For an M.D. Cardiologist to make it his mission to prove how effective vitamin C can be in the treatment of coronary heart disease and other infectious diseases, really shows how medical views are slowly starting to change and how important nutrition is in the total picture of our health.
If I personally had a serious disease or cancer, intravenous vitamin C would be my first choice of treatment. It is totally safe and can be extremely effective. But as usual, if something is too safe, effective and inexpensive then the medical establishment will try to hold it down so as not to compete with the established treatments such as drugs, antibiotics, chemo and radiation. And that is the case here too as the FDA has closed down manufacturers of intravenous vitamin C and does everything it can to prevent public access for treatment.
Please do yourself a favor and read the article below. I also receommend you go to http://tomlevymd.com/ and watch the 60 Minutes TV show segment on how intravenous vitamin C cured a man in New Zealand who's family insisted that intravenious vitamin C be given even though every doctor involved at the hospital voted against any use of vitamin C. The doctors wanted to take him off of life support and only a desperate fight by the family convinced the doctors to try vitamin C with dramatic improvement seen the after the very first day.
Until next time, stay healthy and happy
Jim
The Primal Panacea: Vitamin C Can Defeat Deadly Infections
An Interview with Thomas E. Levy, M.D., J.D.
Richard A. Passwater, Ph.D.
A
few years ago, we had a couple cases of a flesh-eating bacteria bringing fear
to many in my part of the world. Two local citizens died and an acquaintance’s
life was finally spared after a heroic battle that included having his right
leg amputated. At the same time, other neighbors died of sepsis. Citizens were
warned not to go in the water for fear of Pfiesteria piscicida-like
microorganisms. Pfiesteria piscicida can produce symptoms in people that
include skin irritation; memory loss and other cognitive impairments; nausea
and vomiting; and respiratory, kidney, liver, vision and immune system
problems. I instructed my family that if I should contract a flesh-eating
bacterium or even sepsis, they should insist that whomever would be treating me
prescribe massive doses of injectable vitamin C. Since most hospitals are
unfamiliar with the protocol and would not comply with my desire, I also gave
the family the names of a couple of orthomolecular physicians who could help
out.
Certainly,
most readers are well aware of the protection that the nutrient vitamin C
provides against disease, but many of our younger readers were not around
during the time when physicians such as Fred Klenner, M.D., and Robert
Cathcart, M.D., were curing infections with massive doses of injected vitamin
C. To achieve the miraculous cures, blood levels of ascorbate (vitamin C) must
be at levels that can be obtained only via injection. This is not a nutritional
use of a nutrient, but most readers will want to know about this life-saving resource.
Orthomolecular
physicians, of course, are well aware of the miraculous actions of injectable
ascorbate. A leading orthomolecular physician and vitamin C expert is
cardiologist Thomas E. Levy, M.D., J.D. Dr. Levy was kind enough to chat with
us in September 2007 about vitamin C and the prevention of heart disease.
Atherosclerosis (i.e., narrowed and blocked arteries), the primary cause
of heart death in the world today, is easily prevented and even reversed when
enough vitamin C can continually bathe the inner lining of the arteries
supplying the heart.
Thomas
E. Levy, M.D., J.D., is a board-certified cardiologist and the author of Stop
America’s #1 Killer: Reversible Vitamin Deficiency Found to be Origin of ALL
Coronary Heart Disease (Livon Books, 2006, ISBN 0-9779529-0-2), Curing
the Incurable: Vitamin C, Infectious Diseases and Toxins (Livon Books, 3rd
edition, 2009, ISBN-10: 0977952029), plus three other ground-breaking medical
books. He is one of the leading vitamin C experts in the world and frequently
lectures about the proper role of vitamin C in the treatment of a host of
medical conditions and diseases to medical professionals all over the globe.
Passwater: During
our last chat, you told us why you became a cardiologist. Since you have been
practicing cardiology, you have become one of the world’s most knowledgeable
experts on vitamin C. Your book, Curing the Incurable, contained over 1,200
scientific references addressing vitamin C and its incredible properties as a
broad-spectrum antibiotic and a universal antidote. Please remind our readers
what drew your interest to vitamin C.
Levy: I suppose this is where
the forces of fate and destiny took a very active role in my life. Just over 15
years ago, I met Hal Huggins, D.D.S., M.S., the leading anti-mercury amalgam
dentist in the world. At the time, Dr. Huggins had a clinic in Colorado
Springs, where patients from literally around the world came to him for the
removal of mercury amalgam and other forms of dental toxicity.
