanced > FeLV but > if the cat is early into the disease I believe that administration of > up > to 2,000 mg per pound of body weight for a number of > consecutive days > (perhaps 10-11) would kill the virus based on Dr. Klenner's > explanation. > I have seen it kill FIP in a young kitten when administered for 11 > consecutive days at nearly 2,000 mg per pound. > > If you intend to try this for your cat, you should contact me and let > me > know so that I can give you more specific directions or give your > vet > the name of my vet. Again, though, I have not yet tried to > reverse FeLV > in a cat who has had it for years and am not sure if it is even > possible. > A lot of it would depend if the virus has progressed to the stage > that > it is already in the cat's bone marrow. Still, being the kind of > person > I am, I will probably still try that just to satisfy my own interest > and, of course, help others to know whether it works. Having just > lost > three companion animals I have just been so overwhelmed with > veterinary > expenses that my funds are too low to consider it right now. But > as > sure as the sun rises in the east, I will. :) > > FYI, I spoke with a nurse in Pennsylvania this week and she said > that > there are definitely vets in Pennsylvania who are doing this > treatment > on animals. It is completely safe and nontoxic for the animal. > > Regarding the Mega-C Plus, it is an excellent supplement and > completely > safe for the cat. It was formulated by Dr. > Belfield himself. People are misinformed about vitamin C in > general, > hence the reason I am getting such a barrage of backlash over > posting > this information. I believe they are just scared and of course, > skeptical based on their misinformation. > > > Sally Snyder Jewell, Marketing Di
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Hi Sally, Thank you for this information. Susan -Original Message- From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of S. Jewell Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 12:20 PM To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell Hi, Susan, Intravenous ascorbate is vitamin C in the form of sodium ascorbate administrated intravenously (directly into the animal's veins) at high doses in veterinary medicine. It is typically mixed with sodium chloride and administered over the course of a few hours, depending on how much vitamin C the cat will be receiving. I have used it with my FeLV cat Linus for his lymphoma and was able to put him into remission for going on two years now when the diagnosing vet had told me he had about 4-6 weeks to live in early 2008. We administered it over the course of a year (2x a week for three months), six months off, then 2x a week for three more months). We did not reverse his FeLV with the low dose he was getting (1,000 mg per pound of body weight). However, I am going to be trying this therapy more intensively for the next young FeLV that comes into my care, for I truly believe that if I can administer the ascorbate in the early stages of the disease before it has a chance to progress too far the ascorbate will reverse it. For information on why and how intravenous vitamin C kills these viruses, see Dr. Fred Klenner's paper, Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C, reprinted in its entirety at this link: http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/198x/smith-lh-clinica l_guide_1988.htm The writings of retired veterinarian Dr. Wendell Belfield also cover many conditions that he used vitamin C for as far back as the 1960s. Tragically, few vets paid attention to this paper and the profound evidence of how well this therapy works in vet medicine. Dr. Belfield's paper is here: http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/197x/belfield-w-j_int _assn_prev_med-1978-v2-n3-p10.htm The protocol would be rather intensive for a cat with advanced FeLV but if the cat is early into the disease I believe that administration of up to 2,000 mg per pound of body weight for a number of consecutive days (perhaps 10-11) would kill the virus based on Dr. Klenner's explanation. I have seen it kill FIP in a young kitten when administered for 11 consecutive days at nearly 2,000 mg per pound. If you intend to try this for your cat, you should contact me and let me know so that I can give you more specific directions or give your vet the name of my vet. Again, though, I have not yet tried to reverse FeLV in a cat who has had it for years and am not sure if it is even possible. A lot of it would depend if the virus has progressed to the stage that it is already in the cat's bone marrow. Still, being the kind of person I am, I will probably still try that just to satisfy my own interest and, of course, help others to know whether it works. Having just lost three companion animals I have just been so overwhelmed with veterinary expenses that my funds are too low to consider it right now. But as sure as the sun rises in the east, I will. :) FYI, I spoke with a nurse in Pennsylvania this week and she said that there are definitely vets in Pennsylvania who are doing this treatment on animals. It is completely safe and nontoxic for the animal. Regarding the Mega-C Plus, it is an excellent supplement and completely safe for the cat. It was formulated by Dr. Belfield himself. People are misinformed about vitamin C in general, hence the reason I am getting such a barrage of backlash over posting this information. I believe they are just scared and of course, skeptical based on their misinformation. Sally Snyder Jewell, Marketing Director Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk- > boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Sander, Sue > Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 6:58 AM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Sally, Please tell me EXACTLY what "INTRAVENOUS ASCORBATE" is. I > have a FELV+ cat who shows no symptoms. Do you recommend this for > him? If so, do all vets did this? I live in the Phila Pa area. Also, I have > the MEGA C but someone on this list (I think) said it may contain > something (that over the long haul) may not be good. What is > your > opinion on this. > > Thanks. > > Susan > > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org > [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of S. > Jewell > Sent: Monday, December 14,
