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Cure Your Cancer newsletter- Special Edition

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> Many of you have heard of cesium chloride as a cancer treat-

> ment. I have several readers who have told me about their

> successful use of cesium to get their cancers under control.

> Still, I have never recommended anyone try this treatment

> without competent medical supervision from a doctor with

> experience using it as a cancer treatment.

>

> When Dr. Gregg learned about cesium chloride as a cancer

> treatment last year, he studied it and added an addendum

> about its properties to his treatise on the cancer cell

> in August, 2003.

>

> When I heard from him this week, he said he had added some

> other important information to his treatise which he wanted

> me to comment on. You can read it at:

>

> http://www.krysalis.net/cancer.htm

>

> Just scroll down to the end of the article and read the last

> couple of pages. I will attempt to summarize it here, but

> you really need to read Dr. Gregg's text to get " the full

> story. "

>

 

OK, so I was curious, and this is what I found in the cesium article:

 

" The diffusion of potassium ions out of the cell is not facilitated

by a protein in the cell wall that transports it, as in some

bacteria. Instead, it is facilited by a protein in the cell wall that

provides a pore, highly selective to potassium, that allows the

potassium to freely diffuse out, called a potassium channel. He also

discovered that there was data that showed that this potassium

channel not only blocked the exit of cesium ions, but the cesium also

blocked the channel to potassium ions. Cesium is a potassium channel

blocker! "

 

I agree that cesium works, but the rest is theory. If the old theory

was correct, that 'channels', 'pumps' or pores in the cell wall

control the concentration of minerals in a cell, why then if the cell

is membrane-deficient, or the cell wall is cut off one end, does the

cell still maintain its mineral concentrations?

 

A good read of Cells, Gels and the Engines of Life: A New, Unifying

Approach to Cell Function ties it all together and dispels the old

theories, of which there are several that similarly fall apart under

thorough testing.

http://www.cellsandgels.com/

 

" Remember, he is a cell biologist and a good one. "

 

I think all good cell biologists should read the book.

 

regards,

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