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Dog dewormer effective for quickly clearing advanced cancer (Fenbendazole)

cancer fenbendazole dewormer

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13 replies to this topic

#1 Fred C. Dobbs

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Posted 28 April 2019 - 10:39 PM


A Merck researcher working on cancer research in mice accidentally discovered a common (and cheap) animal dewormer (Fenbendazole) combined with certain vitamins was astonishingly effective in killing cancer. This researcher had late stage brain cancer and used it on herself, clearing the cancer in 6 to 8 weeks. Here is the research paper on the discovery: https://www.ncbi.nlm...les/PMC2687140/
 
Blogger Joe Tippens had metastasized small cell lung cancer. MD Anderson told him the survivability for his widely metastatic small cell is 0%, with a median/mean survival of 3 months. Joe got word of the dewormer discovery, and after 3.5 months on the dewormer and some supplements (vitamin E, curcumin, and CBD oil), he was clear of cancer.
 
Joe's story has gotten a lot of attention. Many people have contacted him about their own use of the dewormer based on Joe's experience. Joe provides details about his results and those of people who have contacted him on his blog, here: https://www.mycancerstory.rocks
 
Joe recently started a very active Facebook group where people with mostly very advanced cancers are sharing their experience on Joe's protocol. https://www.facebook...ncerstoryrocks/
 
Here is a good summary on the use of Fenbendazole for cancer: https://www.cancertr...m/fenbendazole/
 

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#2 Mind

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Posted 28 April 2019 - 11:06 PM

Sounds interesting. Hopefully more people will try it and we will get a better feel for the success rate. N=2 is a pretty small sample.


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#3 Fred C. Dobbs

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Posted 28 April 2019 - 11:28 PM

Joe reports on about 40 other success stories on his bog.

 

The Facebook group is very active and has 2,827 Members, with over 1000 joined in the last 30 days. There should be many anecdotal results there soon.

 

The dewormer is cheap, common and apparently has very low risk for side effects.



#4 zorba990

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Posted 29 April 2019 - 02:37 AM

What is the mechanism of action here? Is this related to the oft maligned Hulda Clark's work?

Edited by zorba990, 29 April 2019 - 02:37 AM.


#5 Fred C. Dobbs

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Posted 29 April 2019 - 05:07 AM

Here is a good related study titled "Fenbendazole acts as a moderate microtubule destabilizing agent and causes cancer cell death by modulating multiple cellular pathways": 
 
 
According to this study, "Altogether, our findings show microtubule disruption, p53 stabilization and interference with glucose metabolism as collective underlying mechanisms of FZ induced preferential elimination of cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo."
 
As far as I can determine, the cancer is not able to use glucose, so it starves.
 
There could be a relationship to Hulda Clark's work.


#6 mikeinnaples

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Posted 02 May 2019 - 01:05 PM

Another dewormer, mebendazole, had excellent results on mast cell tumors in canines. It shrunk my elderly dog's inoperable tumor away to nearly nothing. It did come back later but she was too frail to try the treatment again at age 15. We started it, but her gastro was a wreck and even with some meds to help with that, we couldn't keep her going. Had to make the tough decision regarding what was most comfortable for her that late in life. Anyhow, I do not find this result with another drug in this class too shocking. Thanks for sharing.


Edited by mikeinnaples, 02 May 2019 - 01:05 PM.

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#7 Mind

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Posted 04 May 2019 - 10:28 AM

A couple things to keep in mind.

 

1. So far, this looks like a "multivariable" experiment. Fenbendazole was combined with cbd oil and "certain vitamins" in the mouse and/or human success stories.

 

2. Spontaneous cancer remission (due to placebo or other unknown mechanisms) do occur. I have heard of many spectacular one-off cancer success stories in the past.

 

Does anyone know if fenbendazole is off patent?



#8 joesixpack

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Posted 05 May 2019 - 01:18 AM

A couple things to keep in mind.

 

1. So far, this looks like a "multivariable" experiment. Fenbendazole was combined with cbd oil and "certain vitamins" in the mouse and/or human success stories.

 

2. Spontaneous cancer remission (due to placebo or other unknown mechanisms) do occur. I have heard of many spectacular one-off cancer success stories in the past.

 

Does anyone know if fenbendazole is off patent?

In reading through the blog, he mentions a discussion with his Dr. in which he asks why more work has not been done with this substance. The Dr. opined that no one wants to try to cash in on an off patent drug, as they will just be fighting lots of low cost competition.



#9 pamojja

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Posted 05 May 2019 - 11:24 AM

2. Spontaneous cancer remission (due to placebo or other unknown mechanisms) do occur. I have heard of many spectacular one-off cancer success stories in the past.

