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Hello Friend,
A cheery good morning to you and your family- pets and people!
Thanks for feedback on the cover picture of my upcoming *REAL* book.
I have submitted changes, and expecting to have the book in print for the end of April. I'll let you know when it's ready.
I have noticed that even in old family pictures, there is almost always an animal..
Here are my Grandparents, on the veranda of the 'Big House' in Lillooet where we grew up..they always had Irish Setters
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| | Here's a picture of the farm, golf course in Lillooet...many a sheep :-)
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| | My kids, Liam and Aliza bottle feeding some orphans...
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| | Can dandelions kill cancer?
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| Can dandelions kill cancer?
By Erika Tucker Global News
TORONTO – Dandelion root tea, championed by an elderly leukemia patient, has sparked exciting cancer research at the University of Windsor.
Windsor Regional Hospital oncologist Dr. Caroline Hamm admitted there wasn’t much she could for her chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) patient after rounds of chemotherapy.
The “little old lady” replied she’d “take care of it herself” with some dandelion root tea, and spread the word to another patient in the waiting room.
To Dr. Hamm’s surprise, the patients’ conditions improved, and one patient is still in remission 3 years after a steady diet of dandelion tea.
These results inspired Dr. Hamm to contact Dr. Siyaram Pandey, professor of biochemistry at the University of Windsor.
“I was very pessimistic,” says Dr. Pandey. “Two people doesn’t mean anything scientifically, but… I was surprised to find that simple aqueous extract of this root had pretty good activity in inducing cell suicide in cancer cells.”
Cell suicide, called apoptosis, is a process taking place in our body all the time. If cells are not needed or have damaged DNA, they effectively commit suicide.
“Cancer cells are the ones who evade this process… become resistant to cell death,” explains Dr. Pandey. His research looks to see if dandelion root extract can ‘remind’ the cancer cells to commit suicide, without killing off the healthy cells.
Dandelion root
However, Dr. Pandey’s research suggested the amount of extract obtained from boiling the tea was not sufficient, and so his team started increasing the efficiency of extraction with actual dandelion root obtained from farmers.
“We have increased the potency of the extract,” he explains. “We are excited about it because it is a very simple natural extract, so it’s like you buying the vegetable and cooking it, basically, it is as simple as that, because we are not interfering with any chemicals.”
Preliminary research thus far involved collecting leukemia blood cells from the disposable tissue of nine patients (with their consent). It’s called an ex-vivo study, and took place in a culture dish with the dandelion extract of higher potency described by Dr. Pandey.
“All nine blood samples gave a good response that cancer cells committed suicide,” said Dr. Pandey. “In 48 hours, more than 70 per cent were committing suicide. If those cultures were kept for longer, all of them will die-this is our prediction.”
Dr. Pandey donated his own cells as a “healthy” comparison, and showed there was no toxicity and very few cells dying from the healthy blood sample. He explains they have already studied dandelion extract in animals, and found no apparent toxicity and no tissue malfunction.
Human trials
These findings were so encouraging, they have now applied for clinical approval from Health Canada to begin trials in people, which may take between 6 months to a year. Dr. Pandey says the University of Windsor trial will aim to include 24 patients.
While dandelion extracts have been documented as treatments for leukemia and breast cancer in traditional Native American Medicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Dr. Pandey is investigating other potential areas the extract could work. So far dandelion root extract has been shown to be active against pancreatic cancer cells, colon cancer cells and melanoma (in cultures, not in patients).
“Compared to Taxol, this one is 100 times better in terms of toxicity,” says Dr. Pandey. “Taxol is terribly, terribly toxic to normal cells, it is not selective to cancer. That’s why people have very bad immunity, they lose their immunity, lose hair, and all that.”
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Veterinary Secrets Pet of the Week
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This is Nelson...( a great name:-) )
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Dog and Cat Words of Wisdom... "I poured spot remover on my dog. Now he's gone." Steven Wright
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| Heal Your Pet At Home!
Best Wishes,
Dr Andrew Jones, DVM |
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P.S. Dandelion has some wonderful properties- the leaves are a fabulous diuretic, and the roots are now gaining scientific evidence as being a serious anti-cancer treatment.
And it's in your backyard.
With virtually no side effects.
P.P.S. If you have yet to get started with Natural At Home Treatments, I suggest you start small.
With my Getting Started Kit
Inexpensive, LOADED with value, and TONNES of positive reviews:
Veterinary Secrets Revealed Getting Started Kit includes:
1. Healing Your Pets Naturally At Home 2. At-Home Pet Health Exam Tutorial 3. Healing Modalities 4. Healing Your Pets With Homeopathy (e-Book Download) 5. Healing Your Pets With Herbs (e-Book Download) 6. Healing Your Pets With Massage (e-Book Download) 7. Healing Your Pets With Acupressure (e-Book Download) 8. Getting Started Kit Guide (e-Book Download)
http://www.veterinarysecretsrevealed.com/gettingstarted/
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| DISCLAIMER: This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace the advice of your own veterinarian. Dr Andrew Jones resigned from the College of Veterinarians of B.C. effective December 1 2010, meaning he cannot answer specific questions about your pet's medical issues or make specific medical recommendations for your pet.
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Tel: 1-800-396-15341-800-396-1534 Fax: 1-888-398-1378 www.theonlinevet.com support@fourpawsonlineltd.com
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