In
working as a medical consultant to Dr. Huggins’ clinic, I became very impressed
quite rapidly with the amount of improvement that a diverse array of patients
achieved in a very short period of time when their dental toxicity was
appropriately addressed and removed. And, it was in these patients that Dr.
Huggins always gave 35–50 grams of vitamin C intravenously during the
multi-hour sessions in the dental chair. The absolutely sickest of patients,
including many who were wheelchair-bound, would immediately feel fabulous after
extended periods of dental work.
I
certainly never before had seen patients with different advanced degenerative
diseases get several teeth extracted on one side of the mouth and promptly feel
so good that they wanted to go out and eat a steak with the remaining teeth the
same evening of treatment. It wasn’t too long before I realized that these
intravenous infusions of vitamin C must have been giving some very amazing
effects inside the bodies of these very ill patients. I then realized that my
life as a physician could never and would never again be the same. I had to
find out and report on all that I could scientifically gather about toxins,
vitamin C and health. It was a direct result of these experiences with Dr.
Huggins and vitamin C that my first book, Uninformed Consent: The Hidden
Dangers in Dental Care (Hampton Roads Pub. Co., 1999, ISBN 1571741178,
9781571741172) was co-authored with Dr. Huggins in 1999.
Passwater: Your
book, Stop America’s #1 Killer, makes a compelling scientific case for
vitamin C protecting against heart disease. What I especially liked was the way
that you presented the evidence like the lawyer and scientist that you are. Has
your book and its teachings had any effect on other cardiologists or medical
scientists?
Levy: While I have received
substantial positive feedback from that book, I really can’t say with any
certainty how many cardiologists have changed the way they practice, or how
many scientists and researchers now think about heart disease in a different
way. I think the book effectively substantiated and even expanded a bit on the
work of Pauling and others. Also, I feel the book certainly has enough
scientifically based information to change in any doctor’s opinion regarding
how best to manage coronary artery disease, as long as that doctor is willing
to give the book proper consideration. I am hoping to set up and implement a
protocol that will prove, angiographically, that coronary artery
atherosclerosis is a substantially reversible, and often “curable,” disease the
vast majority of the time. Whenever that occurs, a reassessment of the
information in that book by many should result, I suspect.
Passwater: What
I want to chat about this time is vitamin C and its ability to cure various
infections. Note, I did say “cure” as you point out in your latest book, Primal
Panacea (MedFox Publishing, 2011, ISBN 9780983772804). Why did you choose
that title?
Levy: Quite simply, I chose
that title because I didn’t want to understate what should be properly and
accurately stated. The definition of “panacea” is literally that of a
“cure-all,” and “primal” indicates that it was there from the start and
designed by nature to deal with whatever infections or toxins the body encounters.
Although
our bodies, in contrast to most other animals, have lost the ability to
synthesize vitamin C in the liver, it still remains clear that vitamin C is
nature’s choice for restoring and maintaining health. Vitamin C does cure, or
help to cure, a wide array of infections for which modern medicine offers
little to nothing of substance in the treatment of those conditions. The
documentation for my “assertions” is solid, and I believe the reader should not
be subjected to exaggerated, overblown conclusions anymore than he or she
should read understated conclusions when the evidence clearly shows that
vitamin C can repeatedly achieve and cure conditions for which modern medicine
still offers very little.
Passwater: You
have witnessed many miraculous cures using vitamin C in your own practice, but
let’s start out with a dramatic case that was documented on the 60 Minutes
television show in New Zealand.
Levy: The 60 Minutes piece
in New Zealand, Living Proof?, can be viewed on the front page of my Web
site, www.peakenergy.com. While the response of this intubated, comatose
patient who was deemed terminal after an extended fight with the H1N1 swine flu
was certainly very dramatic, it is equally important to appreciate that it was
not an unexpected result to anyone who understands the excess oxidative stress
associated with all infections and the ability of vitamin C to neutralize and
reverse that existing excess oxidative damage, as well as to block further
excess oxidative stress from occurring. As long as irreversible tissue and
organ damage have not already occurred prior to initially receiving properly
dosed vitamin C, a full recovery should be anticipated and should shock nobody.
Passwater: In
your practice, you have successfully treated West Nile virus, acute Lyme
disease, chronic infectious mononucleosis and even hemorrhagic dengue fever.
What were the results?
