The Key to Managing Cancer is Unrelated to What Oncologists Practice

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

Комментарии • 106

  • @bobporch
    @bobporch 16 часов назад +19

    I am stunned! This is no doubt the most important video, lecture, or presentation I have ever watched. I was a 9/11 responder and so far have dodged the bullet. Twice I have been told "we think this is cancer." On two other occasions the doctors were sure I had cancer but the biopsies came back negative. Fellow responders have not been so fortunate. More have died of cancer and lung disease than the number of people murdered outright on 9/11. I intend to save and download this under the title of "Best Medical Video."

    • @kittyhooch1
      @kittyhooch1 11 часов назад

      Dr Thomas Seyfried took the work of Dr Otto Warburg and proved it. Warburg won a Nobel Prize in 1932 for his work in cancer tumor respiration, stating that instead of oxidative phosphorylation, cancer ferments glucose to make ATP. Normal cellular respiration has the mitochondria producing ATP very efficiently. Cancer is very inefficient, and fermentation is more acidic. Many people have taken the wrong lesson, thinking a more Alkaline pH would kill cancer. This just proves they don't understand biology. Blood pH has nothing to do with digestion. It's controlled be our breathing, and if it leaves a very narrow range you die. Hyperbaric oxygen is interesting because cancer is anaerobic and the first great dying was anaerobic life being poisoned by oxygen. Poetic. Dr Seyfried took Normal and cancer cells and switched the nucleus, and mitochondria. The behavior followed the mitochondria. That was in 1975. By the end of the decade the theory of oncogenes was the shiny object. A decade later the human genome was sequenced and it was declared the other 98% of our genes were garbage. A decade later epigenetics was a field of study. Dr Seyfried says not all cancers have specific genetic expression. Clearly oncogenes aren't universally applicable. Logically cancer could cause epigenetic changes. Dr Seyfried mentioned Don for glutamine blocking. He uses press/pulse therapy. Most people use glucose metabolism, but ketones have advantages that express in metabolism, cancer, diabetes, neurdegenerative disease and more. I beat diabetes with it. Regarding Don, JHU083 is a derivative that only regulates glutamine in the tumor, while boosting the immune system. Glutamine is essential for the immune system, which is why it must be pulsed. I was recently diagnosed with uveal melanoma and am recovering. Cancer went from a fear to a field of study. In addition to blocking glutamine as food the SLC7A11 pathway transports amino acids, including cysteine, which along with glutamine can be used to make glutathione, an antioxidant. Cancer is highly susceptible to ROS and can suffer ferroptosis from extreme peroxidization events. Also high serum melatonin reduces and fights cancer. Another Dr with great information is Dr Casey Peavler, who uses Dr Seyfried as a model for treatment.

  • @Papadoc1000
    @Papadoc1000 День назад +25

    Yes! Everything this man says lights and fire in my brain. It's the line that connects all the dots. Alas, there is so little money to be made in proper diet/fasting protocols and hyperbaric treatment. And so few oncologists who have the courage to step outside the accepted toxin protocols.

    • @wagnerw8364
      @wagnerw8364 6 часов назад +1

      Cancer is by far the most profitable desease ever!

  • @janesantangelo1447
    @janesantangelo1447 19 часов назад +9

    I can feel Dr. Seyfried’s pain and disgust! I feel it too😢

  • @Fred-y8w
    @Fred-y8w День назад +16

    Everyone needs to watch this video,GREAT PODCAST. Thank you Dr Seyfried.

  • @MarcapadaMY
    @MarcapadaMY 8 часов назад +4

    We have proven him correct. We more than 40 successful cases, mostly stage 4 tumours, recovered to full remission. And, the numbers are growing... Thank you

    • @egg399.
      @egg399. 5 часов назад

      people in my group are not having success with hbot and d.

    • @eliasvonbernstorff6762
      @eliasvonbernstorff6762 25 минут назад

      @egg399. which group? Are they really not having success with metabolic therapy?

  • @totomarnantokadri3717
    @totomarnantokadri3717 10 часов назад +5

    Thank you very much Dr. Seyfried

  • @Kiihhu2
    @Kiihhu2 23 часа назад +10

    I love that this channel is starting to gain some traction! 🤩21.9k subs in just about 4 months, or 132 days, that's an average of 166 subs a day and rising! :)

  • @martinlouden9005
    @martinlouden9005 День назад +20

    I believe the industry knows that their standard of care is toxic and ineffective. It's nothing short of a protection racket.

