
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
The Dr. Lodi Podcast empowers people to think for themselves and teaches people how to achieve optimal health, free from cancer and all other chronic conditions. Dr. Lodi shares evidence-based information and reveals the truth about cancer, health, and healing. As a medical doctor, clinical psychologist, nutritionist, historian, philosopher, and the pioneer of what has now become the definitive route for those unsatisfied with the modern cancer treatment system, Dr. Lodi will deliver information that you’ve never heard before. Tune in and discover what a True Second Opinion really means, how to Stop Making Cancer, why there is no such thing as “diseases,” and what you are TRULY capable of achieving in your life.
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
Episode 152 - 6.22.25 Breaking the Cancer Code: Chronically Fermenting Cells Explained
Imagine if we could transform our entire understanding of cancer by simply changing the language we use to describe it. In this eye-opening discussion, Dr. Thomas Lodi introduces the revolutionary concept of "Chronically Fermenting Cells" (CFCs) to replace the fear-inducing word "cancer." This isn't merely semantic—it fundamentally shifts our approach to healing by acknowledging what these cells actually are: normal cells adapting to an abnormal environment through fermentation.
Dr. Lodi presents a comprehensive healing philosophy centered on restoring optimal physiological function rather than just targeting symptoms. He explores the fascinating connections between seemingly unrelated systems—like how dental health directly impacts heart rhythm through shared meridians, and how parasites may influence various chronic conditions. With passionate conviction, he dismantles common medical myths, from the supposed dangers of oxalates in green vegetables to the protein adequacy of plant-based diets, using comparative biology to illustrate his points.
The conversation weaves through practical applications: precise protocols for treating edema and heart arrhythmias; specific antiparasitic regimens that target CFC stem cells; and lifestyle interventions including early bedtimes, intermittent fasting, and EMF protection. Throughout, Dr. Lodi demonstrates a refreshing commitment to evidence-based approaches while challenging conventional medical dogma. He repeatedly encourages listeners not to simply believe him but to research claims independently, embodying the critical thinking essential to true health sovereignty.
Whether you're navigating a serious health challenge or simply seeking optimal wellness, this conversation offers a paradigm-shifting perspective that empowers you to understand your body as an integrated system design
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This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on Jan. 19th, 2025
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Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.
Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast
Welcome to the Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast. This is the show for you if you’re...
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Sunday Night Live, june. What is it for you guys? 22nd June 22nd in US and Europe, canada, and it's June 24th, I think, for us over here. I want to make sure you all get on there. Duane is on.
Speaker 1:Hi, duane, from Facebook, and my sincere apologies about last week. Hi, good morning Alice. Yay, anyway, my sincere apologies last week, no other reason than I didn't wake up First time, so I got another five years because I can do it one more time. Sorry about that, really. I know it's a bummer. I apologize, but I'm here today and you're here today, so let's get started. All right, hey, mary, cool, itchy, itchy, itchy, itchy, itchy. Here we are. I'm just waiting for you all to come on. Looks like you're assembling, okay. So here we are, all right, thank you, pam. I'm really sorry about last week, really. All right, thank you, pam. I'm really a word that deserves to be discussed and I will. West Virginia, roger. I needed rest, mary.
Speaker 1:I know what are my thoughts on Dr William Mackes. I'm not sure who he is. There's a guy that comes on all the time. I think it's him. Is he the ICU doctor? Irene hello, from Australia, and everybody from what's that? Um, instagram? Okay, so here we are. Let's get started today. There we go, all right, and I've got some of you here, look at this here, and then I can see you here and like that, like that, beautiful, okay, cool, and let's get instagram going here like that, yeah, okay, yeah, all right. So anyway, um, just as a reminder, these live, these live streams, are every sunday night if I'm awake. And, um, just a reminder if you're having an active CFC problem.
Speaker 1:Cfcs are chronically fermenting cells that are also called cancer, which is not at all a useful word. We don't use it. In fact, it's a painful and deadly word, so don't use it. Please Call it what it is. They are chronically fermenting cells. So, for those of you who have an active situation going on, please contact Oasis of Healing and Oasis of Healing in Arizona. All right, that's the clinic that I founded, and it's 20 years now, and I founded several other clinics over here in Thailand, and they've all gone their own ways, so I can't recommend anything here, unfortunately. I'm still trying to get funding so that I can open up a real healing center the only one in the world, because there are none, and I'd be happy to discuss that with anybody who has what they call a healing center.
Speaker 1:So he opened up his own clinic treating patients with ivermectin. That's good, okay. Well, that's one part of it and that's only one part and that's not going to do it by itself in most cases. And, as a matter of fact, all of these antiparasitic meds that have been repositioned, which they call repurposed for CFCs, they all work incredibly well as well for CFCs as they do for parasites, and they should be, and I think are starting to become standard therapy, as what they call adjunctive, which means it's in addition to something else that's really working. But if something else were really working, they wouldn't need an adjunct.
Speaker 1:Anyway, so we have these sunday night lives and I have three groups, and the reason I have three groups is because was the three groups are cfc groups group, the parasite group and the health and healing group, and, of course, in the paris. In the health and healing group we talk about health and healing and that's everything from coffee enemas to curcumin iv or orally, you know. For health and healing group, we talk about health and healing and that's everything from coffee enemas to curcumin iv or orally, you know, for health and healing, fasting, sleeping, all the aspects to life that are compatible with re-establishing a healthy physiology, because what we're all looking for is to re-establish a healthy physiology, all right, and then a healthy physiology means an optimally functioning human, and an optimally functioning human can also be known as a healthy human. So that's what health is. Health is the establishment, re-establishment of a physiology for which we were designed to function optimally. Optimal functioning of the organism, any organism, is called health.
Speaker 1:So our goal, remember our goal is never to eliminate any one thing, because we certainly wouldn't want to eliminate one thing and have something else a crippling arthritis, heart failure. We wouldn't want any of that. So we don't want to have any of those disabilities, and they come from not having our biological needs requirements satisfied. When they're not satisfied, our body must adapt, and those adaptations are what the Rockefellerians call diseases. Okay, they don't exist, but they exist conceptually and they're concepts that we don't need to have.
Speaker 1:And, by the way, all concepts are housed in, formed out of words, constitute language. So it's our language that has to be modified, because if we modify our language, we modify our thoughts, we modify our mind, and our mind, being the boss of everything in our body, needs to be respected. So yeah, here we are, and so that's the Health and Healing Group, and they meet every other week with me and I answer questions until we're done and we talk back and forth and it's an opportunity to interact, whereas we can't interact in this format. In this format, I have to attend to the questions that have been submitted, right, but what we're talking about in the groups, if someone has a question, I can say what do you, what do you mean by that? We can interact and we can really answer questions. So they're very well, they're very, it's very well worth it to do that.
Speaker 1:In addition to that, you get every tuesday you'll get either Vanessa or Darren and Darren. Vanessa is a nutritionist, she's a biologist, she understands how to prepare healthy foods, she understands everything about lifestyle and she's able to teach it, so she's very important. She also knows yoga and meditation, so she knows all of it. She's an amazing woman. Darren is a kinesiologist second to none. Right, he talks about our muscles and their role in life, their role in health, and their role is so essential, critical, that we must understand it all. Right. Our circulation doesn't work without muscles. Lymphatic drainage doesn't work without muscles. Our immune system stays work without muscles. Lymphatic drainage doesn't work without muscles. Our immune system stays suppressed without muscles, so there's no end to it. All right, and equally as important is sleep and all of that. And then the other person we have is Donna Peroni. She's 36 years of eating raw vegan food, extremely healthy woman, and she's been teaching people how to live this life for a long time, and so you have access to her. She's on every other week. And then we've got for those in the CFC group where we talk about CFCs is a lady named Kathy and we have Kathy's Corner which is for people to talk about.
Speaker 1:Okay, great, I understand all these treatments and all that, but I feel terrible, or I feel good or what we need to talk about that. Let it out. It's kind of like a mind animal. Discuss it and support each other, and we need to all understand that we're not alone. Whatever was going on with us is going on with at least 100,000 other people, right? So there's nothing unique about our situation. That's very important to understand, because if you think you've got a unique situation, you're going to think you're alone in the world with this, and there's nothing more lonely than feeling you're alone in the world and that will depress your immune system by feeling that when in fact, you're not alone. You're in a wonderful group, bright group. These people that are in these groups blow my mind. They're all extremely well-informed, so it's really wonderful and we share information and all that.
Speaker 1:And then we have the parasite group, and the parasite group is the second one, um. So you got cfc's parasites and the parasite group. We talk about parasites and um and how to deal with them and all that. What is a parasite? Those are the groups and I recommend them so we can interact instead of me doing this. I'll never stop doing this because this is Foundation and it's free. So, and then, of course, you know we're live streaming here on Twitter and to talk. Well, not tick tock yet, because, yeah, but anyway, instagram, facebook, youtube, linkedin, the website dr Lodi calm stream on that X Rumble. Okay, so if you're on any of those, if you're on X or TikTok, it's at drthomaslodymd. If you're on any of the other ones YouTube, instagram, facebook, x Rumble it's at drthomaslody. No MD, that's it. So we took care of that stuff.
