Cesium Therapy for Cancer

Cesium therapy for cancer is an alternative treatment for cancer whose effects have yet to be confirmed as effective. Cesium is an alkaline mineral, in fact the mineral with the highest alkaline content, whose chemical make up parallels elements such as sodium, potassium, rubidium and lithium. Drs. Keith Brewer, Otto Warburg and H.E. Sartori started to use cesium chloride, also known as cesium salts, as a treatment for cancer when they discovered that cancerous cells are acidic, therefore vulnerable to alkaline. Alkaline minerals, such as cesium, raised the pH of cancer cells at a level where the abnormal cell cannot survive.

Cancer basically happens when toxins devastate the body’s immune system, transforming healthy cells into mutant, cancerous cells. In this case, the cell membrane, which normally allows nutrients and oxygen to pass through it, breaks down and prevents the flow of oxygen. Glucose can still pass through, however, and the overdose of glucose makes the cell anaerobic. Without oxygen, the glucose in the cell ferments into lactic acid, where the affected cells change into highly poisonous substances. A tumor is basically these poisonous cells growing over a clot of dead cells.

Cesium, which we have already said to be the mineral with the highest alkaline content, is then used to stabilize these fermenting cells. While this makes perfect sense, it is still yet to be medically confirmed. In 1984, Drs. Brewer and Sartori successfully treated 30 cancer patients using cesium therapy. Incidentally, a survey was made among cultures who lived on volcanic land, and had high contents of cesium, potassium and other alkaline materials in their diet. These cultures, particularly Arizona’s Hopi Indians, as well as particular groups in Pakistan, Central America, Peru and Ecuador, were found to have very low cancer development rates. Their food is grown in volcanic soil, which is high in cesium, and furthers the theory that cesium’s high pH levels control the growth of cancer.

Even with these cases and evidence, when studies were set out for documentation and confirmation, with several variables among 50 patients, it became more difficult to determine whether cesium chloride did indeed effectively cure cancer. Which is why, to this day, cesium therapy is considered only an alternative cure for cancer and not highly recommended by medical practice.

Doctors who do advocate cesium therapy would recommend a minimum dosage of 3 grams of cesium chloride daily, ideally divided between breakfast and before bedtime. A dosage of 3 grams daily will cost $70 a month. Some doctors will prescribe a larger dose, up to 6.0 grams a day. A supplementary diet administered by the physician is also recommended.

Potassium is said to be staple in the supplementary diet of cesium therapy because cesium chloride drains your body of potassium. Also, there is evidence that cesium chloride stays in the body long after cesium therapy has ceased, therefore supplementary potassium must still be taken for a few months more. Other downsides to cesium therapy is ingesting large amounts of cesium chloride is known to cause nausea and diarrhea.

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