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Hi, Susan, Intravenous ascorbate is vitamin C in the form of sodium ascorbate administrated intravenously (directly into the animal's veins) at high doses in veterinary medicine. It is typically mixed with sodium chloride and administered over the course of a few hours, depending on how much vitamin C the cat will be receiving. I have used it with my FeLV cat Linus for his lymphoma and was able to put him into remission for going on two years now when the diagnosing vet had told me he had about 4-6 weeks to live in early 2008. We administered it over the course of a year (2x a week for three months), six months off, then 2x a week for three more months). We did not reverse his FeLV with the low dose he was getting (1,000 mg per pound of body weight). However, I am going to be trying this therapy more intensively for the next young FeLV that comes into my care, for I truly believe that if I can administer the ascorbate in the early stages of the disease before it has a chance to progress too far the ascorbate will reverse it. For information on why and how intravenous vitamin C kills these viruses, see Dr. Fred Klenner's paper, Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C, reprinted in its entirety at this link: http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/198x/smith-lh-clinica l_guide_1988.htm The writings of retired veterinarian Dr. Wendell Belfield also cover many conditions that he used vitamin C for as far back as the 1960s. Tragically, few vets paid attention to this paper and the profound evidence of how well this therapy works in vet medicine. Dr. Belfield's paper is here: http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/197x/belfield-w-j_int _assn_prev_med-1978-v2-n3-p10.htm The protocol would be rather intensive for a cat with advanced FeLV but if the cat is early into the disease I believe that administration of up to 2,000 mg per pound of body weight for a number of consecutive days (perhaps 10-11) would kill the virus based on Dr. Klenner's explanation. I have seen it kill FIP in a young kitten when administered for 11 consecutive days at nearly 2,000 mg per pound. If you intend to try this for your cat, you should contact me and let me know so that I can give you more specific directions or give your vet the name of my vet. Again, though, I have not yet tried to reverse FeLV in a cat who has had it for years and am not sure if it is even possible. A lot of it would depend if the virus has progressed to the stage that it is already in the cat's bone marrow. Still, being the kind of person I am, I will probably still try that just to satisfy my own interest and, of course, help others to know whether it works. Having just lost three companion animals I have just been so overwhelmed with veterinary expenses that my funds are too low to consider it right now. But as sure as the sun rises in the east, I will. :) FYI, I spoke with a nurse in Pennsylvania this week and she said that there are definitely vets in Pennsylvania who are doing this treatment on animals. It is completely safe and nontoxic for the animal. Regarding the Mega-C Plus, it is an excellent supplement and completely safe for the cat. It was formulated by Dr. Belfield himself. People are misinformed about vitamin C in general, hence the reason I am getting such a barrage of backlash over posting this information. I believe they are just scared and of course, skeptical based on their misinformation. Sally Snyder Jewell, Marketing Director Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk- > boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Sander, Sue > Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 6:58 AM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Sally, Please tell me EXACTLY what "INTRAVENOUS > ASCORBATE" is. I have > a FELV+ cat who shows no symptoms. Do you recommend this > for him? If > so, do all vets did this? I live in the Phila Pa area. Also, I have > the MEGA C but someone on this list (I think) said it may contain > something (that over the long haul) may not be good. What is > your > opinion on this. > > Thanks. > > Susan > > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org > [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of S. > Jewell > Sent: Monday, December 14, 2009 11:42 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Merlin, > > Indeed in the interest of "self-disclosure," in all of my posts > anyone > could have seen from my sign-off at any time that I work with > Tower > La
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Hi, Susan, Intravenous ascorbate is vitamin C in the form of sodium ascorbate administrated intravenously (directly into the animal's veins) at high doses in veterinary medicine. It is typically mixed with sodium chloride and administered over the course of a few hours, depending on how much vitamin C the cat will be receiving. I have used it with my FeLV cat Linus for his lymphoma and was able to put him into remission for going on two years now when the diagnosing vet had told me he had about 4-6 weeks to live in early 2008. We administered it over the course of a year (2x a week for three months), six months off, then 2x a week for three more months). We did not reverse his FeLV with the low dose he was getting (1,000 mg per pound of body weight). However, I am going to be trying this therapy more intensively for the next young FeLV that comes into my care, for I truly believe that if I can administer the ascorbate in the early stages of the disease before it has a chance to progress too far the ascorbate will reverse it. For information on why and how intravenous vitamin C kills these viruses, see Dr. Fred Klenner's