Speaker 1:Now let's get into the reason we're here. We're here to answer questions. So the first question comes from joshua and his topic is parasites and says doc, I've followed you on several platforms for about nine months. I'm in trouble, doc. I definitely have edema in my lower legs. Fluid retention okay, where are we fluid retention? Had this for a few years now and it goes, it goes. It felt like you know. It comes and goes and it felt like cellulitis on three occasions. Forgive me, doc, I'm wrong, but what seems like clogged lymphatic system is the cause of the edema. I feel I might have filariasis and the cat parasite, as I have over 12 felines. My legs are crazy, swollen and I'm terrified. I need some direction. I know you don't know much about me, but I'm hurting and I'm scared. What I'm asking for is some guidance.
Speaker 1:I'm a 48-year-old male. I smoke less than half a pack a day. Don't drink at all. I'm not diabetic. I smoke less than half a pack a day, don't drink at all. I'm not diabetic, usually healthy. Had COVID-19 eight times. Only vaccine was one from Pfizer, I believe.
Speaker 1:Legs progressively, have gotten worse. In the last four months have been under tremendous stress as my father had prostate CFCs Now in remission, thank God. Thank gentlemen such as yourself. This PSA is five. Thanks again. I'm part of your parasite group that I watch every Sunday. I just really need some help here. I will be there Sunday.
Speaker 1:My question is how to kill safely filariases and cat parasites without harming myself. What do I take and how long? Please help me. I know how busy you must be. All right, josh, let's go through your question a little bit.
Speaker 1:So, first of all, you're saying that you've got edema in your lower legs, fluid retention and you've had this for a year now. At one time you thought it was cellulitis, which the reason you might think it's cellulitis is because it was red and perhaps inflamed. Redness is usually inflammation, but I guess at times it's not and you feel that you might. It might be filariasis and the cat parasite, because you have 12 cats, all right, right. First of all, swollen legs have several possible causes, right? Um, as you know, we live on a planet with gravity, so things that are gravity is always pulling things down.
Speaker 1:So if you get swelling in your legs, that means it's called dependent and it's out of the blood vessels, it's called edema. So if the fluid is leaking out of the blood vessels, it's called edema. If it's leaking out of the lymphatics, like you, mightema. So if the fluid is leaking out of the blood vessels, it's called edema. If it's leaking out of the lymphatics, like you're suspecting, then it's called lymphedema and there's a very simple, easy way to determine which, and that is you just place your three fingers onto where it's swollen and hold it down so you can touch the bone and keep it there for a minute and let go. If you still have those indentations, then it's probably what we call edema or due to vascular extravasation of fluid out of the blood vessels into the interstitial fluid.
Speaker 1:Why would that be occurring? That would be occurring probably for a few reasons, but the main one is usually heart failure. It sounds terrible. It's usually heart failure. It sounds terrible. It's not that your heart failed, it's just that it's not able to pump as effectively as it would. And because it's not pumping as effectively, it's leaving more and more blood in the lower extremities due to gravity, not able to come up. And when they're in the blood vessels, like that, the fluid not the red blood cells or the white blood cells, but the fluid goes through the walls of the blood vessel and collects, and that's called edema, dependent edema, called to cardiac insufficiency, in other words, not pumping strong enough.
Speaker 1:So if that's the case, then we need to work on the heart, we need to make the heart stronger, and we can make the heart stronger first of all, by getting sleep. Appropriate sleep was by 9 00 pm, waking up when you would normally you'll find it be around four or five. Um, just by doing that, that's a major thing. And the other thing is you make sure you don't eat 18 hours a day, which means if you stop eating four because you go to bed at five, because you know that you need five hours before you go to bed to stop eating, and you stopped at four so you can start again at 10 am, that's not as bad as it sounds, but that has given your body 18 hours to clean, because when we're not eating and our body's not busy assimilating that which we have eaten, our body just starts to clean. And that's what it does. It cleans up all the worn out organelles inside of our cells that are important for cellular function, hence organ function. And so to make the heart. So that's part of making the heart healthy. Doing that, the other one is moving around throughout the day, every 90 minutes, spend about 10 minutes in vigorous movement and Darren talks about that and then eating within our biological limits and our biological requirements.
Speaker 1:Okay. So, whether you like it or not, or you argue or not, or whatever you want to do with it, we are plant eaters. Sorry, we're plant eaters. Sorry, we're plant eaters. Am I sorry that we're plant eaters? No, I'm not sorry, we're plant eaters. I'm happy that we're plant eaters. But I'm sorry to cause any discomfort for someone who thinks that we're not plant eating, but anyway.
Speaker 1:So by eating plants and eating them within that six-hour window so that you have 18 hours of not sleeping, your body will be nourished. It will be given all of the amino acids, all of the fats, all of the carbohydrates, all of the minerals, all of the phytonutrients and vitamins it needs from that, and that means eating a healthy diet, a diet that is compatible with this. What do we need? We need a ton of fat, healthy fat, no bad fat. So bad fats would be saturated fats and trans fats. That's the shape of the molecule.
Speaker 1:Things like that occur usually from applying heat. So if you apply heat to fats, you change them. If you apply heat to muscle, you change it. Apply heat to anything, you change it. But if you're not sure if that's true, put your finger in a flame, see what happens. I probably think you would remove it before it had the ability to make any changes. Put a piece of paper, put a piece of wood, put anything else in fire, and you'll watch it change. Well, the same goes with food you're going to eat, all right. So the pyrolyzed, which means heated fats from animals, animal bodies, turns into well, it produces aldehydes which are a trillion times worse than free radicals. And then it produces fats that, when incorporated into the membranes of our new cells, makes those cells not efficient, not able to do their job.
Speaker 1:Now there are supplements in addition you can take to make the heart stronger, such as taurine, which is an amino acid you can take four grams a day, three times a day. L-carnitine you can take like 250 milligrams three times a day. L-carnitine you can take like 250 milligrams three times a day. Ribose, which is a non-metabolizable sugar. Your blood sugar won't go up from eating ribose. Ribose is not metabolized but it's used to make our RNA and our DNA and things like that. So it's essential. But so it helps with cardiac. And then there's coenzyme q10, which is essentially important, uh, for mitochondrial function and, as you know, the heart has a ton of mitochondria. Why? Because it needs a lot of energy. Why does it need a lot of energy? Because in one day sitting around on the couch doing nothing, it beats a hundred thousand times a day, so that's kind of busy organ needs lots of energy. So those are like the main ones.
Speaker 1:If you have any kind of arrhythmia of any kind, you could also add Hawthorne. But, of course, selenium You've got to take minerals, all the other things that you need to take vitamin D, vitamin A, vitamin C and all that Melatonin get your thyroid right, all those things. So all of that has to happen All right. Tone in, get your thyroid right, all those things. So all of that has to happen. All right Now.
Speaker 1:So if it's not due to a decrease in cardiac pumping ability, it could be due to a low albumin. So a low albumin is probably one of the most important proteins that our liver makes. And there's multiple functions right, multiple, multiple functions and excuse me one second here you know, in addition to being a carrier molecule, and what a carrier molecule is is that anything that gets in our body that's going to be used, is necessary, is a nutrient, it needs to be transported, and if it's going to be transported, it needs a transporter. So most of the time. There are specific carrier molecules. For example, testosterone is carried by sex hormone binding, but it's also carried by albumin. So albumin will be an assistant to any other carrier molecule, plus in and of itself it carries stuff, so it's essential.
Speaker 1:The other thing is that it, being in inappropriate levels in our blood, causes what's called oncotic pressure, in other words, the pressure to keep our blood into our blood vessels. So if you had too low albumin, our blood would extravase through the blood vessel wall and cause edema, so, but it would cause edema everywhere, right? So it's's exceptionally important. In fact, albumin is kind of like a biomarker, so significant that if you have enough, you'll live, if you don't, you won't live, and that's really how important it is. So, and excuse me, so albumin is one, and that would be due to malnourishment.
Speaker 1:It's either due to malnourishment or there's another situation where we lose albumin, and that's when we have something that causes aphrodite syndrome, which is in our kidneys and leaks through our kidneys. So instead of being kept in the body, it leaks through the kidneys and it comes out in our urine and we have a lot of protein in our urine and that protein can be that. So that's the other reason protein in our urine, and that protein can't be that. So that's the other reason. All right. And then the third reason would be our lymphatic vessels are not doing the work. Lymphatic vessels, remember, drain the 10% of the fluid that's circulating in our body, 10% of it that goes to the cells, goes through the lymphatics and ultimately back into the blood and to the heart. But if those are blocked, imagine 10% is blocked. So within a month you're going to have a lot of lymph stuck in your body and that's called lymphedema. So when you stick your three fingers in there, you're not going to see that indentation. That's one of the main ways, clinically, to figure out what you have, all right. So just so you know about that, I just want you to understand that. So those are the three things. So if you're having that, that's that. So those are the three things. So if you're having that, that's that.
