Insulin Potentiation Therapy - IPT - Low Dose Chemotherapy

9 months ago
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Insulin Potentiation Therapy | IPT | Low Dose Chemotherapy
https://www.anoasisofhealing.com/ipt-low-dose-chemotherapy/

Insulin Potentiation Therapy or often called IPT hasn’t always been called by that name. Dr Steven Ayre was a Canadian physician living in the US who was responsible for bringing this effective alternative cancer treatment to the states in the 1990’s.

The Donato Perez Garcia lineage of doctors from Mexico actually invented what is now called IPT. Dr. Steven Ayre worked closely with this family on making the IPT cancer treatment what it is today.

Insulin Potentiation therapy is based on sound science. What’s really interesting as well is that IPT actually predates Chemotherapy.

Cancer is cells that have changed in many ways. Cancer cells are fermenting cells that have different requirements. One of those requirements is that they need a lot of glucose. In fact, they need 19 times more glucose than normal healthy cells.

Now, in order to get more glucose, they have up-regulated certain enzymes like insulin receptors. Cancer cells have many, many more insulin receptors when compared to normal cells. When anything sweet or sugary is consumed, the cancer cells eat first.

To further illustrate this point, it has been used and continues to be used by the conventional world as a diagnostic tool. They use it in the form of a PET scan. When someone receives a PET scan they are injected with fluoro deoxyglucose which is a radioactive glucose.

They then wait an hour and then scan you and where there is a rapid uptake of glucose they can identify that as cancer. Only above a certain threshold would cancer be consuming glucose at that rate.

When you understand this concept, this is where we use it as a Trojan horse. The person we are administering it to comes into our healing center in the morning after not having eaten from the night before. They are given a certain amount of insulin based on certain conditions and body weight.

The amount of insulin we use is equivalent to the same amount one would secrete during a normal meal which is not a large amount. The goal is to open up cancer cells, not to make someone sick. Why do we want to open the cancer cells up? Well, they have more insulin receptors and hence they will be saturated first.

What this creates is a window of time when the cancer cells are open before the normal healthy cells because they have eaten first. This is called the therapeutic window or therapeutic moment. During this window of time is when the drugs are administered. And, it’s usually between 20 to 40 minutes after the insulin has been given.

The process is then closed by having the person eat something and that stops the insulin cascading that has been occurring. It’s important to note that not one person, worldwide, has ever died from this therapy. We can’t say that for other therapies being used.

People receive the benefits of this therapy without all the horrible side effects of conventional chemotherapy.

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