A. KEITH BREWER, Ph.D.
A.. Keith Brewer Science Library,
325 N. Central Ave., Richland Center, WI
53581
TESTS OF THE HIGH pH THERAPY ON MICE AND
HUMANS
The therapy has been tested and the
results will be discussed briefly below.
Tests on Mice
The High pH therapy was first tested
at American University in Washington, DC using mice. In
these tests, 2 mm cubes of mammary tumors were implanted in
the abdomens of mice and allowed to grow for 8 days. The
mice were then
divided into two groups. Both groups
were continued on mouse chow, but the test group was given
1.11 g of rubidium carbonate by mouth per day in aqueous
solution. After 13 more days the controls were starting to
die so all mice were sacrificed and the tumors removed and
weighed. The tumors in the test animals weighed only one
eleventh of those in the controls. In addition, the test
animals were showing none of the adverse effects of having
cancer [3].
Results similar to those mentioned
above were obtained at Platteville, WI using CsCl. More
recently, Platteville has studied intraperitoneal injection
of cesium carbonate for mice with abdominal tumor implants
with 97% curative effect.
Tests using intraperitoneal injections
of CsCl were carried out by Messiha et al.
[21]. The results were most successful and showed a
drastic shrinkage in the tumor masses.
Tests on Man
Many tests on humans have been carried
out by H. Nieper in Hannover, Germany and by H. Sartori in
Washington, DC as well as by a number of other physicians.
On the whole, the results have been very satisfactory. It
has been observed that all pains associated with cancer
disappear within 12 to 24 hr, except in a very few cases
where there was a morphine withdrawal problem that required
a few more hours. In these tests 2 g doses of CsCl were
administered three times per day after eating. In most cases
5 to 10 g of Vitamin C and 100,000 units of Vitamin A, along
with 50 to 100 mg of zinc, were also administered. Both
Nieper and Sartori were also administering nitrilosides in
the form of laetrile. There are good reasons to believe that
the laetrile may be more effective than the vitamins in
enhancing the pickup of cesium by the cells.
In addition to the loss of pains, the
physical results are a rapid shrinkage of the tumor masses.
The material comprising the tumors is secreted as uric acid
in the urine; the uric acid content of the urine increases
many fold. About 50% of the patients were pronounced
terminal, and were not able to work. Of these, a majority
have gone back to work.
Two side effects have been observed in
some of the patients. These are first nausea, and the second
diarrhea. Both depend upon the general condition of the
digestive tract. Nieper feels that nausea can be prevented
by administering the cesium in a solution of sorbitol. The
diarrhea may, to some extent, be affected by the Vitamin
C.
Only one case history will be
presented here. A woman with 2 hard tumor masses 8 to 10 cm
in diameter, one on her thyroid and one on her chest, was
given 3 to 6 months to live. She had been subjected to
chemotherapy, but was discontinued because it weakened her.
She was taking laetrile on her own. She was given a 50 g
bottle of CsCl and was told to take 4 g per day. She
reported her case a year later. Being very frightened she
took the entire 50 g in one week. At the end of that time
the tumor masses were very soft, so she obtained another 50
g of CsCl and took it in another week. By the end of that
time she could not find the tumors, and two years later
there was no sign of their return.