Speaker 1:Now, if you think it's filariasis so in other words, you're thinking it's the what you're thinking is of what is commonly known as elephantiasis. The legs get extremely huge right. So the usual drug regimen is pyrimethamine, sulfathiazine and clindamycin. So the pyrimethamine. The usual thing that's done is that there's a 75 milligram approximately loading dose and then they give Leucovorin. And the reason they give Leucovorin? Leucovorin is really a replacement of folate, because the way that these drugs work is that they inhibit folate metabolism, which is how it kills these organisms. But you don't want that to happen to you. So that's the leucovorin reclinicism. And then we also use clindamycin, and the clindamycin would be like 30 milligrams four times a day, right. The leucovorin would be 25 milligrams, two to three times a day, all right. So that's the main treatment for filariasis, all right.
Speaker 1:Now toxoplasma gondii, which causes toxoplasmosis, which we're afraid of in cats because you can throw felines, so it's a good chance you have that going on anywhere. So one of the easiest and simplest ways to deal with that is Bactrim. We've all heard of Bactrim. It's also called Sceptra. It's an antibiotic that's used mostly in bladder infections, but other things it used to be used for. That's pretty much the mainstay of it all and the so to toxoplasmosis is.
Speaker 1:It's hard to know if you really have that. It's not that it's easy to diagnose, but if you have 12 felines I don't know if they sleep with you or what, but remember it's in their cat litter this organism winds up in the cat, in their stool and it gets into the cat litter so easily. If you're cleaning the cat boxes every day you get, you could be exposed to it, and the one nasty thing about the toxoplasmosis is that the plasma is that they can get into your brain and cause these cysts and cause multiple problems. So if that's a problem, then you would probably have to go into a hospital, get some IV medication, but if it's not that serious, you can try it back. You know, I think it's the easiest.
Speaker 1:I had a woman, a young woman, 23 years old, who develops a brain tumor and it turned out it was toxoplasmosis, right. And of course she had, I think, 11 or 12 cats and they slept with her. So you know that's the problem. So in toxoplasmosis they use the pyrimethamine and the sulfadiazine, and both of those work with that folate that I was talking about. So you need to take folinic acid, which is, uh, lucifer, which is another name for it. Okay, so that's what it is. It replaces it. So you don't, you don't wind up getting now if you've got this problem and now, in addition to that, you need to be taking all the other antiparasitics the ivermectin, the fenbendazole and or mebendazole and niclosamide you want to be taking those and you also want to be taking the antiparasitic, that's, an antiprotozoal Protozoa are these microorganisms?
Speaker 1:That are not what the worms are. The worms are multiple cellular organisms, right? Some can be very large, some can be small, but they are definitely larger than a one-celled organism, which is a parasite, which is a protozoa. So a linea, as it's called, takes care of that. It also gets some of the worms. That's the good thing about it. And if, for any reason, you can't get it or whatever, you can take tinidazole, which is a cousin of metronidazole that you might have all heard of, which is flagell, but that works as well, again, for the protozoa.
Speaker 1:And if you're killing off these organisms, you're going to wind up remember the yeast in our body, funguses in our body that are all over the earth too that they ultimately win. You ultimately get dismembered by and taken apart and recycled by yeast, by funguses, all right. So we need about 10% of them in our gut, and we do have them. And they're there to clean up all the dead cells, because they take that which is dead, recycle it into what can now produce new life, Right? So, in other words, it would contribute to the soil. So the reason you'd want to have, you know, for what they call fertilizers and stuff like that, the best would be the feces from animals, or if the animals die and their bodies get decomposed in the soil, all right. So so I would not sleep with them and I'd also make sure that, uh, their cat boxes are, don't even clean them, just throw it out and add new sand, all right.
Speaker 1:And so our second question is by Jules, and she's saying the same thing what is the treatment for toxoplasmosis gondii, trying to help a friend Excuse me, she doesn't want to lose her hair and I know some treatments affect folate, right, they do affect folate, and you heard what I recommended, for that it's pretty much standard. As I said, you can do Bactrim or you can do the pyrimethamine with the sulfathiazine, right, plus the leukoholm and folin, again for the folate, and you can take care of it pretty nicely. If you do that, get started on it. The Bactrim would be like it's called double strength, which is Bactrim, is primethoprim, primethoprim, sulfamethoxazole, so it's two drugs really, and so double strength is what they get. So you get Bactrim, double strength, twice a day, one pill twice a day.
Speaker 1:Now the next question is from Debbie and she's saying that the topic is leaky gut At first. Thank you for Dr Emma's recommendation. She was very thorough and all that caring. I know she is the one I have a few things. She recommended mostly that my airway is very small and recommended a five-pack Rashid For the juice cleanses. Many of the vegetables recommended to juice are very high in oxalates. Is this not a concern? I was told that I have leaky gut, fatty liver, gallstones and mycotoxins. I eat clean, but I also add egg, chicken, shrimp, salmon and beef. If I skip these proteins, I never feel full. I take a lot of high-quality supplements but I do not seem to absorb them.
Speaker 1:Okay, so let's take a look at this question. Let's start at the top here. You saw Dr Emma, who is again fantastic, and she found that you had a problem with your airway. In other words, you were probably having a sleep apnea and you didn't know it. You weren't sleeping throughout the night and not getting appropriate rest. But she recommended the BiPAP machine. If she recommended it, you'd need it and, as you know, you apply that at night and make sure that you don't have periods of apnea where you're not breathing.
Speaker 1:On the second part of your question, which was the vegetables that I've recommended celery, cucumber, kale, spinach, lemon, apple or any other fruit you need to make it taste good are high in oxalates. Did that get posted? I guess it didn't get posted yet because I made a video on that again and I also refer you to the December 2015 issue of the Townsend Letter where I about, um, the whole oxalate thing. Okay, so the oxalate, the whole oxalate issue is just really true, not true?
Speaker 1:Oxalates are a compound produced by certain plants, notably spinach and kale, things like that. Oxalates are also in lots of different foods. We also produce oxalates in our body. Now, the big problem with oxalates is causing kidney stones, because calcium oxalate is probably 80 to 90% of all those kidney stones that anybody ever gets. So, excuse me, one second, so just one. So so just one second, please. The point is this Form oxalates. First of all, what they have found is and this is throughout all the studies and please look them up what they have found is that vegetarians who eat vegetables like kale and spinach, et cetera, have significantly less kidney stones oxalate than those who eat animals, and the reason being is because really, the cause and and and and what's important in that is that the contribution to oxalate in the body by diet is 30 percent. 70 percent of the oxalates that cause problems in our body are produced endogenously. We produce them, they're part of our metabolism. So it's not necessarily what we're eating and it's only gonna contribute a small amount.
Speaker 1:Now, in order to develop an oxalate stone, that means the calcium oxalate has to bind, has to precipitate. How does something precipitate? If I pour salt into water, it'll dissolve until it's saturated and then I'll start to see salt forming. Because I've saturated it with salt. I can add water and it'll be dissolved again. Or I can take out some of the salt it'll be absorbed again. So there's a certain relationship between the amount of the salt and the water. That's called precipitation.
Speaker 1:So in order for calcium oxalate to precipitate, it must have a pH that is acidic. If you're eating healthy, that won't be an acidic pH, so they won't form. It also comes from dehydration, because there's not enough water and therefore it concentrates and precipitates. If you've got enough water, that won't happen. And if you're eating a lot of magnesium, magnesium will bind to the oxalate before the calcium has a chance to and therefore you won't form calcium. And so the people that are chronic oxalate stone formers are told to eat. They use magnesium oxide. You can use any kind, but that was what they used and I think it was three grams a day. I forget what exactly it was. If the chronic oxalate stone formers had that, they wouldn't form the stones.
Speaker 1:So if you're eating green, if you're drinking green juice which has spinach and kale and all that stuff, it's extremely that's a lot of water. It's like 95 water. They're getting hydrated. Number two the um dissolved nutrients in there. Um, including the oxalates. There's also what? Tons of magnesium. Why? Because it's green. Whoa. What does that mean?
Speaker 1:Green is in a plant. Green is a plant that forms photosynthesis. Okay, it takes sunlight, carbon dioxide and water and turns it into glucose and oxygen. That's called photosynthesis. All right, the green part of the plant that is able to do that is these little organelles called chloroplasts, and each one of them, at the very center of their molecule, is magnesium. Eating green, you're getting tons of magnesium. Magnesium is what it's alkalinizing, so it's also going to alkalize you, so you won't be acidic to cause the foam from stones. Magnesium. Magnesium is what it's alkalinizing, so it's also going to alkalize you, so you won't be acidic to cause the foam from stones, magnesium is going to bind some dietary oxalates which contribute only 30 percent, and then you're going to. So the whole thing is blah, blah, blah, bullshit. Sorry, it's bullshit.
Speaker 1:And, by the way, anybody out there an expert on it? Talk to me. Let's have it. Let's have an open debate. Let me show the research that I found, which is all over the Internet, and you show me your research.
