Incredibly Effective Protection from
Fukushima Nuclear Radiation Effects
September 26, 2012
A special study conducted by Dr. Atsuo Yanagisawa, M.D., Ph.D., from the
Japanese College of Intravenous Therapy (JCIT) took a group of men working on
the Fukushima site and administered 25,000 mg (milligrams) or 25 grams of
vitamin C as a pretreatment prior to half of the men entering the area. What
you’re about to learn is that this measure of protection may be one of the best
when dealing with nuclear radiation effects.
A Solution to Fukushima’s Nuclear Radiation Effects
After their hazardous work, thorough medical evaluations determined they were
clear of DNA damage and precancerous indicators that would have otherwise
occurred from the radiation. The untreated workers showed DNA damage and
precancerous indicators, but they received a similar post treatment protocol for
a couple of months and recovered completely.
The Japanese College’s work and findings were supressed because TEPCO, the firm
that owns the Fukushima plant, the Japanese government, and Japanese media all
have ignored them and their science based advice.
Their report was published in the States by a major orthomolecular (nutritional
medicine) information center, Orhomolecular.org. The report covers the JCIT
study with links to JCIT’s videos. Very few media outlets know of this report
Mega-dose vitamin C administered by IV (intravenously) gets more vitamin C into
the bloodstream directly than orally administered C. Unfortunately it is
difficult to find someone who will do IV C in the USA, thanks to our Medical
Mafia. If you can find someone near you, it can be a bit pricey per treatment.
But there is another solution that anyone can access with less cost, and it can
be taken orally. Liposomal encapsulated C surpasses even IV C’s ability to
penetrate your cells, where it is ultimately needed. So it takes considerably
less liposomal encapsulated vitamin C to equal thousands of milligrams of IV C.
The Alan Smith Story
The poster guy for liposomal encapsulated vitamin C is New Zealand farmer, Alan
Smith. After the hospital threatened to take him off life support while he was
in a coma with double pneumonia and leukemia complications from a bout with the
flu, Alan’s family pushed for mega-dose vitamin C administered intravenously.
The vitamin C was administered for a couple of days, but doctors refused to
continue even after Alan showed signs of improving. After the family got an
attorney involved, the hospital resumed with much lower doses, going from 50
grams daily to two grams daily.
After this happened, Alan’s family found out about a new vitamin C product
called Lypo-Spheric. It is an orally consumed gel in packets that can be ordered
online. The family brought packets into Alan’s hospital room after he could
begin eating again. After six days of only six grams of the vitamin C, Alan
walked out of the hospital.
Alan Smith’s story was presented in New Zealand TV’s version of 60 Minutes. In
the last few minutes of that presentation, you’ll see a still of Alan with those
packets in his hospital room. Oh yeah, a year later Alan had no trace of
leukemia.
How Liposomal C Works and How You Can Make Your Own
So how did six grams of oral C daily do the job of 50 grams daily of IV C? Dr.
Tom Levy, a prominent orthomolecular physician with years of experience
administering vitamin C intravenously was shocked to discover Lypo-Spheric was
obtaining the same clinical results as mega-dose IV C. Dr. Levy came to realize
that the combination of vitamin C and essential phospholipids radically improved
cellular bioavailability.
Tiny particles of vitamin C coated with phospholipids create molecules of
vitamin C coated with a substance similar to the cell walls. Thus those coated
vitamin C molecules can slip into the cells easily. Encapsulation also avoids
diarrhea thresholds of normal oral C.
You can even make your own liposomal encapsulated vitamin C. The homemade
version is estimated to get around 60% of its vitamin C content into your body’s
cells rather than 90%, but it’s more economical.
There are two similar methods for making your own liposomal C: One here and the
other here.
I have no financial connections with Lypo-Spheric.
Read more:
http://naturalsociety.com/