paper, Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C, reprinted in its entirety at this link: http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/198x/smith-lh-clinica l_guide_1988.htm The writings of retired veterinarian Dr. Wendell Belfield also cover many conditions that he used vitamin C for as far back as the 1960s. Tragically, few vets paid attention to this paper and the profound evidence of how well this therapy works in vet medicine. Dr. Belfield's paper is here: http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/197x/belfield-w-j_int _assn_prev_med-1978-v2-n3-p10.htm The protocol would be rather intensive for a cat with advanced FeLV but if the cat is early into the disease I believe that administration of up to 2,000 mg per pound of body weight for a number of consecutive days (perhaps 10-11) would kill the virus based on Dr. Klenner's explanation. I have seen it kill FIP in a young kitten when administered for 11 consecutive days at nearly 2,000 mg per pound. If you intend to try this for your cat, you should contact me and let me know so that I can give you more specific directions or give your vet the name of my vet. Again, though, I have not yet tried to reverse FeLV in a cat who has had it for years and am not sure if it is even possible. A lot of it would depend if the virus has progressed to the stage that it is already in the cat's bone marrow. Still, being the kind of person I am, I will probably still try that just to satisfy my own interest and, of course, help others to know whether it works. Having just lost three companion animals I have just been so overwhelmed with veterinary expenses that my funds are too low to consider it right now. But as sure as the sun rises in the east, I will. :) FYI, I spoke with a nurse in Pennsylvania this week and she said that there are definitely vets in Pennsylvania who are doing this treatment on animals. It is completely safe and nontoxic for the animal. Regarding the Mega-C Plus, it is an excellent supplement and completely safe for the cat. It was formulated by Dr. Belfield himself. People are misinformed about vitamin C in general, hence the reason I am getting such a barrage of backlash over posting this information. I believe they are just scared and of course, skeptical based on their misinformation. Sally Snyder Jewell, Marketing Director Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk- > boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Sander, Sue > Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 6:58 AM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Sally, Please tell me EXACTLY what "INTRAVENOUS > ASCORBATE" is. I have > a FELV+ cat who shows no symptoms. Do you recommend this > for him? If > so, do all vets did this? I live in the Phila Pa area. Also, I have > the MEGA C but someone on this list (I think) said it may contain > something (that over the long haul) may not be good. What is > your > opinion on this. > > Thanks. > > Susan > > -Original Message- > From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org > [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of S. > Jewell > Sent: Monday, December 14, 2009 11:42 PM > To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org > Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell > > Merlin, > > Indeed in the interest of "self-disclosure," in all of my posts > anyone > could have seen from my sign-off at any time that I work with > Tower > La
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Sally, Please tell me EXACTLY what "INTRAVENOUS ASCORBATE" is. I have a FELV+ cat who shows no symptoms. Do you recommend this for him? If so, do all vets did this? I live in the Phila Pa area. Also, I have the MEGA C but someone on this list (I think) said it may contain something (that over the long haul) may not be good. What is your opinion on this. Thanks. Susan -Original Message- From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of S. Jewell Sent: Monday, December 14, 2009 11:42 PM To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell Merlin, Indeed in the interest of "self-disclosure," in all of my posts anyone could have seen from my sign-off at any time that I work with Tower Laboratories, a nutriceutical manufacturer whose Pauling therapy vitamin C/lysine protocol has been saving lives from heart disease for the past 14 years. I have made no attempt to hide that fact, though perhaps doing so might have made me seem more like one of you and less like I was trying to "sell" you something. However, despite what I do to support my family and my rescue, I am certainly not paid to spend time posting here about the successes I have seen with intravenous ascorbate in my cat rescue and answering e-mail questions gratis after my 12-hour work days in an effort to help others save animals. My company does not even sell vitamin C for animals and I have never once offered to sell anything to anyone here, so to accuse me of "selling snake oil and preying on people's love of their pets" borders on libel. There is no "ulterior sales motive" here - I am simply trying to help. I am also, as you accurately point out, a published contributing author, and if memory serves, this is the first time I have ever been publicly chastised for sharing information in the interest of helping animals. Perhaps it is really true that people do not value the things they get for free. I first posted my experience with vitamin C here because I love animals and people and want to see these cats have a chance of survival and yes, help their owners to have "hope" where there would otherwise seem none. It would have been self-serving not to, or to disseminate the information for profit, as many might have. After all, there aren't many options for saving these cats and it seemed to me that some might actually appreciate and find my experience useful. I truly did not expect such a firestorm of skepticism and negativity and I am beginning to regret my initial decision to share at all, though thankfully there have been some to embrace and implement what I have shared, and for