Levy: The results were
dramatic and consistent. Using high doses (50–100 grams at a time) of vitamin C
intravenously, two cases of West Nile virus and two cases of chronic infectious
mononucleosis were completely resolved in three to four days, even though all
four individuals had been very ill for months. Two were students who had
already dropped out of college due to incapacitating fatigue and malaise. One
15-year-old girl in Colombia, South America presented to me with dengue fever,
while already demonstrating blood in the urine. This young lady was completely
cured in two to three days by taking a total of 10–15 grams of
liposome-encapsulated vitamin C orally during that period. As well, four to
five days of high doses of vitamin C intravenously resolved a case of acute
Lyme disease. But take note that this was an acute presentation; chronic cases
of Lyme are more resistant to all forms of therapy than the acute cases.
Passwater: How
about sepsis? Sepsis, sometimes called septic shock or blood poisoning, is a
severe illness in which the bloodstream is overwhelmed by bacteria. Sepsis is
caused by a bacterial infection that can begin anywhere in the body. Immune
chemicals released into the blood to combat the infection trigger widespread
inflammation, which leads to blood clots and leaky vessels. The result is
impaired blood flow, which damages the body’s organs. In sepsis, blood pressure
drops, resulting in shock. Major organs and body systems, including the
kidneys, liver, lungs and central nervous system, stop working properly. The
incidence of sepsis has increased considerably since the late 1970s. In 2000,
the number of patients with a diagnosis of sepsis was approximately 660,000,
increasing about 9% per year since 1979 (1). Now, severe sepsis is the 10th
leading cause of death in the United States, striking about 750,000 Americans
yearly (2). It’s been estimated that between 28% and 50% of these people
die—far more than the number of U.S. deaths from prostate cancer, breast cancer
and AIDS combined (3). Some experts believe that sepsis may be the leading
cause of death worldwide.
You discuss this pandemic in your book. What should readers know
about sepsis and vitamin C?
Levy: Probably the most
important thing to realize about sepsis is that it is massive in scope, causing
an enormous increase in oxidative stress throughout the body. As such, and to
my knowledge this is not widely appreciated, sepsis carries a very poor
prognosis because it induces a body-wide acute scurvy, and very little reduced
(non-oxidized) vitamin C is available to deal with the underlying infection.
Even for clinicians who do not embrace or understand the impact of vitamin C in
the treatment of infections in general, vitamin C in a reasonable dosage should
always be part of the treatment of sepsis just to deal with the resultant
induced acute scurvy. For clinicians wanting proof of this, obtaining plasma
vitamin C levels will show little or no detectable vitamin C once sepsis is
well-established, and they will have solid grounds for administering vitamin C.
Furthermore, follow-up plasma vitamin C levels will also provide justification
for the higher doses of vitamin C required to routinely cure the patient, since
plasma vitamin C levels will remain subnormal to undetectable if suboptimal
amounts of vitamin C are given.
Passwater: Before
you, physicians including Drs. Fred Klenner, Robert Cathcart and Hugh Riordan
had reported dramatic results using injectable ascorbate (vitamin C). While
their work was legendary, there are many people today who have not heard of
their results with injectable vitamin C.
Levy: Yes. Dr. Klenner
undoubtedly led the way, as no physician, to my knowledge, had any idea of the
value of high doses of vitamin C before he began his work. Dr. Cathcart treated
very many patients over a practice of many years, reproducing much of Dr.
Klenner’s work, while adding his own important contributions, which included
the demonstration that oral vitamin C alone could accomplish a great deal, if
dosed adequately and for a long enough period of time. Dr. Riordan added his
own significant contribution, which was to repeatedly show how effective
properly dosed vitamin C, particularly in intravenous form, could benefit and
even occasionally cure a wide variety of cancers.
Passwater: But,
critics claim that these are only rare isolated cases, not scientific studies.
Levy: Such critics are either
woefully uninformed, or they may well have an agenda to undermine the
acceptance of vitamin C, which could certainly replace or make irrelevant a
great deal of expensive and often toxic prescription drugs. Either way, it can
be reasonably asserted that there is no nutrient or vitamin that has been
researched more in the history of medicine than vitamin C. Well over 50,000
significant studies on vitamin C have been published on PubMed over the past
50+ years.
Furthermore,
these same critics persist in making assertions that so little of what vitamin
C can do has been established by “randomized, placebo-controlled, and
double-blind” clinical trials, while ignoring the fact that the same standard
is not met by most prescription drugs. Also, such assertions attempt to ignore
that such clinical trials are not the only way to establish the effectiveness
and safety of any given medicine and/or nutrient. Even when vitamin C therapy
is given and resolves 95–100% of infectious disease patients in a few days, it
is denigrated as an “anecdote, ” even when the typical course of such a disease
virtually never resolves when treated by traditional medicine.