    • @Jimfrenchde
      @Jimfrenchde День назад +5

      I hope you are wrong. If you are right, these people are guilty of crimes against humanity.

    • @SimKunaknana
      @SimKunaknana 19 часов назад +2

      Cancer drugs make them rich and I’m sure the doctors get a kick back.

    • @wagnerw8364
      @wagnerw8364 6 часов назад

      And the tons of money they make? How profitable is to be wrong😂😂😂

    • @egg399.
      @egg399. 5 часов назад

      @@Jimfrenchdethey are

  • @goingdark1916
    @goingdark1916 20 часов назад +8

    Sitting here watching this video…
    10 months post Oesophageal Cancer and sub total surgery carried out only to be told today that the Cancer has spread to Liver, Lung, Bones (Rib) and lower spine!…
    What makes this frustrating is the fact I have complained about the continued pain in my lower back and upper back (Between shoulder blades) and being totally ignored! 10 months and absolutely no response other than you have undergone serious surgery it will improve…
    I am now being offered palliative chemotherapy and immunotherapy as the only alternative….
    Needless to say as many others my trust in the system is pretty much on its last legs!…

    • @KarinaLoren
      @KarinaLoren 14 часов назад +7

      Did you try Ivermectin and Fenbendazole yet? I didn't take the offer from the cancer center team and started reading instead. One of the first protocols I came across was as well coauthored from Seyfried. In short: I follow a hybrid approach metabolic 'therapy' with IVM plus ABZ.

    • @goingdark1916
      @goingdark1916 7 часов назад +2

      @ I am based in the UK therefore Ivermectin is not readily available albeit I have seen it in agricultural shops (Not sure if it’s suitable as advertised an animal wormer)? Can I ask…what is ABZ?

    • @noircc
      @noircc 7 часов назад

      ​@@goingdark1916 I am no doctor. But I would strongly emphasis a therapeutic keto with fasting periods with GKI < 1.0.
      Also do a hyperbaric oxygen therapy (look up press pulse protocol from Prof. Seyfried).
      You could als try to combine it with Panacur (fenbendazol) -> NOT everyday look up Joe Tippens Protocol.
      Pray for you.

    • @KarinaLoren
      @KarinaLoren 6 часов назад

      @goingdark1916 I'm in Egypt, and they don't have Mebendazole or Fenbendazole so I take Albendazole. It works too. At least you could order it from the USA. Here no parcel passes customs without diligent inspection, heavy additional customs, and hours of traveling to the related authorities..)

    • @egg399.
      @egg399. 5 часов назад

      @@goingdark1916 albendazole

  • @Kiihhu2
    @Kiihhu2 23 часа назад +3

    I've long been curious what is the link between not being able to do oxidative phosphorylation and uncontrolled cell division. This video finally sheds some light to that. The very organelle that controls apoptosis, gets dysfunctional and corrupt. I hadn't heard this from any of the Seyfrieds previous lectures.

    • @joevans5713
      @joevans5713 4 часа назад +1

      He wrote about it in his treatise, published in 2012

  • @HannaShumska
    @HannaShumska 7 часов назад +1

    Thank you for your job.

  • @ChrisRoseHK
    @ChrisRoseHK 16 часов назад +4

    Amen.

  • @impopn3
    @impopn3 Час назад

    Awesome, thank you sir!

  • @caeran4life
    @caeran4life 23 часа назад +10

    I have breast cancer and my team wants to put me on chemo, surgery then radiation. My cancer is not in my lymph nodes and I feel strong and healthy! I am more scared after seeing this. What can patients do? Challenge the Oncologists and surgeons who have been doing this for decades? I dont have time to argue but I do not want to become disabled from chemo/radiation either! I dont know, this is alot of information to digest, I feel helpless

    • @tanyawilliamson8407
      @tanyawilliamson8407 22 часа назад +2

      It's still your choice. Are they going to remove your tumor first, and after that, chemo and radiation treatment?