Speaker 1:Some guy the other day saying you should eat only meat during pregnancy? Yeah, you're right, you should smoke too and you should take cocaine while you're at it. What the hell? It's absurd, but he gets away with it. He's a doctor and everybody goes oh, all right. So in the future anybody says anything to you, they say, ok, I'm going to, you should take this. I say great, thank you very much. Show me the research.
Speaker 1:How did you come to that conclusion? Because this is my body. I need to know why and I need to know, know, know why. I don't need to believe you and don't believe me either. If I say something, I'll look it up and if you can't find it, send me a message, I'll send you the research. All right, I don't say anything. That's not research bound.
Speaker 1:I don't say it. Why would I say it? How could I say it? How would I make it up? Why would I make it up? Would it help me to make up something about oxalates? How would you do it? I don't even know and I don't care and I don't do that. So if I tell you something, I'm telling you because I know period. Yeah, one second please. So sorry, so sorry, so sorry, so sorry. Couple of my time back to where we were and we were there. Okay, here we are. We're back again. Now that was your oxalate thing. I hope you understand.
Speaker 1:And if I skip these proteins, I never feel full. I take a lot of well, I'm not sure what that means. I guarantee you that I'll make a bet with you that I could make you full without eating those I could. Did you ever eat a pizza? I'm not even saying you should eat pizza. Do you ever eat a pizza and tell me you're not full? Pasta you're not full. Baked potatoes you're not full, so you can get full.
Speaker 1:Now, if you eat a big salad and you've eaten six tablespoons of chia seed that you've soaked overnight in a fresh nut milk and you made a smoothie with it and you put it in a nut milk and you put in two handfuls of broccoli sprouts so that you have like the perfect smoothie. You drink that before you're going to be full and there's. Okay, I'm sorry, wait, let me. I mixed that up Six tablespoons of chia that you soaked overnight. You make a chia porridge and in that chia porridge you can put on top of it, you can put cinnamon, you can put vanilla, you can put strawberries, blueberries, anything to make it delicious. I like it by itself, but that's pretty filling. And later on you have a smoothie in the smoothies with three freshly ground tablespoons of flax seeds in a nut milk with two hands of broccoli sprouts. Get that also. Now you've got two hands of broccoli sprouts. Okay, that also.
Speaker 1:Now you've got a lot of healthy fats. And now you eat a big salad. You're going to have some fruit later by itself. Okay, you're not going to eat a lot of fruit, but you can have all of it. You don't want to have bananas, you don't want to have dates, you don't want to have raisins. You want to have anything really sweet, sweet, sweet, sweet, sweet, sweet.
Speaker 1:But glucose the glucose is is a natural substance that we need. That's why plants make it oxygen and glucose through photosynthesis. Because we need glucose. We need glucose not just for fuel for cells and cfcs, but cells because if you starve successfully, start the cfcs, you've starved yourself. You can't do it, so do all that. It gives you phytonutrients. You're gonna so um and you eat the salad and then if you've got to have cooked food steam potatoes, steam sweet potato, steam spinach and stuff like that Just realize you're not going to get the full nutrients if you've steamed it. But you know, you know.
Speaker 1:So you don't have to eat the animals to be full. All right, elephants get full, rhinoceroses and rhinoceri get full, horses get full, wildebeests get full, mooses get full, kangaroos get full, lions get full too. But those dogs wolves 15 years they eat dead animals. Horses 38 to 40 years, chimpanzees 55 years, elephants 60 to 90 years and they're big and they're strong. So that means they got protein and they're vegan. So there's no argument there. Are they well-nourished? How about a gorilla, well-nourished? You want to fight a gorilla? How about a gorilla Well-nourished? You want to fight a gorilla? How about a teenage gorilla? You're going to fight a teenage gorilla.
Speaker 1:So I don't understand the argument that people have. They have this argument and it's based on wishful thinking. It ain't based on biology, comparative biology, it's not based on physiology, it's not based on anything. And, by the way that doctor out there, whoever you are, the way of the carnivore, okay, how about the way of the human? And, by the way, think about it. Tell me, if I were to ask you and I am, of all the animals in the jungle, which ones get most CFCs? The answer is animals such as tigers and lions, who are designed to eat animals, and they get it the highest incidence of CFCs. And don't believe me, never believe me. Look it up. I don't say anything. That's not true. I don't.
Speaker 1:Why would I? Why would I spend my time making up things? Think about what Am I selling it? Am I making money? Am I getting anything out of this? What am I getting from telling this stuff? Am I making money? Am I getting anything out of this? What am I getting from telling this stuff? Am I selling you a product? No, all right. So think about it. Put all those things together and just realize that For you, I already know it.
Speaker 1:Here's, nicholas, dear Dr Lodi, your advice fighting a clinic or specialist who treats CFCs. Please stop using that word, that astrological sign word. Please stop using it. It means nothing except, ah, okay, specialists who treat CFCs with alternative methods using also antiparasitic drugs? I would really greatly appreciate.
Speaker 1:My beloved sister suffers stage four colon CFC and is progressing now into widespread into the bones. She has insurance for the US or another country or would pay herself in order to find a better approach than chemotherapy. You mean find a good approach, because chemotherapy is a bad approach, bad meaning it does harm. Could you possibly recommend or refer her to a doctor that may treat trust best? Thank you so much. All right, nate Nicholas and your doctor Very happy to meet you. If you're in the United States, I guess you are. She has insurance for that.
Speaker 1:Are there any doctors that do this? There are that use antiparasitics. I don't know. Most doctors that I have any interaction with or I learn about them through patients that I have that I work with, people that I work with, not patients people that I work with tell me that they think oh no, you don't need that much. They give underdose. You don't want to ever underdose an antiparasitic medication. Because why? Because you don't kill them because you've underdosed but you've disturbed them and they migrate to another organ. You want them to migrate to your pancreas, your lungs, your brain. I wouldn't do that. So finding a doctor that does that is impossible unless you go to an Oasis of Healing. That's what we do. It's part of our program. Can I think of another one? Honestly, I can't, and that's a problem. That's why my Singapore company, institute of Integrative Oncology, is going to train doctors and clinics, because we can't leave this understanding of everything just up to me.
Speaker 1:Now there are people who use antiparasitics, like one of them, plus metformin and other things and what they call repurposed drugs. But I'm not sure what else they use. And I'm not sure what their diet is, and I'm not sure if it's comprehensive, and I'm pretty sure it's not, because I haven't found any place that's comprehensive. I find that most places focus on one thing they do I. We intervene with. We have ozone, we have IV vitamin C, we have curcumin, okay, but what are the people eating?
Speaker 1:Because if you don't establish healthy physiology, it doesn't matter how good your treatments are, you're going to continue to regrow whatever you're growing. I mean, that's not like oh yeah, oh, my God, is there research? Okay, treat long CFCs and continue smoking. Make sense? No, all right. So now, unfortunately, I don't really know of any. I wish I did. And if there are any doctors out there that do that, let me know so I can know, so I can recommend them to you.
Speaker 1:I'm not doing this for business. I don't have a clinic with me here in Thailand and my clinic in Arizona is doing really well. So if you want to go there, we'd love to have you. But I'm just saying we're doing really well, so I'm not here to make business, right? Remember that. Okay, for all those of you. I had one guy. The other last week said I think I was talking for two minutes and he goes I'm already pissed off. Oh my god. Well, you know then you shouldn't join the group. It gets you angry like that. So anyway, I'm very sorry, nicholas, I don't know of any.
Speaker 1:I think what you'd have to do is find a doctor, an alternative doctor, that you feel cares and knows what they're doing, uh, and then tell them about the antidepressants and that they won't. They don't agree and don't understand it. It's not even to agree about you. You either know about it. You, if you don't know that oxygen exists and someone told you that they want it, you say, well, let's anyway, it's not a matter of believing in it. We don't believe that. I don't believe that five plus five is 10. It's not an opinion. That's the truth, and since we're all talking about life and death and suffering and happiness, we need to tell each other the truth and it should not be predicated upon making a sale of any kind. All right. So what I would say is find yourself a good doc, and if you can't get antiparasitics from him, you can get most of them online, and very soon I have a setting up situation here where we will have available to everyone Good, good, good antiparasitics that you don't have to worry about. Where am I going to get it anymore? Ok, now, where are we? This is Tyrone.
Speaker 1:I've had irregular heartbeat for about 20 years and it has progressively got worse. I went to the doctor and they said it is my cardiac sarcoidosis, but the more I research, it could be a parasite. I don't have shortness of breath and no horrible chest pain or anything like that, but the irregular heartbeat pounds and it scares me. My ejection fracture was low, but it went back up when I changed my diet. What can I do? Well, continue the change you made in your diet sounds pretty good. Number one.
