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Date: | Sat, 15 Feb 1997 09:02:55 -0800 |
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Ron Hoggan wrote:
The exogenous (from outside the body) opioid peptides may behave in a
fashion similar to endogenous (from inside the body) opioids. They may
attach at the HPA (hypothalmic, pituitary, adrenal) axis, causing a
downregulation of the activation of Natural Killer Cells, the body's
first line of defence against malignancy.
>
The hormones make it grow, and NK cells are deactivated. That sounds
like a perfect formula for cancer.
Dear Ron,
Well, it's back to MEDLINE for me! You have added some intriuging
points for further study on my part. THANK YOU!
Yesterday I spend a fascinating hour with Sam Chachoua, M.D. During
that time all we discussed were killer cells and spontaneous remissions
that Sam has obtained in cancer and AIDS patients with his unique
curative technology.
Dr. Chachoua is about to undertake a 100 patient study at NYU and is
interested in additional trials at other Universities. He will
personally donate $10,000 to any institution conducting an independent
evaluation of his work. He can be reached at 714-962-4991.
Robert
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