    • @robertmccabe8632
      @robertmccabe8632 22 часа назад +2

      Choose.
      You know what is coming.
      Life is all about choices and outcomes.
      Metabolism.
      Food feeds metabolism for good or bad outcomes.

    • @markhedger6378
      @markhedger6378 21 час назад +3

      Dr jack kruse would also recommend tropical sunshine, non blue light environment high magnetic locations (i.e., black beaches) grounding and fasting FA, and ketones check out his early podcasts

    • @LPOUT-y4k
      @LPOUT-y4k 20 часов назад +4

      Go carnivore, lots of vitamin D3. Fasting 2 days before chemo. To avoid the nausea. Monitor the cancer. See if it shrinks. Don’t do a protocol of conventional cancer treatment. They tend to plan too much. I would not do radiation. That might bite you years from now. Lots of love❤

    • @Bilge-Tekin
      @Bilge-Tekin 8 часов назад

      Pls follow Prof Seyfreid's protocol, intermittent fasting, while taking Ivermectin & Fenbendazole combinations, eg Paragone because tumor is parasitic infection.

  • @RegenerateYourHealth
    @RegenerateYourHealth 21 час назад +3

    I wonder if IV NAD+ help you overcome the mitochondrial dysfunction, since NAD helps boost mitochondria? In addition to Ketones and Fenben, and ivermectin....

  • @kathleen.d.1231
    @kathleen.d.1231 23 часа назад +3

    Regarding mitochondrial damage, I wonder if the “point of no return” be quantified?

    • @pterakau
      @pterakau 14 часов назад +2

      Yes,below 50% of energy product by OXPHOS

    • @egg399.
      @egg399. 5 часов назад

      @@pterakauso there is still some oxphos going on inside a cancer cells?

  • @Bilge-Tekin
    @Bilge-Tekin 9 часов назад +1

    What makes the organelle called mitochondria become defective to start with?
    What can we do to avoid it?

    • @MarcapadaMY
      @MarcapadaMY 8 часов назад +2

      Inflammation...

    • @Bilge-Tekin
      @Bilge-Tekin 8 часов назад

      @MarcapadaMY parasite related infection?

    • @joevans5713
      @joevans5713 4 часа назад

      There are several leading environmental causes, but a main one is oxidative stress from Reactive Oxygen Species, which rips through mitochondria/DNA/cells. The ROS are often caused by AGEs (advanced glycation end-products - a byproduct of over-consuming carbohydrates/sugars to name a few things in our unhealthy modern diets). Check out your AGEs score if you have a smartwatch - quite frightening…

  • @dctrex
    @dctrex 18 часов назад +4

    Yeah, but Dr Seyfried but talking in circles. What would you recommend? From what I'm hearing, I believe you're telling cancer patients to do intermittent fasting to reduce the consumption of glucose therefore breaking the fermentation cycle right? You probably would need some kind of drug to suppress the glutamine production as well. Am I on the right track?

    • @liia9736
      @liia9736 13 часов назад +2

      yeah, it's very frustrating to listen to him talk bc as a patient he doesn't really give any clear path. He always seems more concerned with sounding 'legit' than actually being helpful. Maybe its a legal thing, idk. Neither his website nor his book are any better.
      But, what it seems to come down to is doing keto(no sugar) fasting, specifically 1-2 days before treatment, the day of, and 1-2 days after. Many people also include invermectin and fenbendazole taken 3 x/week but some do it daily though you want to give the fenben a rest every few days.
      There is a glutamine antagonist that he references here he refers to as "DON" 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine, but it's illegal to buy except for approved chemists.
      This is what I have put together over the past few months (my mother is sick). Hope that helps!

    • @joevans5713
      @joevans5713 4 часа назад

      @@liia9736You’re exactly right and yes, Dr Seyfried has to be careful what he says, though he is freer to speak now that he doesn’t gave a medical licence to lose I believe. He and others have been proposing this theory for over a decade….the roots of it began with Dr Otto Warburg over a century ago.
      This new theory is in direct opposition to the juggernauts of current cancer theory & treatment - the system that is used to train Doctors; the hospitals, Universities, pharmaceutical companies, insurance companies. Combined, they are trillion dollar industries. Not to mention government, private and business-backed agencies, corporations and regulatory bodies that are the status quo. Everything the Specialist have spent a fortune on and great deal of their time learning, is going to be proven wrong eventually. I heard a statistic that stated that new medical theories take on average, 20 years to be one accepted, taught and used….think of the early days of germ theory, cross-contamination and infection, vaccination, pasteurisation etc.

