Hi so the wand will help for Cancer ?

thank you 




From: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, March 11, 2010 10:37 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: Fw: CANCER CODE IS CRACKED



There has been several cures for cancer over the past 100 years. I did say 
cure, not remission. Order the book "Politics in Healing" by Daniel Haley.



In a message dated 3/9/2010 11:10:27 AM Mountain Standard Time, 
[email protected] writes:


  CajunMike &Zena Mungovan Cell:  503. 501. 8579

  http://www.eAmega.com/ILLUVISTAR




  --- On Mon, 3/8/10, J &J McNeil <[email protected]> wrote:


    From: J &J McNeil <[email protected]>
    Subject: CANCER CODE IS CRACKED
    To: "Cajun Mike Mungovan 08" <[email protected]>
    Date: Monday, March 8, 2010, 4:01 AM

    CANCER CODE IS CRACKED 



    Researchers believe they have succeeded in halting the spread of advanced 
cancer

      

    Sunday March 7,2010

    By Lucy Johnston

      

    Comment Speech Bubble Have your say(8)

      

    SCIENTISTS believe they have made a major breakthrough in cancer treatment 
after cracking the “code” behind the disease.

      

    They have discovered the body’s immune system can kill cancer cells within 
a window occurring every 12 to 14 days.

      

    By giving low-dose treatment at exactly the right time, researchers believe 
they have, against the odds, succeeded in halting the spread of advanced cancer.

      

    Professor Michael Quinn has led the trial in patients with advanced ovarian 
cancer and suggests it could signal the most exciting development since the 
introduction of chemotherapy in the Fifties.

      

    While he points out that it is still a theory, he said: “This is 
astonishing and could infl uence the treatment of all solid tumours in the 
future. We hope it will revolutionise the treatment of cancer.” Professor Quinn 
and his team reviewed 63 papers involving more than 1,200 patients since 2000.

      

    They discovered that sufferers had about a 1-in-12 chance of responding to 
chemotherapy. &shy;During further studies they found the body has a fortnightly 
immune cycle during which it “switches on and off”.

      

    When the immune system turns off, it releases “inhibitory cells” which 
prevent it fighting disease, including cancer.

      

    Professor Quinn and his team in Melbourne, Australia, target chemotherapy 
when the immune system is not working to knock out “inhibitory cells”, 
dramatically improving patients’ chances of recovery.

      

    The treatment is in pill form and patients avoid almost all the 
debilitating chemotherapy side effects.

                

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    Professor Quinn, originally from Glasgow, said: “Everyone, including 
non-cancer patients, has an immune cycle which fluctuates every 12 to 14 days.

      

    “That’s why if someone in the family comes in with a cough or cold, only 
some members of the family will develop it. The immune system also attacks 
cancer cells, which is why we need to give chemotherapy on the right day."

      

    “The concept is sensational. If you can treat people at the right time it 
could dramatically improve their chance of a successful outcome. The research 
is still in its early stages, however if we are proved right this method of 
treatment could be applied to all cancers and in fact all diseases.”

      

    Since last year Professor Quinn and his team at Royal Women’s Hospital and 
Monash University, Melbourne, have given the therapy to seven women. Their 
advanced, recurrent &shy;ovarian cancer is almost impossible to treat 
successfully. Several responded positively and their tumours have stopped 
growing. Professor Quinn added: “These are very, very promising results.”

      

    One patient, Melissa Campbell, went to her doctor four years ago with back 
pain and a bloated stomach, and was diagnosed with advanced ovarian cancer.

      

    The disease recurred twice, and she has endured surgery, chemotherapy and 
radiotherapy, as well as severe side effects from another experimental drug.

      

    The 44-year-old said the new treatment had been a totally different 
experience: “It’s keeping it under control, and fingers crossed it will get rid 
of it down the track. It’s so much easier compared with the other times.”

      

    The treatment is a pill taken for a few days every fortnight rather than 
the patient being attached to a drip in hospital. Blood tests are also carried 
out every two days to assess the immune system.

      

    Preliminary work is now underway to use the same methods to treat patients 
with skin cancer. Professor Peter Johnson, Cancer Research UK’s chief 
clinician, &shy;welcomed the news: “We know the immune system may be 
influential in treating many cancers.

      

    “Any research that helps our understanding may hold promise for the future.”

      









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