Speaker 1:Now, if you've had an irregular heartbeat for 20 years and it's progressively getting worse, I mean it could be several things, but most commonly it's something called atrial fibrillation, afib, which is when the heart beats like maybe real fast, like, and then so it's like it's not like that, it's irregularly. Okay, now, that is called AFib and usually the treatment for that is to take. Well, it used to be. It used to be digitalis or digoxin, which was quite appropriate. It comes from a tree and it was used as a therapy way back in the days of hippocrates. But it was made into a drug and what it did was it decreased inotropy and blocked the beat. What am I talking about? I'm talking about this Inotropy is the strength with which the heart beats.
Speaker 1:If you have a low ionotropy, it's the strongest Boom. It increases that, which is important because in AFib, because of the irregularity, it's not pumping enough and it also blocks what's called the AV node, the atrial ventricular node. So between the atria, which are the top chambers of the heart, where the blood enters from the body and then it goes to the lungs, blood goes into the right atrium, down into the right ventricle and then pumped into the lungs where it's exchanged, oxygen and carbon dioxide goes back to the left heart and the left heart pumps it through the atria up to the aorta and the left heart pumps it through the atria up to the aorta, the aorta and then throughout the body. So that's the route of it. So in order for the beat which is initiated in the right atrium to reach the right ventricle, there's a node called the AB node, strangely enough, atrial ventricular anyway. It kind of determines the number of the or how much of the atrial contractions are going to be translated into ventricular contractions. So if the ab node was like being permissive and all of the atrial fibrillation to say, get through, then you'll have ventricular fib, which is a. It's just death. So if you can block that through, then you'll have ventricular fib, which is just death. So if you can block that AV node, then you can prevent all the many, many, many atrial contractions that are happening during atrial fib. You can block them from reaching the right ventricle. So it was a very effective medication and for some reason it's not used now. So they're using calcium channel blockers and other things just to increase endotropia, or they use things that work with contractions and stuff like that, which is not all that good.
Speaker 1:But there's one other reason that I'd say probably 100% to 101% of all doctors ignore it. And why would they ignore it? Because they don't know it. They're not really ignoring it. They don't know it, so they wouldn't tell you that your wisdom teeth are in the same meridian that controls the heart. So if you have a cavitation, which means that you've a kind of like a little cave in the bone whether it's the bone down here from this wisdom to the where they're going up here in the heart, these bones wind up getting these little areas like caves where microorganisms are growing because the immune system can't get there and they're mutating and having all kinds of fun, and meanwhile it's sitting on the meridian that goes to the heart.
Speaker 1:So the heart is going to be affected and, as a matter of fact, there are people like myself who had a root canal extracted the wrong way. Why? Because I went to a regular dentist and that's what they do the wrong way. Where they don't do it the complete way, they don't take out the periodontal ligament. If you don't take out the periodontal ligament, you're leaving a highway in for the microorganisms to get to your bone. It's not rocket science guys.
Speaker 1:So it turns out, you pull out that extraction that was done incorrectly and you got to go into the bone where it has accumulated, and you scrape out all of the pus, then you irrigate it with ozonated water and then, prior to sitting down in the chair, the dentist took the blood, spun it and at the top is this foamy stuff and it's called platelet-rich fibrin. So this platelet-rich fibrin is your body's way to form a clot. So after you've cleaned out, you've irrigated the ozonated water, you take ozone gas and then you push that in kind of hard and it goes into all of the little nooks and crannies that are in your bone, called um trabeculae. Why? Because that's where microorganisms are hanging. So you push that gas in. You've already irrigated, you took out the periodontal ligament, you got rid of all the junk and you've now you've cleansed it, and then then you put the stuff, the ozone, in the bone and then you quickly seal it with your platelet-rich fibrin. And guess what happens? You don't get a dry socket, it heals. But you've sealed it off. So now microorganisms cannot get in there and reaccumulate.
Speaker 1:So if you're not talking about atrial contractions, if you're talking about ventricular bigeminy or trigeminy or any of those other things. Those are disturbances in the electrical activity of the heart, and many times you will have to go see a cardiologist who specializes in the electrophysiology of the heart, and then they wind up. A lot of times you will have to go see a cardiologist who specializes in the electrophysiology of the chart of the heart, and then they, they, they wind up. A lot of times you'll have an accessory, an extra nerve, uh, that's causing this, and they can cut that and that's about all they can do. But, as you can imagine, it doesn't work. So that's what I say.
Speaker 1:So also also for the atrial fib. You also want to do the same things that we've discussed for people who have, you know, hearts that are not pumping so strongly as in heart failure and different degrees of heart failure. So in that case you would take lots of taurine four grams four times a day. L-carnitine, 250 milligrams, three to four times a day. A B-complex, a strong one, because you're also going to add ALA, alpha lipoic acid. Anyway, that's a good combination for the heart. In addition, you would add coenzyme Q10, okay, because coenzyme Q10 is an extremely important molecule, that and especially for the heart, because of all the mitochondria. So it's definitely the way to go.
Speaker 1:You've got to do that for your heart, okay, and I also don't know how much EMF you are being exposed to, but we do know that electromagnetic frequencies have an effect on the electromagnetic frequencies of our heart and our brain and other things like that, and that's part of their danger. They've got many dangers, but a big part is that Okay. So you need to avoid wear Faraday clothing. Maybe put a Faraday cage around your bed at night, so when you're sleeping you're not getting exposed. So there's various ways of dealing with EMF. If you have a Wi-Fi, you can definitely turn it off at night. You can have your house wired so that you get everything directly through wall electricity and you don't need all this ionizing radiation in the air, because that's what's there and it's causing havoc in our bone marrow and many other places. So you don't need that for sure. We need to protect ourselves from EMF because it can cause everything from flu-like symptoms or the big C, the C-19 boogeyman that everyone's come to believe, is sitting on that desk right next to you waiting to you relax so it can jump inside or something.
Speaker 1:I'm not sure what people think about that. So that's COVID and, by the way, any vaccine you got from Pfizer or Moderna, it was what they call a euphemism, meaning it wasn't real, it wasn't a vaccine. Why would you say that? This guy's weird. Is he really a doctor? Okay, so why would I say that? I would say that because, from my understanding, a vaccine is you get an injection of something that is specifically designed to prevent you from getting something else. Well, it turns out, if you've got these injections, it did not only not prevent it, it increased your likelihood of getting them, but they also cause problems. They cause spike protease, they cause cardiac problems, they cause what's called so yeah, this oat milk is fantastic, oat milk, all right.
Speaker 1:So now, but I'm telling you, tyrone, get to emma abramayani, or someone that she endorses, and get your mouth checked out, because I'm sure you had your wisdom teeth. Because in today's world, what does it say? Doctors say look, if you're 18 years old, you just don't need your wisdom teeth. It's just one of the mistakes God made. You don't need your tonsils what the hell. And certainly not your appendix, my God. And while we're in it, let's just grab that gallbladder too. And you know what? Once a woman goes through menopause, we should just take out her ovaries and uterus. She goes through menopause. We should just take out her ovaries and uterus. She doesn't need it anymore. I wish I was joking. You guys still excuse me that word.
Speaker 1:The CFC word I don't understand it. My uncle has lung CFCs terminal stage. What do you mean? You know what? I'm in a terminal stage. You're in a terminal stage. I've never met anybody who is not in a terminal stage. You're in a terminal stage. I've never met anybody who's not in a terminal stage. All right Now. So my uncle has long CFCs in his terminal stage. He is taking, for one year already, tugresol 80 milligrams and Tramadol. I procured for him Panacur Cine liquid, which is liquid fembendazole and 12 milligrams of ivermectin, but I don't know how much.
Speaker 1:You should take your meaning for the lung cfcs right. Well, you need to do everything we just said so that so the, the lungs will have a healthy capacity right and they'll be able to do what their job is, which is to breathe in lots of oxygen and breathe out lots of carbon dioxide. So he's taking it to Greece. So what I said about the taurine and the L-carnitine and the ribose and the CoQ10 are magical for that and everything else going to sleep early.
Speaker 1:All these things that we talk about are all appropriate because they all need to restore physiology. So whatever we're doing to treat an underlying condition, in order to successfully treat it we must restore healthy physiology. Because if we do not restore healthy physiology and we just go to hammering down something so we don't see it or feel it, we didn't stop the reason it formed and it's going to form again and that's just the way it is. That's just life. These are just lessons from a thing called life. It's how life happens.
Speaker 1:So you've got to be taking care of the physiology to restore it. Otherwise, whatever changes you make, that may be nice at the moment and you might say, oh wow, I'm in remission It'll be back as you haven't stopped. So I mean, I mean I'm hoping that it makes sense, because what is this now? I'm just looking this up here. Whatever to Greece? Oh is alright, so it's for epidermals growth factor her to stop.
Speaker 1:Anyway, I cannot tell you to stop taking whatever medication your doctor told you to take. I can't tell you to stop because I don't know your situation and I can't give you medical advice. If I were working with you, I would and what I would do. My goal would be to get you off the grease zone and take care of everything. Naturally, you restore physiology and then if we needed the drug, we would do it for as long as we needed it, but we wouldn't continue doing the drug, all right. Now here's constantin. I thought we just talked about you. Maybe I did. I'm hallucinating, but okay. So, yeah, yeah, we did, that's okay. And now, and then we have maureen. So why, husband, I think, and I have take, take it.