  • @sergiopozo4062
    @sergiopozo4062 19 часов назад +2

    👌🏼💯 Thanks!!!

  • @salleone6387
    @salleone6387 День назад +1

    So enjoy this content. When I look at opposing views on managing cancer with Keto, much of the information I find is that certain cancers can use fat to grow, like leukemia?

    • @hermanreulens2767
      @hermanreulens2767 23 часа назад +4

      My understanding is that fat can not easily be used by the cancer cells in the absence of glucose and glutamine.

    • @TalkingCancer-u4k
      @TalkingCancer-u4k  18 часов назад +8

      While it is true that some cancers can uptake small amounts of fatty acids and ketones, their ability to do so is minuscule and is neither necessary nor sufficient to maintain cancer cell growth.

    • @shellyburris5918
      @shellyburris5918 15 часов назад

      Thank you for your work, sir. I was recently diagnosed with melanoma and I find hope when I listen to you explain the error of somatic mutation theory. ​@TalkingCancer-u4k

  • @hobrosture3537
    @hobrosture3537 День назад +2

    My view is overall as Thomas. That said I believe that most tumors uses most of the oxygen that is delivered to the tumor.
    However most tumor are hypoxic in general and in areas and over time all tumor is experiencing extreme hypoxia and must utilise glucose to survive.
    Glucose is so much more abundant and becomes the lifeline for hypoxic tumor cells!

    • @yelowfruit
      @yelowfruit День назад

      Will a carnivore diet heal this ?

    • @aj-uo3uh
      @aj-uo3uh День назад +1

      But according to Seyfried tumor cells have broken mitochondria and oxphos is not working, so how do they use the oxygen.

    • @hobrosture3537
      @hobrosture3537 День назад +3

      @@yelowfruit The diet that can have and proven to have an effect on cancer is a medical ketogenic diet! Here I fully agree with Thomas.

    • @hobrosture3537
      @hobrosture3537 День назад +2

      @@aj-uo3uh Here we are in an academic disagreement. Guppy in 2004 showed that cancer cells used similar amount of OXPHOS as healthy cells in Vitro, with no or litle problem with OXPHOS. For some cell lines this may not be true! But in general cancer cells can and will use oxygen is present!
      However in tumors that are generally hypoxic cancer cells that consume more energy and ATP must switch to use more glycolysis for ATP to survive!
      Therefore I agree with Thomas that true tumor cell must ferment and our view on why they generally switch to glucose is not completely in line! But we are in line that glucose are essential for tumor cells!
      Also agree around that glutamine is essential for them!

    • @aj-uo3uh
      @aj-uo3uh День назад

      @@hobrosture3537 Ok, this would be opposite to Warburgs research that in the presence of oxygen tumor cells are fermenting and convert pyruvate to lactate. I guess it depends on the cell line then.

  • @ignaciourena5692
    @ignaciourena5692 День назад +1

    Cisplatin - Docetaxel saved my life ...

    • @ec6992
      @ec6992 9 часов назад

      Avastin is saving mine

  • @cliftongolden2
    @cliftongolden2 22 часа назад +3

    Keytruda cost 11500 every three weeks these methods won’t make that kind of money

  • @alfredzig2035
    @alfredzig2035 День назад +3

    C'mon, if it's so simple why NO, not a single hospital in the whole world, treats their patients this simple way?

    • @stevenholden2814
      @stevenholden2814 День назад +6

      Because you can enter ketosis for free. Hospitals want you hooked up to their expensive machines and injecting expensive medicines.💸

    • @alfredzig2035
      @alfredzig2035 День назад

      ​@@stevenholden2814 C'mon, I'm talking about the WHOLE WORLD ... There are dozens of countries which health system is based around (rather) minimalistic principles - to cure the patient at the lowest possible cost, so the system can handle more people. They really don't look forward to paying for extremely expensive drugs from USA, UK, Switzerland and they'd love to apply this cheap way of treatment ... if it really worked.

