It is stated in the protocol: "(300mg, 6 days a week)", "(24mg, 7 days a week)" and "(2 capsules per day)" but it does not say for what period. A week? 10 days? A month? A year? How do you know when to stop?
It is stated in the protocol: "(300mg, 6 days a week)", "(24mg, 7 days a week)" and "(2 capsules per day)" but it does not say for what period. A week? 10 days? A month? A year? How do you know when to stop?
I can answer that for you, the required dose for both fenbendazole and ivermectin is an evolving path, just as Joe Tippens was when his veterinary friend suggested just 222 mg 3 days per week over concerns that it might be harsh on the liver to use more than that dose. That thought was rapidly discounted by people first doubling the dose then extending it out over time to daily then over time many were reporting great results up to 1000 mg. Per day even that has been extended to 2000 mg per day by a man I've been following that has almost eliminated his original pancreatic tumour of 10 cm. Now two at his last scan.he is also using ivermectin, in the time I have been following him he has gone from 24 mg daily to 36 to 60 to very recently 120 mg daily which for him at 60 kg is exactly 2 mg. Per kg. Now many people would consider that a extremely large dose which is ten times the dose required to kill intestinal worms, however that dose is tiny when we consider the LD 50 that is the dose that kills half the animals and that dose is 50 mg. Per kg. Which one hopes was done on primates and not humans, of course that is a single dose not daily. So that while seemingly large is tiny at 2 mg. Transient side effects in some are vision and tiredness. The gentleman I write of in addition takes a large raft of antifungals in the form of herbs etc.and chlorine dioxide. Cancer is simply a fungal disease and anything known to have effect is always without exception is antifungal.
That should be obvious to anyone as long as it takes to get the all clear or in their terms no evidence of disease. But don't stop just reduce the dose for a couple of years after the all clear, as it has a habit of returning if one stops abruptly.
I have a question:
It is stated in the protocol: "(300mg, 6 days a week)", "(24mg, 7 days a week)" and "(2 capsules per day)" but it does not say for what period. A week? 10 days? A month? A year? How do you know when to stop?
I can answer that for you, the required dose for both fenbendazole and ivermectin is an evolving path, just as Joe Tippens was when his veterinary friend suggested just 222 mg 3 days per week over concerns that it might be harsh on the liver to use more than that dose. That thought was rapidly discounted by people first doubling the dose then extending it out over time to daily then over time many were reporting great results up to 1000 mg. Per day even that has been extended to 2000 mg per day by a man I've been following that has almost eliminated his original pancreatic tumour of 10 cm. Now two at his last scan.he is also using ivermectin, in the time I have been following him he has gone from 24 mg daily to 36 to 60 to very recently 120 mg daily which for him at 60 kg is exactly 2 mg. Per kg. Now many people would consider that a extremely large dose which is ten times the dose required to kill intestinal worms, however that dose is tiny when we consider the LD 50 that is the dose that kills half the animals and that dose is 50 mg. Per kg. Which one hopes was done on primates and not humans, of course that is a single dose not daily. So that while seemingly large is tiny at 2 mg. Transient side effects in some are vision and tiredness. The gentleman I write of in addition takes a large raft of antifungals in the form of herbs etc.and chlorine dioxide. Cancer is simply a fungal disease and anything known to have effect is always without exception is antifungal.
Well, that didn't answer my question but I gather that the duration is over as long a period of time as is needed which can be...years?
That should be obvious to anyone as long as it takes to get the all clear or in their terms no evidence of disease. But don't stop just reduce the dose for a couple of years after the all clear, as it has a habit of returning if one stops abruptly.
The problem, of course, is that it is NOT a cheap protocol and insurance won't touch it. Many will die as a result...c'est la vie I guess.
LD50 testing is normally done on rats.