The validation and enormous importance of much of this test tube research came from the work of Frederick Klenner, MD in North Carolina. His clinical experience demonstrated how vitamin C was just as effective in the body as in the test tube in neutralizing or negating the toxic impact of whatever toxin the patient was exposed to. Snake venom, heavy metals, pesticides, cyanide, alcohol, carbon monoxide were all neutralized. The results that Dr. Klenner reported with infections were also astounding, as vitamin C, properly administered, proved to be the ultimate virucidal agent, curing all acute viral infections. These viral infections remain incurable by the standard approaches of modern medicine today.
I would be very careful about using iodine. If you have acute hepatitis C taking small amounts of iodine can actually give more energy to the virus itself. If you decide to "nuke" the virus with high dose of iodine it may produce heavy detox symptoms putting more load on the liver. So I wouldn't recommend taking iodine if you are in the acute phase.Thank you nature and Foxx for your replies.
Vitamin C and Iodine might be much better and cheaper than the chemical treatment about hepatitis C.
I'll dig into these subjects...
Viruses are a weird phenomenon !
I would be very careful about using iodine. If you have acute hepatitis C taking small amounts of iodine can actually give more energy to the virus itself. If you decide to "nuke" the virus with high dose of iodine it may produce heavy detox symptoms putting more load on the liver. So I wouldn't recommend taking iodine if you are in the acute phase.
Chemical treatments are VERY expensive and VERY toxic so it might not be a good idea either.
If you have chronic hepatitis c I would recommend low carb anti-inflammatory diet with no or very little alcohol (you don't want to have fatty liver), liver detox (coffee enemas, drinking/injecting Quinton water, fasting), liver protection and support (for example, milk thistle) and support of the immune system (vitamin C, autohemotherapy).
Someone in my family did the expensive treatment to get rid of Hepatitis C. But trying some alternatives would be a good idea I think. It seems a significant number of people in their mid 50's have this disease, at least as evidenced in the US by our family and friends.
Would it work on chronic hepatitis C, its infection coming from blood ?
May be Gabi could answer about this...
Thank you Gaby for your reply.
Then it means that it would not be wise to give it a try, there is too much uncertainty, as it seems quite antagonist...
How can light kill viruses?
A study by Kong-Thon Tsen of Arizona State University along with researchers at Johns Hopkins University shows how strong blasts of visible light from a low-power laser can kill viruses. The laser technique appears to be more successful than other methods at killing viruses, while also posing less harm to healthy tissue.
In their study, the researchers blasted a virus with a quick pulse of purple laser light. The laser, which only shines for 100 femtoseconds (a femtosecond is one millionth of a billionth of a second), causes the virus's capsid (its outer shell) to vibrate and become damaged. Essentially, the virus becomes "deactivated" while the area around the virus remains unharmed. The treatment doesn't cause viruses to mutate either, which is a problem in other virus treatments and can lead to viral resistance.
While the treatment is still in testing, it presents an array of potential applications. Serious diseases like HIV/AIDS and hepatitis could be blasted with laser light. Scientists could cleanse blood samples of viruses and other pathogens, making them safer to handle. Scientists could also combine the laser therapy with current blood dialysis treatments. In that case, blood would be cycled out of a patient's body, lasers could eliminate any pathogens in the blood and the blood would be cycled back in.