    • @cbunix23
      @cbunix23 23 часа назад +3

      There is no treatment based on this research at this time. He and his team completed a seven-year research project showing cancer ferments glutamine only one month ago. His next research project is to determine treatments. Look up his earlier videos for more details.

    • @kathleen.d.1231
      @kathleen.d.1231 23 часа назад +5

      Money and a humiliating admission of massive error.

    • @alfredzig2035
      @alfredzig2035 23 часа назад

      @@cbunix23 But why isn't ? If it's so simple to implement those principles into actual treatment?

  • @douglascutler1037
    @douglascutler1037 19 часов назад

    100 different types of gas cars on the road, all with variations in their engines and drive trains. You want to take ALL of those cars off the road . . . drain the gas tanks.
    Or buy EV . . . but the blocked fuel source is the metaphor we are going for here.

  • @highlander7326
    @highlander7326 14 часов назад

    Put in plain English, what to eat, what not to eat. Foods

  • @jasoncook9003
    @jasoncook9003 День назад

    You keep saying how easy it is to control the fuels for cancer but you don’t say how to control glutamine.

    • @Redefine18
      @Redefine18 23 часа назад +2

      DON, but its not easy to get thats the main problem. They are working on a protocol on how to pulse glutamine properly. The problem is, you cant surpress is too much or too long as your brain and liver cant go without it

    • @kathleen.d.1231
      @kathleen.d.1231 23 часа назад

      He does. But he doesn’t say it’s actually easy.

    • @JimmyRickardsson
      @JimmyRickardsson 17 часов назад +1

      I believe the answer to controlling glutamine is excercise - our bodies need glutamine, so I would say it is more a matter of making sure that as little as possible gets to the tumor

    • @egg399.
      @egg399. 5 часов назад

      @@Redefine18haemoglobin need glucose as they don’t have mitochondria. yes the other cell is a brain cell, not sure which type of cell.

  • @dmarcellus
    @dmarcellus 19 часов назад

    So my question is as follows. Doesn't your immune system - macrophages/etc. require glutamine to function properly? So won't restricting glutamine cause immune dysfunction.

    • @JimmyRickardsson
      @JimmyRickardsson 18 часов назад +1

      As our body requires glutamine to function, I believe one of the correct ways to mitigate this is excercising, to make sure that we limit amount of glutamine that the cancer cells can get access to.

    • @egg399.
      @egg399. 5 часов назад

      yes but the idea is to like the glutamine inhibitors for short periods so as not to starve the healthy cells, gut and immune system. The cancer cells need a continual supply of glutamine and glucose.

    • @dmarcellus
      @dmarcellus 3 часа назад

      @egg399. So unless you have access to glutamine inhibitors (i.e. Pharmacological intervention) GKI and Keto are in an of themselves not sufficient?

  • @charlesharper285
    @charlesharper285 21 час назад

    Can brain tumors be treated in this way? Isn't glucose the only fuel available to the brain?

    • @LPOUT-y4k
      @LPOUT-y4k 20 часов назад +3

      No. Fat can be used as fuel for the brain.

    • @JimmyRickardsson
      @JimmyRickardsson 18 часов назад +5

      Ketones work for the brain

    • @JimmyRickardsson
      @JimmyRickardsson 18 часов назад +2

      And our body does by the way produce glucose, in a regulated way

    • @egg399.
      @egg399. 5 часов назад

      There is a type of brain cell that does need glucose BUT we can get out blood glucose very low 9mg/dl or 0.5mmol/l and stay alive (not doing anything physical though) and the study showed the subjects were all fine.

  • @lluxflorida3
    @lluxflorida3 19 часов назад +4

    Doxorubicin El Diablo. I have stage 4 lung cancer. Liomyosarcoma. 6 rounds at my 4th and some have shrunk the lung mass stayed the same. Right arm bone, grew some . Using iver and fenben supplements. Need to do diet and add exercise.

    • @shellyburris5918
      @shellyburris5918 14 часов назад +2

      God bless you and restore you to perfect health 🙏 ❤️

    • @liia9736
      @liia9736 13 часов назад

      Yeah, stop being a stubborn punk and get on it lady.

    • @egg399.
      @egg399. 5 часов назад +1

      I find the carnivore diet the best way to get into ketosis with a gki