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CANCER - Therapies

What we specialize in

(therapies we do that normally are not available elsewhere):

  1. First of all: there are a few quickly working treatments that I consider much more effective than usual chemotherapy - at least in many cases.

    So we can normally handle an immediate danger well. But more: These treatments very often handle all of the existing tumour - even before we start applying our main approaches. So you can also come for just this anti-tumour treatement. It takes a few weeks and the costs are about 500.- € per week.
  2. Cancer is a complex situation with many possible causes that require consideration and treatment. It has been clear for quite some time that cancer is not just a tumor, but an entire system fallen ill. Which is why "chemical attacks" (chemotherapy) cannot eliminate cancer. In most cases, they may have only a minor or no influence at all: chemotherapy, whether or not combined with hyperthermia, is at best only able to induce tumors to take a "break" before coming back again.

    The reason is that such a therapy addresses disease rather than health. It tries to eliminate the primary tumor and secondary tumors (metastases), whereas the disease consists of more than just those tumors, i.e. it consists of a diseased organism. Therefore, such a therapy will not suffice and produce a poor outcome unless you try to restore health, or "as much health as possible", to the entire organism.

We therefore undertake every effort to RESTORE THE WHOLE BIOLOGICAL SYSTEM. For this purpose, we employ the below methods, and in particular:

1) Blood preparation

We make a preparation from the patient's blood. This procedure helps change the body's milieu and make it "hostile to cancer". It has to be applied for two months in most patients.

2) Oscillations in the electromagnetic field

They are used to potentiate the above procedure. The effect is multiplied, and that is the whole secret of our treatment modality. It must be applied for two months at our center. Further treatment will be conducted at the patient's home. Patients living in the Vienna area may continue coming to our center for treatment.

This therapy has not been invented by us. Rather, it is an old therapy which apparently has not been taken up. It dates back to the 1920s. (Blood preparation has been modernized and adjusted to present-day requirements.) We may thus refer to several decades of therapy success:

(case reports)

Whom we accept for treatment:
According to the experiences gained in recent decades, the best results are to be expected for patients whose life expectancy is at least six months at the beginning of our therapy. Therapy simply needs some time to become fully effective (reverse the body milieu). Healing and/or decades of symptom-free survival are possible for a large percentage of patients - old case reports appear to indicate this would be so (if life expectancy at the beginning of treatment was more than six months).

But we also accept extremely ill patients provided that they are mobile and not in imminent danger. The success stories (see case reports) justify this policy, although the rate of success is lower. Our center is an outpatient facility where patients cannot stay but have to commute for treatment. If at the beginning of therapy patients have a lower life expectancy, an embryonic stem cell therapy could increase life expectancy and thus improve the chances of the entire treatment.

3) A cure with vegitable juices

This form of therapy is built upon developmentes made by famous men like Gerson, Breuss, Moerman, Kuhl and others. It changes the fluids in the organism to become cancer hostile. It takes quite a few months to accomplish that.

4) Embryonic stem cell therapy

This therapy is suggested when patients are in poor condition and have too low a life expectancy. Its purpose is to raise a patient's life expectancy so far that our treatment is given the time it needs to become fully active.

There is a major debate now on whether it is "ethical" to transplant embryonic cells taken from human embryos, in this special case from normal abortions. Each patient has to decide for himself/herself. These cells are alive and thus able to give a diseased organism an enormous "impetus for survival". It has been found out when in an embryo's development these cells have to be obtained to give the greatest possible healing support to people suffering from cancer. These cells are "pluripotent", which means that, when administered, they can develop into the most different cells in the human organism. Experience has shown that somehow they appear "to know where help is needed most desperately". In a way they mend the holes left by e.g. chemotherapy (in the body's defense system) and give the entire organism much more sanity and strength for survival. We will not publish where this therapy is available. But whoever wishes to get it can get it.

(Mention ought to be made that this therapy has been successful also in other diseases generally considered to be "incurable" and characterized by tissue defects: ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), MS (multiple sclerosis), following strokes and heart attacks, in Alzheimer's and many other diseases)

Our capacity:

We have to admit that our capacities are limited because electromagnetic field therapy may require several hours a day for every patient, and we only have some devices (which, in part, we had to produce ourselves) and places available.