Speaker 1:Then ben is on my wire exit for years, I guess, meaning your husband has severe low back pain and was diagnosed with kidney cancer. So here we are, okay. Now let's look at maureen. Okay, your husband. So he's been taking a fen.
Speaker 1:Bend is on ivermectin for years. He has has severe back pain, is diagnosed with kidney CFCs, he has a large mass on his right kidney and metastasis of the spine and other areas. Blood work is perfect A1C. Hemoglobin A1C, which is looking at diabetes, is 5.4 to 61-year-old, all right. So it's like borderline being what they would call diabetic. No vaccines ever. Now they are scheduling radiation, did mapping already on morphine and Norco, so drug to the max. All this happened within two weeks.
Speaker 1:What do I do other than giving him 350 milligrams of Manuka honey daily? Do I start Fenban and ivermectin again? All right, so he's got a large mass on his right kidney and it's been diagnosed as kidney CFCs. It's metastasized to the bones of the spine and other areas. All right, and then when you say blood, the blood tests are perfect.
Speaker 1:I do not know what they drew, what bloods they drew, because I can tell you that most doctors draw the same blood tests that are useful, but they don't tell the story. All right. So they probably look at tumor markers, other parameters like it's your heart, your heart, how that has that working, your electrolytes, your kidneys, your you know blood, albumin, liver. All these things is what they in the blood test. What they do is they don't look for things like the ferritin to iron ratio.
Speaker 1:Ferritin is a molecule that stores iron. It's the free iron that is available, right? So the ferritin is the storage and it turns out, if it's five times more than the iron, then you probably have CFC somewhere. So the ferritin level compared to the iron level should not be more than five to one. The lower is better, one to one is great, less than one to one is great. Now ferritin can go up for other reasons infection, inflammation, other things All right. Now ferritin can go up for other reasons infection, inflammation, other things but that means it goes up acutely and it comes down. But if you have a chronically high ferritin and a relatively low iron and the ratio is more than five to one, then it's a good chance there's CFCs going on. So I really don't know what you mean.
Speaker 1:And then I'd look at LDH, which is the last enzyme involved in the conversion of pyruvate to lactobate, which causes lactic acid in tumors. Ok, so I would look at that. I would look at thiamine and kinase. So those would be the tests I would look at, in addition to some tumor markers. And, as you know, kidneys don't really have a tumor marker that's been designated to them. So he's drinking six tablespoons of Manuka honey. Well, what else is he eating and how often? And when does he stop? What time does he go to sleep? There's all these questions that I would want to know if we were going to work together, all right.
Speaker 1:So here's a note from thoughts on RGCC test. Actually, excuse me, I think I need to add to the drlodycom website a few things. One should be the RGCC test, the RGCC test, makes me crazy. It's been around at least like 25 years. At least it's out of Greece. Back in the early 2000s there was another group that popped up in competition to them. They were in Germany, and I guess they've since gone under. And so the RGCC test has come to be known as the originator of this whole process and has a lot of business worldwide.
Speaker 1:And what that test does is that you, you get some, you get some blood, you draw some blood and they, they, they, they call that's a euphemism, you know they use it, it's it's. They draw the blood and they look for circulating tumor cells and when they find enough of them, then they can test them against certain agents to see if they die, such as different chemotherapies or combinations of chemotherapies. And every other thing they do is to just eliminate the symptoms but not to deal with the underlying problem. So your question here is occasional coffee. Okay, oh, I'm sorry. That was the second question. Thoughts on the RGC test. So here's the thing about that test Since that test is testing circulating tumor cells but not the actual tumor cells, we know that only 0.1% of tumor cells can break away and then form a metastasis.
Speaker 1:It's not a lot. And they have to be CFC stem cells, right? Because an adult mature cell cannot metastasize, so stem cells are being produced from the tumor in great numbers Now. So the idea is this so a CFC stem cell, you can look at it like a seed. It's looking for a place to land soil where it can grow into a tumor.
Speaker 1:Now that soil is your body. So in your body, soil is determined by what you eat and what you don't eat, and how well you eliminate and how well you sleep, et cetera. So you are the producer of the soil, you are generating the soil. So if you generate a soil that CFCs can grow in, then you're contributing to that process. So your job is to grow a soil, to have a soil in your body that is unhospitable, inhospitable, non-hospitable to CFCs. So when the CFC lands there, it won't survive. Such as I have a tomato seed and I plant it in the Sonoran Desert. I won't be eating tomatoes, that's what you want, but if I'm eating the kind of food that is going to produce a healthy soil for tomato seeds, I will be having tomatoes.
Speaker 1:There's two ways of dealing with that. One is you can kill the CFCs specifically. And number two, make sure there's no soil for them, and that's our job. So it's our job to make sure it doesn't spread, and the way we do that is by eating healthy the right way. Number one and number two we can use certain medications to kill the CFC stem cells, such as ivermectin, such as Mabendazole, such as mycosaline. That's one of the things they also do. So I would not, and I do not use the RGCC since 2004. And for that reason is that the cells that we're making are all they're doing all the testing on and giving you answers to how to deal with it are part of the 0.1% of the cells that break off. That are stem cells.
Speaker 1:Or, if you're eating certain foods or getting chemotherapy or getting radiotherapy, you're also now changing mature CFC cells into stem cells. So therefore, even after you've finished your parasite cleanse, you still want to take a little ivermectin, a little mebendazole, a little niclosamide to prevent recurrence or to prevent it from coming back. So this is Marina, and she says is occasional coffee, or when your body is feeling from CFCs, it's still beneficial to have nut butters. Raw nut butter is all right, okay. So raw nut butter is hard to find and can phytate the nuts into iron absorption, alright.
Speaker 1:So yes, number one. Occasional coffee, and even regular coffee you're not putting anything in it, it's black and it's organic Can be healthy if you don't overdo it. So I would not have roasted nut butters, because roasted nut butters if the seeds have been or the nuts have been roasted prior to making the nut butter, then they've lost lots of their nutrients in the roasting process. They're obviously better to be eaten raw, and it's not raw cashew butter, raw almond butter is delicious, raw tahini. So still healing from CFCs and you'd like to know if roasted nut butter is good or you need raw. And can phytates hinder iron absorption? Phytates can limit a lot of different nutrients, so you need to have healed your leaky gut and other things like that. So the raw nut butter needs to be raw and it's delicious, so don't worry, it won't taste bad. You're used to the other and you're talking about iron absorption. What's more deleterious to iron absorption is having a high stomach pH, because you're no longer to make your stomach acidic enough. And if you get to that point, you're 40, 50, then you start taking betaine, hydrochloric acid, these little tablet capsules 15 minutes before you eat so that your stomach is nice and acidic, the way it should be to deal with the incoming food. All right, now.
Speaker 1:This is Stephanie and she's saying that brain CFCs. I am a mother of three children under the age of five. I had a seizure last month, was rushed to the hospital where they discovered a brain tumor on my right temporal lobe. They did emergency brain surgery to remove it and have diagnosed it with stage four glioblastoma. With EGFR on September 14th, fusion FGR, idh, wild type and an unmatched management gene. We are deciding if we do radiation or should go on a different route. I have been doing a ketogenic diet since out of the hospital, but looking for guidance on the protocols and would it be effective to take ivermectin or dendritic immunotherapy, ozone therapy All right, so okay, a glioblastoma, as we all know, is a very it's got a nasty reputation and the reason is they really have never developed a successful five-year prognosis, you know.
Speaker 1:So they have no specific treatment for it. All right, that's that. I guess the tumor in the brain is your right temporal. The temporal is going to control emotions and stuff like that. So you know it can be a problem and you have three children under the age of five. Wow, that's pretty young. Okay, all right. So you've got this brain tumor.
Speaker 1:First of all, you've got to do this. I don't care where you live. You get an appointment with Emma Abramian in Glendale, california. She's the best biological dentist and you need the best right now. You don't need anybody who might be good, you need the best. Maybe call her and she'll say I live here. Maybe she'll tell you who she would recommend in that area and then go to them. But get in touch with her and let you know. I would implore you to use her.
Speaker 1:But anyway, the reason I'm saying that I've had people with glioblastomas and we just doing the dental work and antiparasitics. They got better. I mean, the glios never get better, right? So it's a big deal. This is a big deal and what this fella had was titanium implants, which is a metal. You don't want any metals in the head. Why? Because there's no pure metal. So when they say it's titanium, what they mean is it's probably about 40% titanium. The rest is other things like aluminum. It's an alloy. An alloy of a muscle, of a metal, is a mixed metal. Even gold is an alloy in the mouth. So you've got to get that out, because that, remember, is blocking or enhancing this. Uh, randomly, some nerve, which one? Was that? Okay now.