 

Found the work of Kelly Turner illuminating, who worked at a place counseling cancer patients. Coming across such spontaneous remissions, she set out to find out more about it and found thousands such case studies in the literature. Disappointed that these case studies just reported the 'spontaneous' remissions, but never actually asked the patients what they've done differently, she set out to do just that and interviewed spontaneous remission patients.

 

Kelly A. Turner, Ph.D., Radical Remission, Surviving Cancer Agianst All Odds

 

During the course of the study, Kelly identified more than seventy-five factors that cancer survivors said they used as a part of their healing journey. Nine of these factors were used by almost every one of them. They are as follows:

 

1. Radically change the diet
Let your food be your medicine, and medicine your food (Hippocrates)
- avoid sugar, meat, dairy products and processed foods
- eat lots of fruits and vegetables
- limit to organic food
- drink only filtered water
 

2. Take control of health
Action is the basic key to success (Pablo Picasso)
- actively participate
- be prepared for change
- resolve resistance
 

3. Follow your own intuition
In vital matters, the decision should come from the unconscious, somewhere from within (Sigmund Freud)
- listen to body signals
- activate the intuition
- find the right change
 

4. Take herbs and food supplements
The art of healing comes from nature and not from the physician (Paracelsus)
- help digestion: digestive enzymes, prebiotics and probiotics
- boost the immune system: e.g. Vitamin C, other vitamins (B12, D3, K2), fish oil, trace elements, certain edible fungi, aloe vera; and hormones (melatonin)
- detoxify the body:
- antimycotics (eg olive leaf extract, celery, nettle)
- antiparasitic substances (eg wormwood, yellow root, black nut husks)
- antibacterial and antiviral (eg garlic, oregano oil, Pau d'Arco)
- liver detoxification (eg milk spotted dwarf, dandelion root, sweet tooth root)
- supplements alone is not enough
 

5. Release oppressed emotions
Anger is an acid which can cause much greater damage to the vessel in which it is stored than to what it pours (Mark Twain)
- disease is blockade
- what are suppressed emotions?
- stress and cancer
- anxiety and cancer
- the waterfall solution
 

6. Enhance positive emotions
The meaning of life is to be happy (Dalai Lama)
- what are positive emotions?
- what are the positive emotions in the body?
- happiness must be practiced daily
- but one does not have to be permanently happy
 

7. Allow social support
In poverty and misery, friends are the only refuge (Aristotle)
- experience love
- do not feel alone
- physical contact
 

8. Deepen the spiritual connection
This is the greatest mistake in the treatment of diseases: that there are doctors for the body and physicians for the soul, where both can not be separated (Plato)
- experience spirituality
- a third kind of love
- the relationship between the physical and the spiritual
- it is important to exercise regularly
- it is important to calm the mind
 

9. Have strong reasons for life
People say that it is the meaning of life that we all seek. I do not believe that this is what we are really looking for. I believe what we are looking for is an experience of being alive ... (Joseph Campbell)
- placing deep trust in one's inner being
- the mind directs the body
- find one's calling
 

http://www.radicalremission.com/

 

This is only a rough outline, some even added meat back in to their diet. I too find the adjective 'radical' more appropriate.


Edited by pamojja, 05 May 2019 - 11:26 AM.

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#10 xEva

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Posted 05 May 2019 - 09:48 PM

Fenben is off patent and sold OTC as a dewormer for pets, cattle and horses. I think it is the least toxic of all benzimidazoles, which I have researched years ago. Just now I bumped into Repurposing Drugs in Oncology (ReDO)—mebendazole as an anti-cancer agent, 2014, which is about a very similar compound registered for human use. There is no financial incentive to clinically test it in cancer patients, though there are plenty of expensive cancer drugs that are also microtubule-disrupting agents (main feature of benzimidazoles, except that benzimidazole dewormers are less toxic to microtubules of healthy mammalian cells). Fenben is very similar to mebendazole, the only diff is that it has S where =O is in mebendazole:

 

440px-Fenbendazole.svg.png

450px-Mebendazole.svg.png


Edited by xEva, 05 May 2019 - 09:50 PM.

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#11 Mind

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Posted 06 May 2019 - 04:01 PM

According to an informal facebook poll from the group:

 

26 cases that were success stories

13 cases where cancer remained stable or progressed.


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#12 Mind

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Posted 08 October 2023 - 03:27 PM

Has anyone heard of any other studies in regards to Fenbenzadole? Any other patient success stories?


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#13 Vitalist

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Posted 08 October 2023 - 10:18 PM

Has anyone heard of any other studies in regards to Fenbenzadole? Any other patient success stories?

 

Yes, there's lots of testimony on Twitter (X) about fenbendazole curing cancer.
 
Here's a couple of short video testimonies
 
 

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#14 boylan

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Posted 13 October 2023 - 02:24 PM

Here's Joe Tippens' FB page - https://www.facebook...44815949755622/

 

Here's his blog - https://mycancerstory.rocks/the-blog/







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