Maintenance of treatment success:

Mention ought to be made that successful therapy must not be fully discontinued in the following years. Experience has shown that cancer is likely to reoccur. We will thus try and make therapy devices which can be bought and taken home by patients together with the vaccine for the purpose of maintaining treatment success.
 

Examples of successful therapies:

Here we present therapy results and successes to show that even very progressed cancer cases can be cured. Usually we make individual therapy protocols that consist of a number of therapies - just to make sure. Yet the following therapy results and successes have been produced by one single therapy of those. We show you those because of the many years of experience with this.
Anyway: Please do not wait until such a progressed stage. The earlier you start with the therapy the better your chances.

(Please let us remind you that this treatment modality is most promising when at its beginning the patient's expected time of survival is at least six months. The following examples, however, refer to more seriously afflicted patients. They are taken from a textbook of the 1930s and 1950s. Last edited in 1980, it is now out of print; some of the medical terms used in the original descriptions have been replaced with more colloquial equivalents)

Case 1: Inoperable tumor of left half of the brain. Patient was in very poor state, could not speak, did not respond, was totally incontinent (urine and feces). X-ray showed an enormous enlargement of the right ventricle of the brain, the left ventricle could not be visualized. Therapy was begun. Three months later, patient had much improved, half a year later patient had no symptoms whatsoever. Continued to live in good state for many years.
Case 2: An angiography was performed on a patient admitted to the neurological university hospital. It revealed a constricting process reaching from the cerebral cortex down into the brain stem. Patient suffered from jacksonian-type seizures every day. Radiation therapy failed entirely. Following radiation, patient even had up to 17 seizures a day. It was difficult for patient to walk or talk, eyeballs were bulging. Treatment started in 1971. After six weeks, patient was without seizures, has remained in good state until now (1980).
Case 3: Ovarian carcinoma, was diagnosed by histological findings, inoperable, had grown into the rectum. X-ray confirmed intestinal stenosis. Patient was terminally ill, required morphine four times a day. Treatment began in 1953. After six months, patient was symptom-free. Treatment was continued by her general practitioner. Treatment was discontinued in 1965. Patient was still alive in 1977.
Case 4: Patient diagnosed with cancer-induced intestinal stenosis in 1956. Improved under therapy, but then withdrew. A year later blood was found in the urine. Bladder had cauliflower-like tumor (x-ray). After regular treatment hardly any complaints half a year later (clear x-rays of 1975 prove this point). Patient was still alive in 1980 at age 87 (only had some problems with hip, but was otherwise in a good state).
Case 5: An 18-year-old young man was operated on by a brain surgeon in 1933. A large glioblastoma (i.e. a malignant brain tumor, generally considered to be incurable) of the cerebellum was found, which could not be excised. The patient was about to die. Because of the increasing intracranial pressure, the patient underwent a trepanation (i.e. a hole had to be drilled into the skull to alleviate the pressure). When the patient started treatment, he was dying. He could neither stand up, nor sit down, was confined to bed, vomited all the time and was only able to babble. He was emaciated and had lost his sense of balance. During the first therapy sessions, he had to vomit every time. This improved only gradually within half a year. Only then was the patient responsive and better able to retain some food. Treatment was continued daily, and the patient's state improved very slowly, he gained weight (10 kg). After one and a half years he had gained 20 kg. He was able to resume his former job. He started traveling and had almost no symptoms, except for some balance disorder which forced him to walk with a cane. Also, there was a minor speech disorder. This was due to the fact that prior to treatment major portions of the cerebellum had been destroyed. The patient was 18 years old when treatment began. He died at age 59.
Case 6: In 1947, a 46-year-old patient had a tumor on the right ovary, which was surgically removed. In 1952, a carcinoma developed on the uterus. A sample taken revealed this to be a "papillary adenocarcinoma". Since this tumor was inoperable, the patient underwent radiation, but to no avail. In March 1953, doctors diagnosed that the tumor had grown into the rectum. On 1 August 1953, the tumor was seen to have grown into the other side of the intestines as well. The patient lost weight and was under severe pain. In October of the same year, her state was hopeless. Her husband was informed accordingly. She was given morphine, and her stool was thin and hemorrhagic. Therapy was started on this bedridden patient. Six weeks into therapy, she did no longer lose weight, her weight remained the same for two months, whereupon she started to gain weight ever so slowly. After eight weeks she did not need any pain killers any more. After two months, it was possible to enter the previously too contracted rectum with one finger. Four weeks later you could even introduce a rectoscope to see that the rectal wall was covered in tumor masses for up to 10 cm (from bottom). The patient remained without symptoms until 1970. Her gynecological findings had improved as early as in 1960. Since then no more treatment.