Speaker 1:Now, as far as radiation, I I usually do not recommend surgery, radiation or chemo, unless specific situations. And this just might be one of those situations where radiation is necessary. And what I mean by that is that if the tumor is growing so large that it is about to cause the brain herniation, or where it gets knocked off its axis and then you're dead, or it's causing so much edema that you need to be getting rid of edema. So you know, in a situation like that where it's just growing too fast and there's no way you can do anything, and you know already the surgery is just going to grow back, you need to do the radiation, even though we know it increases epithelial mesenchymal transition, which means it turns healthy CFCs into CFC stem cells, so it increases the likelihood of metastasis. All right.
Speaker 1:Now another thing with these brain tumors and overall neurocognitive problems and Alzheimer's and ADHD, all this thing Alzheimer's and ADHD, all these things is that they're made up of a lot of white matter. White matter is surrounded around the gray matter, kind of like it's a protective. So white matter also serves as a conductor. So our peripheral nerves have these myelin sheaths, just like an electrical cord has a rubber sheath, and without it the conduction is very slow and it won't work. The same thing with our nerves. Now many people are on what do they call that?
Speaker 1:Statins, drugs that block cholesterol reduction. Now, all the testing on this has never ever said that if you take statins you have a better quality of life or you have a greater quantity of life. It doesn't look at that. It looks at simply does it lower cholesterol? Because it's the a priori message is there is that cholesterol is bad, when in fact it's not only bad, it's necessary for multiple things. But anyway, by blocking consistently for a number of years with statins correlates with cognitive decline. You're losing your memory and getting some of those other neurodegenerative conditions, alzheimer's. So there's been a parallel increase in the use of statins and a parallel increase of the incidence of alzheimer's, and alzheimer's is not a thing. It's multiple potential criteria and if you meet any part of them, you're you're diagnosed with that. So so there's so many issues at play.
Speaker 1:But the answer your question is if it's growing and it's causing problems, absolutely have to radiate. You have no choice. And clearly surgery just kind of makes it grow back. So now ivermectin and FemBed, absolutely, but I would also take niclosamine. I would take mesoxanide, which is also called Alinea. I would take all of those synergistically three weeks on, one week off.
Speaker 1:Three weeks on one week off. Three weeks on, one week off. And you take high doses 12 milligrams three times a day. Ivermectin 222 milligrams three times a day of fenbendazole or, if it's mebendazole, 500 milligrams three times a day. And then the nitroxonide, 500 milligrams three times a day. And it's three weeks on and one week off. Three weeks on and one week off.
Speaker 1:But before you start you got to make sure your liver function is normal, right. And then there's lots of other treatments. Once you get your and you need to balance hormones and go to sleep early. You do all that you're going to. It's going to start to shrink, but it's not enough. You might need some interventions, such as IV ozone and IV vitamin C and some other things that we that we do. You might also need some IPT.
Speaker 1:Ipt is insulin-potentiated low-dose chemotherapy so that the chemotherapy in the small amounts is directed directly to the tumor and not to other places, which is kind of nice. So it's a very rational way of poisoning something. But if you have to do it for the present. That's the way to do it. I don't know your situation, so you may not need any of that, but in general, when you do need it and that's because you have a severe reaction and you might be not around, then you've got to do it. You've got to act now. So before you go into those situations, you load yourself up with certain antibiotics, anti-protozole, anti-parasitics, all those kinds of protections.
Speaker 1:That was June 8th. Okay, now we're on to Lisa. Have you ever heard of Pro? Is it safe as well as autoimmune? I suppose that to heal the gut after each hair section is a minimal problem. Well, I'm not really sure what you mean by that.
Speaker 1:But pearl powder what is pearl powder? Let me just see what that is. Pearl powder Okay, come on Pearl powder. Pearl powder Okay, come on pearl powder.
Speaker 1:So pearl powder is crushed pearls used in China and elsewhere for skincare, traditional Chinese medicine. It's made from freshwater pearls or salty water pearls below jewelry grade and is sterilized into boiling water before being milled into fine powder. So some studies have claimed that it treats acne by stimulating skin fibroblasts, and it's also useful supports bone health and cognitive decline. All right, so it sounds great. But that's the sales, but what the hell is it? Ground-up pearls, you know, I don't know what's the goal of it.
Speaker 1:Well, you know one thing everybody's always looking for something to take that's going to specifically alter the physiology of what's going on and reduce these tumors and there are. If you actually keep reading, you're going to say, well, there's these trillion things I need to take, but you really don't. You need to fundamentally restore physiology and then the requirements of these interventions will become much, much, much less and they'll work for a long time. It's minerals, amino acids and anticoagulation. It has been celebrated for millennia. So I would definitely have to read about this. I don't know. I mean it sounds plausible, but it's just.
Speaker 1:You know, I don't know about pearl powder. I'm not rejecting it at all, I just don't know. I mean it's, you know, sounds plausible, but it's just. You know I don't know about pearl powder. I'm not rejecting it at all, I just don't know about it. Sorry, you know what? I never answered your question, marina. Is it okay to take occasional coffee? And I did and I said all right, yes, just don't put anything in it. But the brain tumor you got to take care of the teeth first and then you do the antiprotosols, you do the cleansing cleansing, you do everything and you do the IV, vitamin C and stuff like that. You need to go to a clinic that does it all, and the only one I know of is Oasis, and it's not because I'm selling for there, it's because I don't know of another one. And if you do, please tell me Now, wait a minute, is that all the questions for the day?
Speaker 1:That can't possibly be the case. Wait, let me see. I guess that's it. That's it. Excuse me one second.
Speaker 1:I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I Sorry. I've had so many crazy things today. Anyway, sorry. Now, where are we? We are with. We answered all the questions, amazing. Okay, let me look at some of your questions. Then you must have some questions, right? Let me look at your questions. Where are we now? I just tuned in about anything.
Speaker 1:Can you speak about COPD, speak on lungs and COPD? Copd chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which means that there's something obstructing the act of breathing, and chronic means it's going on chronically, so which means there's a condition in there that's preventing it. So which means there's a condition in there that's preventing it. This usually means it usually refers to a condition called asthma or emphysema. And those are really two different kinds of obstructions. One is obstruction coming in and the other one is obstruction going out. So in asthma you can't get it in, so there's wheezing. And that means the little bronchioles, the small little tubes that you know, your bronchus, main bronchus, into the lungs, and then they spread out to bronchial tubes, which are really small little guys with smooth muscles, and they spasm. And when they spasm you're wheezing because you can't get the air in, so they're whistling. So that's one kind of obstructive pulmonary disease. The other one is emphysema, where it's a different kind of thing going on, and what's going on is that there's scar tissue surrounding the little sacs that exchange air, that are the end, the final place for which the air goes to through the bronchioles, where the gas exchange takes place. So around there is, the lung part has been chronically inflamed and it became basically scar tissue, and so you get the air in easily because there's no obstruction. You go and then you can't get it out, so they call the nickname for them is that the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease which is involved with getting it in, such as asthma, is. They're called blue bloaters, and blue because they can get the air in but they can't get it out, and the other ones are red. It's weird because the blood's in but it can't get back Anyway. So there's two different ways to deal with it. With the obstructive asthma, you've got to open those bronchial tubes that are spasming, and what they use is such as Ventolin, there's Atravent, there's Ventolin, there's Albuterol, and those actually they're called beta-2 blockers, and they block. That's kind of how that works. But the emphysema there's nothing really they can do.
Speaker 1:You can do something, though. You can do exactly everything we're talking about, that is, make sure you have your teeth right, you make sure you're not on the lung meridian number one or anything going on. Get that taken care of by a biological dentist, okay. The other one is cleansing the body. Let's get rid of all the toxins. Do our cleansing and our juice feasting and all that sort of thing. Let's live healthy.
Speaker 1:Go to sleep early and you know then you're going to take, you're going to max out on your, on the vitamins that we don't get normally from our food, because our food is so malnourished it's not complete Even if it's organic, it still might have lacking in minerals and lacking in phytonutrients or whatever. All right, so we need to take and that's vitamin A, d, c, e, e, the mixed type, tocotrienols, which is the mixed carotenes, which is lutein and astaxanthin and stuff like that, and I would also recommend Velasta at that point, which is a special kind of astaxanthin. And then, of course, melatonin, lots of melatonin, and the iodine thyroid, which we've talked about a lot of times. You've got to get that going, which means you're going to be taking iodine to replenish it, because we don't get enough in our diets if we're not Japanese. And then our thyroid, which is usually low functioning it can be hyper either way but from low iodine. So while we're replenishing the iodine, we're also taking a natural thyroid medication to make sure that during that time of replenishment we are still having what's called euthyroid, we're functioning healthfully, and we need that because the thyroid is in charge of the energy production of our cells Important and it also is involved very heavily in conducting a healthy immune system. So very important that. And the adrenals. We're doing all of that and we're cleansing and all that, and then we're going to be getting extra antioxidants through an intravenous vitamin C et cetera, and ozone and things like that, and we can reverse a lot of this and we can eliminate a lot of this if we do all these things. We can reverse a lot of this and we can eliminate a lot of this if we do all these things.