It
is important to remember that when a doctor administers something, makes an
educated clinical evaluation and then publishes that information, that is a
“case report,” not an anecdote. Many prescription drugs would do well to have
that “little” degree of validation.
Passwater: Are
there many studies on vitamin C and disease treatment?
Levy: Absolutely. In addition
to Dr. Klenner, who led the way, many other clinicians have added their
experience to the medical literature. But it is important to note that the
response of most infections and toxin exposures to properly dosed vitamin C is
so dramatic, there simply do not exist clinical trials of patients with
life-threatening conditions being denied vitamin C therapy for the purpose of a
double-blinded or placebo-controlled study. No clinician in his or her right
mind would deprive a patient of the life-saving abilities of vitamin C to
achieve this end. Also, very many incredibly impressive papers end with the
authors suggesting that “more research” is needed before vitamin C can actually
be recommended for treating a condition that it has been documented to
repeatedly cure, particularly considering the lack of toxicity of vitamin C.
What are the authors really thinking or recommending? I couldn’t tell you for
sure; you decide.
Passwater: In
spite of so many miraculous cures using injectable vitamin C, why is this
simple and inexpensive procedure not widely used by orthodox medicine as it is
in orthomolecular medicine?
Levy: As mentioned, critics
commonly assert that there are no vitamin C studies, not even bothering to make
their falsehoods more believable by stating the equally ridiculous assertion
that there might be “very few” studies of use to the clinician. Somewhat akin
to this, critics like to assert that there is no evidence that vitamin C even
has any significant clinical value at all. Then, after assailing vitamin C from
these two angles, the most-repeated, and equally false assertions, continue to
appear, namely that vitamin C is either not safe in general, or that it causes
kidney stones. This, of course, always completely ignores the fact that there
is no established toxicity level of vitamin C that someone can ingest, or the
fact that in patients with normal kidney function, vitamin C actually prevents
kidney stone formation and even helps to resolve pre-existing stones.
Critics
also like to say that vitamin C needs are met when a properly balanced diet is
consumed, which completely ignores the entire body of work of what Dr. Klenner
demonstrated with larger amounts of vitamin C. The assertion is also made that
supplementation with vitamin C just “makes expensive urine.” Of course, nothing
is completely absorbed, but the critics like to abandon science or just make
trite, irrelevant comments whenever possible to make a joke rather than make a
scientific point.
Finally,
perhaps most maddening is the assertion often heard that, “If vitamin C worked,
we’d all be using it.” It’s really hard to make a straightforward response to a
statement so completely devoid of intellect. Modern medicine, collectively,
will not use vitamin C, and then its many practitioners use that refusal as an
argument against trying it!? Oh, well, so much for science-based medicine…
Passwater: Do
we know why ascorbate is so effective against infections?
Levy: Yes. Nearly all
pathogens accumulate iron in their cytoplasm, which they need in order to
proliferate. This accumulation allows vitamin C, via the increased iron levels,
to ultimately donate more electrons to the peroxide present inside these
pathogens. This biochemical sequence, known as the Fenton reaction, allows the
very highly reactive hydroxyl radical to form from the breakdown of peroxide.
This hydroxyl radical rapidly oxidizes what is next to it. When up-regulated
enough, with high enough levels of iron inside the pathogens, the Fenton
reaction generates enough hydroxyl radical to result in their
“auto-destruction.” Also, vitamin C supports and stimulates the immune system
in many different ways, which helps to resolve any infections that are present.
Passwater: What
protocol do you recommend for using injectable ascorbate?
Levy: I have developed what I
call the Multi-C Protocol, which can be used to maximize the clinical impact
whenever the doctor feels vitamin C therapy is indicated:
1. Three to five grams of liposome-encapsulated vitamin C orally daily, for optimal intracellular support (www.livonlabs.com).
2. Multigram doses of sodium ascorbate powder taken several times daily in juice or water up to or reaching bowel tolerance, to neutralize the commonly present toxic gut and flood the extracellular spaces with C.
3. Several grams of ascorbyl palmitate daily, as a form to reach fat-soluble areas (www.lef.org).
4. 50 to 150 grams of vitamin C IV to “kick start” the suffusion of C into the body several times weekly at first; this can be further optimized with five to 10 units of Humulin regular insulin mixed into the IV bag.