Case 7: On 17 May 1960, the patient underwent an operation to remove a colon carcinoma. This was an orange-size, mucous-producing cylindro-adenoma. At the base of the intestines several bean-size hard glands were palpable. Examinations revealed that those were the metastases of a gelatinous cancer. Treatment began at the end of September. Patient was in very good state until 1974. No further follow-up.
Case 8: A 27-year-old patient was diagnosed with thyroid carcinoma in 1967, which was surgically removed in August 1968. She then underwent 28 cobalt radiation sessions (i.e. radiation therapy) without success. Roughly one year later, she had breathing difficulties. Laminograms of the lungs showed extensive round shadows around the two lung roots, which grew rapidly. Treatment started on 30 September 1968. The following year, no shadows could be detected any more. The patient had gained weight. The hard lumps, which had previously been palpable in the right supraclavicular fossa, went back. The patient's findings improved. Since then she has felt absolutely well.
Case 9: The 60-year-old farmer L.J. came for consultation in 1952. He suffered from labored respiration, and his skin was bluish, a condition that had developed over the past months. He was coughing, and there was blood in his sputum. He was unable to negotiate a five-step staircase without help, and even when assisted his respiration was extremely labored. X-ray findings of 10 September 1952: diaphragms with indistinct margins on both sides; in the right lower area small cloudy shadow containing several softer round shades; the right root of the lung was swollen and protruding, the left root was widened; in the right medium and lower part of the lung there was an inhomogeneous mucous cloudiness containing several cherry-size round shadows; in the first upper part of the lung, close to the root and below the clavicle between the first and second anterior ribs, there were two cherry-size round shadows. Diagnosis: cancer-filled lung roots, atelectasis on the left and cherry-size metastases in the right lower part and in the left middle, lower and upper part. No histological examination was performed to clarify the nature of the shadows seen, but several eminent radiologists confirmed that they could only refer to cancerous growths, probably metastases of some undetected primary tumor. Whatever their nature, it is worth noting that those shadows fully disappeared within five years of treatment. In fact, the patient was almost without complaints after a mere six months and could resume his work as a farmer. Whenever treatment was discontinued for several weeks in the first three years, his breathing difficulties re-occurred and only disappeared after two to three weeks of resumed therapy. Patient lived for another ten years in good state and died in an accident.
Case 10: The 60-year-old farmer Z. was a similar story. He came for consultation because of labored breathing, blood in his sputum and considerable weight loss. The radiologist found a roughly goose egg-sized shadow in the right lung close to the hilar region. The patient seemed to be inoperable. Under our therapy, the shadow became smaller and smaller and was hardly discernible after six months. The patient had gained 18 kg and was able to work in his fields. When he moved to another place in 1952, treatment had to be discontinued. A year later, the tumor had started to grow again. A bronchoscopic examination showed it to be a malignant carcinoma (cancer). This relapse resulted in the patient's death. (This example shows that patients should not completely withdraw from such a therapy.)
Case 11: Also in the 50-year-old physician, Dr. C., discontinuation of successful treatment led to a relapse. He arrived with mucous effusion in the lung area. A bronchial carcinoma was diagnosed by bronchographic and bronchoscopic examinations performed in the surgical ward of a university hospital. The patient was in a very poor condition. He responded to our therapy within a few weeks, i.e. his status improved and the effusion disappeared against all expectations, as up until then we had not been successful in cancerous processes involving the accumulation of fluid. He even gained enough strength to be able to resume working in his practice and driving his car over greater distances. After six months, he was absolutely symptom-free. Despite repeated warnings he withdrew from therapy. Three months later cancer reoccurred, as predicted, and led to the patient's death.