Speaker 1:There's another thing that's done interventionally in these kinds of situations and that is intravenous hydrogen peroxide. But you've got to have someone who's trained in it and they get pharmaceutical grade hydrogen peroxide and they use it as 0.03%. It's very low, but it's pharmaceutical grade, meaning it's pure, and it's given at a certain rate in the IV and it's got to go to a certain rate, otherwise you scar the blood vessels, so it goes in at a certain rate. So you've got to have someone trained in that, but that helps tremendously as well. And then there's the other thing of working with your lungs, and that's doing things like pranayama and other kinds of deep breathing. Okay, you've got to restore immune function. Fundamentally, you do the same things you restore physiology, but you can also work specifically with these. But you've got to find out too do you have emphysema because you were born with alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency. It's extremely rare, but you would know it because you did it as a child, so that's usually a very unusual meaning, a source of it. All right, so that in a nutshell, that's COPD.
Speaker 1:Here's Lori asking what are brain lesions? What are brain lesions? Depends on what they are. You know, if you're talking about infarcts, you know like not getting enough blood, then you've got clogged up arteries. If you're talking about, you know like multiple sclerosis, where you've got defects in different aspects of the white matter, that's another thing, right? And then if you're talking about tumors, so it depends on what you're talking about. See, that's why, if you join the group, I would be able to say well, what do you mean? Let's find out what you're talking about. And I can answer the question what is the third antiparasitic, ivermectin? The bend is all begins with an N and it's called niclosamide, which you can find at niclosamcom.
Speaker 1:How can I heal my nervous system? Very good question. When we're talking about the nervous system, there's the central nervous system in the brain, spinal cord, and there's the peripheral nervous system, all of that that goes out of it. Part of that peripheral nervous system is called the autonomic nervous system, which controls all of the non-voluntary things that are going on in our bodies, like heart rate, blood flow to different organs, messages going back and forth from our gut to our brain and back and forth. So there's all sorts of reasons, so you need to heal all of them. So the one that's usually in trouble is our autonomic nervous system, because we're always on sympathetic overdrive. The autonomic nervous system is parasympathetic and sympathetic, so we're usually in sympathetic overdrive. So we need to learn how to stimulate our parasympathetic, and we do that with things like yoga, tai chi, qigong, pranayama, things like that Humming, meditating, humming that will stimulate it. Hot, cold, hot, cold, cold, hot, cold, hot, cold, hot. Nine colds, eight hots, one minute each. Okay, we'll rebalance the autonomic nervous system.
Speaker 1:Peripheral nerves depends on. You had some kind of damage with the peripheral nerves. I don't, you don't know. It can be chemotherapy, it could be diabetes. There's many things that go. So whatever caused it is what you need to work on reversing, and you reverse it by restoring physiology, healthy physiology. There's things that help it, though, so alpha lipoic acid and the B vitamins the B6, the B1 are really and B12, really helpful for peripheral nerves Antioxidants. So there's many, many different things. If we're talking about a central nervous system, again, that's a whole other thing. So we really need more specific. I need to have you in a group so I can, we can.
Speaker 1:After this, janet, after having a tumor removed in my breast and lymph nodes, what is a good protocol to keep it from the VI Great? Well, first of all, you're going to hear the same answer to everything. Because it is the same answer, because everything is caused by the same thing, and that is accumulated toxins, toxins period. A book called Tox, called toxemia, explained 1915 john tilden md. So you have the tumor removed, which again most likely enhances metastasis, and then you remove the lymph nodes, which, okay, it's done.
Speaker 1:We need to really do now is do all the things that we would have done anyway and that we need to do now, and that is start with the biological dentistry, do a thorough eight-week juice cleanse, colon hydrotherapy, lymphatic therapy by a certified lymphatic therapist using the elt wands okay, very, very important. Exercise in different ways. Okay, uh, and that's a whole topic that we'd have to go into Sleeping right, getting the right supplements and you know, diet and hours of eating and all that all the same, and then using higher doses of vitamin C, iv certain times of the week, and ozone, you know, like Eboo once a week or the 10 pass two to three times a week or four times a week. The vitamin C high dose is to get your blood plasma level to 350 milligrams per deciliter. So it doesn't mean how do I know how much you might need? I don't know. We have to find out what your blood plasma is after X amount. But you should be taking a standard amount of vitamin C every day to make sure your physiological requirements are being met. Therefore, when you get the IV, you're going to be able to get up to that therapeutic very easily because you've already taken care of physiology and it doesn't have to fill up the deficit. So there's, you know, all these things are pretty much the same.
Speaker 1:You also want to get rid of the CFC stem cells, and you do that with ivermectin, levendazole and niclosamide. They all do that, and vitamin C does that, and so does curcumin do that, so does doxycycline do that. Those are the ways of eliminating CFC stem cells. All right, so now let's see where we are.
Speaker 1:Do you truly believe there is a cure for every CFC? Big pharma just doesn't allow it. Well, I don't look at it that way. These are CFCs. There's no every kind, there's one kind. It has different locations, it might be in the bladder and the ovary, but it's the same process going on. That's why they call it breast cancer, colon cancer. It's only the first word that's different, and the first word is location. So understand that. So, in other words, can we resolve that physiological adaptation? Yes, we can resolve it by restoring healthy physiology and then that adaptation is no longer necessary.
Speaker 1:Big story, long answer, but it would be too much for this. And you join the groups, please, and I'd be happy, and then you'll also get access to lots of material that explains it and teaches that I just can't do it all like this. That's why I have these groups. Hi, I'm from California. I need help with candida overgrowth, please, all right. Well, candida overgrowth is overgrowing because there are open parking spaces You've got like 100 trillion parking spaces and as soon as they get over, as soon as they get unutilized, someone leaves, something else takes its place. So it's not so much a matter of overgrowth, it's a matter of having an unhealthy gut biome.
Speaker 1:Gut biome there are the different ratios of microorganisms that exist. Keep biochemically keep the yeast, the funguses, at a healthy concentration, the much as we need. That's the way it works. So you've got to restore that instead of trying to kill this, because if you killed this and you didn't restore the healthy biome, other ones that you don't want will get in there. So that's not the answer. But you can use anti-candida stuff, you can eat healthy, and if you're eating healthy you won't be feeding them specifically. But the reason you get candida overgrowth is because you have somehow resulted in a gut biome that does not have the right numbers and proportions of the ones that should be there and so an opportunistic situation they take over. So you don't just kill them, you have to restore a gut biome.
Speaker 1:All right, is there any test to know how my soil is healthy, my cells are healthy? Not really. There's a test called the Comprehensive Digestive Stool Analysis. It used to be done by Great Smokies, which I think it's now been taken over by Genova, I'm not sure, but other ones like that one in Arizona, I can't remember. Anyway, that do these Comprehensive Digestive Stool Analysis, where you give different samples of stool and they look at it for the enzymes that are in there to determine whether or not you're able to produce the appropriate enzymes for your diet or whether they're lacking. It also determines whether or not you are able to handle fat appropriately. It also looks at the microorganisms in there.
Speaker 1:The ones that are what they call pathogenic are the ones that are either don't belong in there at all because they're not, their function and roles are not necessary in our particular gut biome, and so they're causing problems, or you're having too much of something that you should have or not enough of something you should have. So again, it comes back to restoring a healthy gut biome, and the way you do that is by cleansing, eating correctly, at the right intervals, and that'll do it. You don't even need probiotics because it'll restore a balance, but you can take probiotics. In addition to that, and if you want to get rid of the candida because it's causing a specific problem, there's drugs called nystatin, which is swish and swallow, so it gets any candida that may be in your oral cavity, throat or esophagus stomach, your oral cavity throat or esophagus stomach. And there's Diflucan or Fluconazole, which you can take orally 100 milligrams twice a day. But the best way is diet cleansing and get the right bio.
Speaker 1:Stephanie, why will I add myself to the group. Thank you, oh. All right, stephanie, you're welcome. Go to drlodycom and you'll be able to join a group. Thank you, all right, stephanie, you're welcome. Go to drlodycom and you'll be able to join a group.
Speaker 1:Look, it's late now. I don't have a group for emphysema. However, join the Health and Healing group. We can talk about it there. Join the Parasite group we can talk about it. Just join the Health and Healing. We'll deal specifically with emphysema. Anyway, it looks like there's a lot more questions, folks. I'm so sorry Didn't get them all today. Shoot, all right. So namaste, namaskar, tawadikap and aloha to everybody. Have a fantastic week and get healthy. Join these groups. Let's talk more than just this Sunday Night Live. Let's talk twice a week. If you join the CFC group, we'll be talking twice a week for as many hours as we need to answer everybody's questions and you get access to all these other people. It's really amazing. It's very, very important. Join it. I love everybody except Bill Gates, klaus Schwab, I mean some people. I know I'm not perfect, but if you're not evil, I love you and I should love everybody, but I'm just not at that point yet and so I'm not. Anyway, fantastic, see you next week. Aloha.