Comment by aetherspawn

Comment by aetherspawn 8 days ago

5 replies

My mother has “frozen” breast cancer for 15 years using oral bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis).

To give you the short version of the story about how it works for HER: taking bloodroot causes the cancer to shrink too small to take a biopsy, but not go into remission, and when she stops taking it per the doctors advice, it gets very large and they start talking about surgery.

Nobody really understands how it works and a lot of people claim it doesn’t work, but I think it’s probably similar to a low dose natural chemo.

I have seen it work unusually well with skin cancers (melanoma) as well using paste application (this is called black salve), so despite what the FDA claims, I think there’s something there, and there’s a few papers that agree.

Don’t put black salve on your head, it leaves a hole where the cancer comes out.

throwaway2037 8 days ago

About Sanguinaria canadensis, Wiki says: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanguinaria

    Although limited laboratory research indicates potential for sanguinarine to inhibit the growth of cancer cells, there are no supportive clinical studies, and its use is discouraged due to adverse effects and potential toxicity.
  • aetherspawn 8 days ago

    It has been used by native Americans to treat cancer for a very long time but YMMV. It has worked for us.

aetherspawn 8 days ago

She also swears by a product (basically a huge B17 dose) called Cascading Revenol that a guy on an old set of CDs Phillip Day (“the Truth about Cancer”) recommended to take with blood root.

It advertises itself as a natural tumour growth inhibitor.