Case 12: Heinrich He., born in 1893, farmer and innkeeper. In July 1956, sudden constipation, tearing pain in the hypogastric region, intestinal bleeding. ESR 68/89, delayed evacuation of the large intestines under x-ray. Impossible to fill one section with contrast medium. Treatment started in May 1958, whereupon general condition and bowel movement improved. In September 1958, renewed contrast radiograph of the bowel passage which showed that there was still an area in the sigmoid colon that could not be fully filled with the contrast medium; there was no visualization and an irregular margin of the defect. Incomplete opacification also in the upper part of the descending colon. Treatment was continued, and towards the end of 1959 the patient was symptom-free. Treatment was discontinued because the patient's health fund refused any further reimbursement of treatment-related travel costs. In September 1960, he was again afflicted. In addition, he had trouble with his bladder, cramps in the bladder region, intermittent micturition, flakes and blood in his urine. A cystoscopy revealed polypous, villous growths in the bladder. A follow-up examination performed in the surgical ward confirmed these findings. Rectoscope could not enter more than 15 cm. Clinical diagnosis: carcinoma (cancer) in the colon. Operation was recommended but refused by patient in view of the high risk. in March 1961, cystocscopy: around the right ureteral orifice cauliflower-like soft, slightly hemorrhaging masses without structure, which filled the whole upper side of the bladder. Treatment was resumed in March 1961, whereupon symptoms improved within eight weeks. Patient was then able to pass water without difficulty, he took mild laxatives to have regular bowel movement. Towards the end of November 1962, the patient was symptom-free and able to work again. No pathological changes could be detected in an x-ray performed in 1974 on his intestines. This good status could be maintained - except for an inflammation of the hip joint - to this very day (1980). Patient is still alive.
Case 13: A patient, born on 24 September 1920, noticed intestinal bleeding in spring 1975. He lost much weight. In 1976, he was diagnosed with rectal cancer, which greatly constricted the lumen. The patient underwent surgery on 24 March 1976 and was given a preternatural anus. A biopsy showed that he had an adenocarcinoma. Also a second surgical intervention on 14 April 1976 did not succeed in removing the tumor. It adhered irremovably to its environment. The left and right lobes of the liver had hard nodes, the artery was surrounded by many smaller nodules. The tumor reached down to the hypogastric region, the lesser pelvis was not accessible to the palpating hand. On 11 May 1976, the patient had lost 12 kg. Nothing but some thin broth left the anal orifice. Within 4 cm, hard nodes all around the rectum. Therapy started on 11 May 1976, first at the hospital and then by the patient's general practitioner. Already on 18 May 1976, he had gained weight (85 kg versus 83 kg), and on 16 July he had 89 kg. Very good condition, anus evacuated normal stool, only the fingertips could still palpate one small nodule. On 29 June 1977 the patient's general practitioner reported: general condition is very good, patient is fit, can drive larger distances himself with his own car. The only remaining symptoms are winds and occasional constipation. Since then no further news.
Case 14: That "cancer of the lymph nodes" also responds to this treatment is illustrated by the following case: a young woman, born on 13 October 1937, noticed in 1960 greatly enlarged glands on the neck, which first became smaller under red light irradiation. Following a biopsy, she was diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease and given deep x-ray treatment and Endoxane injections (chemotherapy). On 13 June 1962, several soft, not clearly defined lymph nodes were detected on the right side of the neck, while the left side showed a scar from the previous biopsy. The spleen was no longer palpable. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) was 21/42, i.e. the blood picture was tell-tale. Regular treatment began in June 1962. Since then, no more enlarged glands. The patient married and gave birth to a healthy child. She feels well. Her ESR was 8/25 last time, her hematology measures were normal.
Case 15: Even in very severe cases, it is sometimes possible to help: the 76-year-old M. El. was hospitalized on 19 June 1958. He was emaciated and in a very poor state. There was blood in his feces, he suffered from severe anemia with 1.8 million erythrocytes, he had to be given blood transfusions. Under our therapy his general condition and hematology measures gradually improved. It took him eight weeks to recover enough to be able to undergo an x-ray examination. It revealed a large recess on the inner curve of the stomach, which could still be seen (though much smaller) in an examination one year later. The patient's condition improved so much that he was again able to care for himself and even go on some errands. Being symptom-free, he did not return for treatment after one year. Two years later he died at the age of 79.

The above cases are all very severe. Remember: the better the general condition, the greater the likelihood of improvement. We cannot treat any bedridden patients at our center. As a rule, there should be a time of survival of at least half a year at the beginning of treatment.. The above examples may not be interpreted as healing promises.

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