them and hopefully many others to follow in our footsteps, it was worth it. The fact that I work in this field affords me knowledge that others may not have - others who are still looking for some of the answers that I have been fortunate enough to discover. I have shared in honesty and with a caring heart and now the information is out there for those who would like to try vitamin C in all forms for their animals. I have not made claims that it will work positively to cure FeLV cats in all cases but have very specifically stated that I don't know what the response would be for cats that are well into the disease process with bone marrow involvement, though I sure intend to find out once we recover from the financial burden of the last three sick cats and their treatments. With the alternative being certain death, my question is, "What compassionate, thinking pet owner would deny an animal a chance at life because he or she "did not believe" that something would work?" My vet has now done three clinical trials with three successful outcomes. Had I been skeptical and waited for published clinical trials, all three cats would now be dead. I lost a kitten in November to FIP because we did not use the correct IV ascorbate protocol and because he was perhaps too far into the disease process to be brought back. Do I wish that I had never discovered or used the vitamin C protocol because my heart was crushed over the loss of him? Of course not, for because of what I learned with him we were successful in saving his sister. Every day she is a living reminder that his death was not in vain, and I will never stop trying to save the ones I can with this protocol because I know it works and it's really all I have. It seemed logical to me that others would appreciate the opportunity to hear of and try this for the animals they love as well, regardless of where or who it came from. Waiting for conventional medicine to understand or embrace this science is costing animals (and humans) their lives but nothing says that their owners and caregivers cannot. We are not talking about an "ordinary" vitamin as most have come to consider vitamin C. The
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Merlin, Indeed in the interest of "self-disclosure," in all of my posts anyone could have seen from my sign-off at any time that I work with Tower Laboratories, a nutriceutical manufacturer whose Pauling therapy vitamin C/lysine protocol has been saving lives from heart disease for the past 14 years. I have made no attempt to hide that fact, though perhaps doing so might have made me seem more like one of you and less like I was trying to "sell" you something. However, despite what I do to support my family and my rescue, I am certainly not paid to spend time posting here about the successes I have seen with intravenous ascorbate in my cat rescue and answering e-mail questions gratis after my 12-hour work days in an effort to help others save animals. My company does not even sell vitamin C for animals and I have never once offered to sell anything to anyone here, so to accuse me of "selling snake oil and preying on people's love of their pets" borders on libel. There is no "ulterior sales motive" here - I am simply trying to help. I am also, as you accurately point out, a published contributing author, and if memory serves, this is the first time I have ever been publicly chastised for sharing information in the interest of helping animals. Perhaps it is really true that people do not value the things they get for free. I first posted my experience with vitamin C here because I love animals and people and want to see these cats have a chance of survival and yes, help their owners to have "hope" where there would otherwise seem none. It would have been self-serving not to, or to disseminate the information for profit, as many might have. After all, there aren't many options for saving these cats and it seemed to me that some might actually appreciate and find my experience useful. I truly did not expect such a firestorm of skepticism and negativity and I am beginning to regret my initial decision to share at all, though thankfully there have been some to embrace and implement what I have shared, and for them and hopefully many others to follow in our footsteps, it was worth it. The fact that I work in this field affords me knowledge that others may not have - others who are still looking for some of the answers that I have been fortunate enough to discover. I have shared in honesty and with a caring heart and now the information is out there for those who would like to try vitamin C in all forms for their animals. I have not made claims that it will work positively to cure FeLV cats in all cases but have very specifically stated that I don't know what the response would be for cats that are well into the disease process with bone marrow involvement, though I sure intend to find out once we recover from the financial burden of the last three sick cats and their treatments. With the alternative being certain death, my question is, "What compassionate, thinking pet owner would deny an animal a chance at life because he or she "did not believe" that something would work?" My vet has now done three clinical trials with three successful outcomes. Had I been skeptical and waited for published clinical trials, all three cats would now be dead. I lost a kitten in November to FIP because we did not use the correct IV ascorbate protocol and because he was perhaps too far into the disease process to be brought back. Do I wish that I had never discovered or used the vitamin C protocol because my heart was crushed over the loss of him? Of course not, for because of what I learned with him we were successful in saving his sister. Every day she is a living reminder that his death was not in vain, and I will never stop trying to save the ones I can with this protocol because I know it works and it's really all I have. It seemed logical to me that others would appreciate the opportunity to hear of and try this for the animals they