1. Three to five grams of liposome-encapsulated vitamin C orally daily, for optimal intracellular support (www.livonlabs.com).
2. Multigram doses of sodium ascorbate powder taken several times daily in juice or water up to or reaching bowel tolerance, to neutralize the commonly present toxic gut and flood the extracellular spaces with C.
3. Several grams of ascorbyl palmitate daily, as a form to reach fat-soluble areas (www.lef.org).
4. 50 to 150 grams of vitamin C IV to “kick start” the suffusion of C into the body several times weekly at first; this can be further optimized with five to 10 units of Humulin regular insulin mixed into the IV bag.
The
liposome-encapsulated oral vitamin C is especially effective as monotherapy,
especially if the patient has difficulty paying for repeated IVs.
The
insulin added to the IV bags of vitamin C is what I call the HEAT form of
ascorbate therapy (Hormone Enhanced Ascorbate
Therapy). The insulin allows a tremendously increased delivery of
vitamin C to the intracellular area. I feel strongly that any clinician should
not consider vitamin C a “failure” for a given patient until this full protocol
has been used, in the event that a partial application of this protocol does
not produce the desired results. However, it should also be emphasized that any
regular dosing of multi-gram amounts of vitamin C in any form will often result
by itself in the desired clinical result.
Passwater: Is injectable ascorbate available today for U.S. physicians? There
was a scare not too long ago that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
was preventing the sale of injectable ascorbate.
Levy: It wasn’t a scare. It
was quite calculated, and the situation is very serious. Not too long after the
airing of Living Proof? on New Zealand’s 60 Minutes program, FDA shut down the
mass production of injectable vitamin C by McGuff Pharmaceuticals, which was
the company name clearly visible on the vials of vitamin C featured on that
program. Since then, FDA has “allowed” vitamin C orders to be separately “formulated”
by the McGuff compounding pharmacy, as well as by other compounding pharmacies
in the United States. Merit Pharmaceuticals also sells injectable vitamin C,
although, to my knowledge, all of that vitamin C is produced by Bioniche
Pharmaceuticals in Ireland. All of these “interventions” by FDA have only
served to make injectable vitamin C more expensive, which would represent a
good initial goal for FDA, as it always appears the agency will do anything to
make Big Pharma happier. However, it would still be wonderful if FDA would stop
its apparent agenda to ultimately ban vitamin C, although I doubt this is
likely. Probably the “best” ultimate outcome will be that vitamin C ends up
being available only through prescription. Things are happening very rapidly on
this front, and ready access to vitamin C, along with nearly all other
supplements, may end as we know it before 2012 is over.
Passwater: How
can readers order your book?
Passwater: Dr.
Levy, thank you for chatting with us once again and for giving us the
life-saving information in your books, Curing the Incurable: Vitamin C,
Infectious Diseases and Toxins, Stop America’s #1 Killer! and Primal Panacea.
Many of us take vitamin C supplements, but it is critical to have the knowledge
of injectable vitamin C and special forms of vitamin C, such as liposome-encapsulated,
for treatment if the need ever arises. WF
Dr. Richard Passwater is the author of more than 45 books and 500
articles on nutrition. Dr. Passwater has been WholeFoods Magazine’s science
editor and author of this column since 1984. More information is available on
his Web site, www.drpasswater.com.
References
1. G.S. Martin et al., “The Epidemiology of Sepsis in the United States from 1979 through 2000,” N. Engl. J. Med. 348, 1546–1554 (2003).
2. D.C. Angus et al., “Epidemiology of Severe Sepsis in the United States: Analysis of Incidence, Outcome and Associated Costs of Care,” Critical Care Med. 29 (7), 1303–1310 (2001).
3. K.A. Wood and D.C. Angus, “Pharmacoeconomic Implications of New Therapies in Sepsis,” PharmacoEconomics. 22 (14), 895-906 (2004).
1. G.S. Martin et al., “The Epidemiology of Sepsis in the United States from 1979 through 2000,” N. Engl. J. Med. 348, 1546–1554 (2003).
2. D.C. Angus et al., “Epidemiology of Severe Sepsis in the United States: Analysis of Incidence, Outcome and Associated Costs of Care,” Critical Care Med. 29 (7), 1303–1310 (2001).
3. K.A. Wood and D.C. Angus, “Pharmacoeconomic Implications of New Therapies in Sepsis,” PharmacoEconomics. 22 (14), 895-906 (2004).
Published in WholeFoods Magazine, April 2012

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