love as well, regardless of where or who it came from. Waiting for conventional medicine to understand or embrace this science is costing animals (and humans) their lives but nothing says that their owners and caregivers cannot. We are not talking about an "ordinary" vitamin as most have come to consider vitamin C. The majority of the world's population has no clue about how far-reaching and powerful ascorbic acid truly is for destroying viral and bacterial infections and also reversing heart disease, and how very critical this substance is to human and animal life. While it is tremendously helpful with the common cold virus, this is quite honestly the least of the diseases it can cure. However, the low U.S. RDA for vitamin C is killing human beings one by one, and because our "domesticated" cats and dogs make too little vitamin C and get little to none in their food, it is also killing them. We owe it to them to become educated about this and take action. Clinical trials cost hundreds of thousands of dollars and though NIH funding continues on a broad scale for othe
Re: [Felvtalk] Vit C therapy Sally Snyder Jewell
Merlin, Indeed in the interest of "self-disclosure," in all of my posts anyone could have seen from my sign-off at any time that I work with Tower Laboratories, a nutriceutical manufacturer whose Pauling therapy vitamin C/lysine protocol has been saving lives from heart disease for the past 14 years. I have made no attempt to hide that fact, though perhaps doing so might have made me seem more like one of you and less like I was trying to "sell" you something. However, despite what I do to support my family and my rescue, I am certainly not paid to spend time posting here about the successes I have seen with intravenous ascorbate in my cat rescue and answering e-mail questions gratis after my 12-hour work days in an effort to help others save animals. My company does not even sell vitamin C for animals and I have never once offered to sell anything to anyone here, so to accuse me of "selling snake oil and preying on people's love of their pets" borders on libel. There is no "ulterior sales motive" here - I am simply trying to help. I am also, as you accurately point out, a published contributing author, and if memory serves, this is the first time I have ever been publicly chastised for sharing information in the interest of helping animals. Perhaps it is really true that people do not value the things they get for free. I first posted my experience with vitamin C here because I love animals and people and want to see these cats have a chance of survival and yes, help their owners to have "hope" where there would otherwise seem none. It would have been self-serving not to, or to disseminate the information for profit, as many might have. After all, there aren't many options for saving these cats and it seemed to me that some might actually appreciate and find my experience useful. I truly did not expect such a firestorm of skepticism and negativity and I am beginning to regret my initial decision to share at all, though thankfully there have been some to embrace and implement what I have shared, and for them and hopefully many others to follow in our footsteps, it was worth it. The fact that I work in this field affords me knowledge that others may not have - others who are still looking for some of the answers that I have been fortunate enough to discover. I have shared in honesty and with a caring heart and now the information is out there for those who would like to try vitamin C in all forms for their animals. I have not made claims that it will work positively to cure FeLV cats in all cases but have very specifically stated that I don't know what the response would be for cats that are well into the disease process with bone marrow involvement, though I sure intend to find out once we recover from the financial burden of the last three sick cats and their treatments. With the alternative being certain death, my question is, "What compassionate, thinking pet owner would deny an animal a chance at life because he or she "did not believe" that something would work?" My vet has now done three clinical trials with three successful outcomes. Had I been skeptical and waited for published clinical trials, all three cats would now be dead. I lost a kitten in November to FIP because we did not use the correct IV ascorbate protocol and because he was perhaps too far into the disease process to be brought back. Do I wish that I had never discovered or used the vitamin C protocol because my heart was crushed over the loss of him? Of course not, for because of what I learned with him we were successful in saving his sister. Every day she is a living reminder that his death was not in vain, and I will never stop trying to save the ones I can with this protocol because I know it works and it's really all I have. It seemed logical to me that others would appreciate the opportunity to hear of and try this for the animals they love as well, regardless of where or who it came from. Waiting for conventional medicine to understand or embrace this science is costing animals (and humans) their lives but nothing says that their owners and caregivers cannot. We are not talking about an "ordinary" vitamin as most have come to consider vitamin C. The majority of the world's population has no clue about how far-reaching and powerful ascorbic acid truly is for destroying viral and bacterial infections and also reversing heart disease, and how very critical this substance is to human and animal life. While it is tremendously helpful with the common cold virus, this is quite honestly the least of the diseases it can cure. However, the low U.S. RDA for vitamin C is killing human beings one by one, and because our "domesticated" cats and dogs make too little vitamin C and get little to none in their food, it is also killing them. We owe it to them to become educated about this and take action. Clinical trials cost hundreds of thousands of dollars and though NIH funding continues on a broad scale for othe