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3-23-23 Re: Summary and MD Anderson by Adam S.

Feb 1, 2023, 8:36 PM

Sorry for the delay.  I’ve been starting a business, was in the hospital at MD Anderson, as I mentioned before, and in general, have been slammed with various things.

I’ve attached my blood test results from the Woodlands from October 1 to the present.  If you have any questions about what each category is, I’m happy to help.

There have been zero complications from taking your carbon.  Only benefits.  It seems to clear my body of things that cause nausea, anxiety, and general sick feelings within hours, and repeated use keeps these things down.  It has not done anything to mitigate the side effects of panitumumab, a monoclonal antibody EGFR inhibitor that attacks a certain gene in colon cancer cells that is also shared with dermis cells, causing rash and acneiform reactions.  But then again, why would it?  It’s not a gene activator.

 My cancer marker numbers have been steadily decreasing, which is great.  Something seems to be working, whether it’s one thing I’m doing or the combination of all of it.  I’m also going to Atlanta every other week to get a certain round of treatment I’d be happy to talk to you about in person, due to privacy concerns with the doctor.  Please let me know when you’re free and I’ll come over.  Thank you again for your help.

 On Fri, Dec 16, 2022, at 5:42 AM Adam wrote:

 I’ve been out of the carbon for a few days, and there is a marked difference. I’ve been in Houston at MD Anderson for the past few days. I mentioned to my Oncologist that I’d like to find a way to heat up my cancer to the point of cell death while watching it in an MRI. He said that’s not something that they would do outside of a clinical trial. I asked if they’d consider it for a clinical trial and he said probably yes. Didn’t mention your product, as I know you want to keep it quiet until you’re ready. But if you want to work with MD Anderson, I can connect you.

 My cancer markers are down from where they were at 36, then 24, then 11, and now 4.  Your carbon may be helping, I’m doing a lot of things that might be helping. One of those things is taking optimized fucoidan (I read the article on your material being attached to fucoidan by the Univ. of Maryland and the unbelievable results) at the same time as your carbon. Maybe it helps, maybe it doesn’t.

 Do you have time to meet today (Friday) in the afternoon or Saturday? 

 Wed, Sep 21, 2022, 12:14 PM

 I’ve kept track of how I’ve been doing since starting to take your carbon pills.  I started on Thursday afternoon, August 25th, about 36 hours after chemotherapy and when the 5FU pump was still attached to me.  I started Ivermectin about a week earlier, but the effects of that drug are not typically associated with a surplus of energy.

 Friday Aug 26:

  I was slightly more active than I would normally be, which my girlfriend remarked upon.  Was able to be a videographer for her dance workshop, and run some errands.

Aug 27: Recovered to full function roughly a day earlier than normal.  Placebo effect or not, I was able to drive to Fort Walton to go salsa dancing at an outdoor venue, and dance around 4 songs, needing to sit down for 10-15 minutes between dances to allow my oxygen levels to recover (due to the blood thinner, Xarelto 20mg).

Aug 28-September 6: 

 Return to full function relative to chemotherapy vs no chemo. Since starting chemotherapy in May of 2021, I’ve been at approximately 15% of my usual vigor and stamina, and I stayed topped off at that 15% most of the time.  I noticed that even though I’m taking 120mg of melatonin, I was able to wake up alert and stay awake throughout the day.  This effect was even a bit counterproductive because I stayed alert until around 5am most days unless I forced myself to go to sleep.  As a professional dancer (20 years and counting) I’m usually active in the evenings so late nights are nothing new, but I was definitely more awake than I would normally be.

 September 7th: 

Another round of chemo.  This usually knocks me out until two days after when I get the pump removed.  I did not take the carbon for the 7th or the 8th as I didn’t want to interfere with the chemotherapy.  Unfortunately, I’ve become resistant to the Fol-firi chemotherapy treatment, which was confirmed by MD Anderson in Houston, to which I went September 12th through 15th.

 September 9th through 19th (today):  No overt differences from the previous post-chemo time, though I will say my nose and eyes are watering more.  Also, defecation after chemo is usually a quite painful affair because of the harshness of the chemicals, frequency of needing to eliminate, and the thin soft tissue of the rectum.  But this go around, that only lasted about 4 days before resolving, when normally it would be at least a week before it started to heal and reduce inflammation.

I’ve spoken to Doctor V. about what we discussed, the algae and carbon bond adhering to tumor cells and being highly heat conductive to burn out cancer cells.  I’ve thought about this and how you said 2 watts of microwave radiation for 2 seconds was actually overkill.  I hypothesize that it may be possible to do the same thing but with near-infrared trans dermally from a device that sits on the skin at the site of the tumors.  Heat death of cancer cells happens around 112 to 120 degrees fahrenheit, with 130 degrees being the target for guaranteed heat death of cancer cells.  This is not something that is standard of care, so it’s difficult to find resources to confirm this, but the information I’ve been able to find suggests 130 degrees over several minutes should be sufficient for the purpose, and to do this in multiple treatments as soon after one another as possible. 

If your carbon is able to heat the cancer more quickly than the surrounding tissue due to its heat conductivity, the healthy liver (in my case) can self-regulate excess heat by dumping it through the bloodstream to the surface of the skin.  Probably a saline IV and ice packs on the feet and head would help to keep healthy cells from overheating.  Doctor V. is intrigued by the idea and is meditating on how best to do this.  If you have suggestions, I’m more than happy to hear them.

 I’ve depleted my supply of the Grafex carbon to 4 pills.  It’s generous of you in the extreme to gift these to me, and I do believe they’ve had a positive effect on my health, vigor, and stamina as well as other ancillary effects like recovery time and gut health.  If you’re willing to let me continue to take these I’d be eternally grateful.  My cancer is stage 4, metastasized to my liver and possibly a small nodule in my right lung.  I’m willing to try anything that has promise to help battle this illness.

  I’ll be switching to a much harsher regimen of chemotherapy on Wednesday, the 21st.  Oxolyplatin and (I think this is the correct word) Petumumab.  These drugs cause neuropathy, extreme sensitivity to cold, brain fog, severe rashes, breakouts, fatigue, and nausea.  I’ve been on oxolyplatin before, and it was the bane of my existence.  If I become resistant to these drugs, I’m sadly out of options outside of clinical trials as I’m not a surgical candidate and there are no more chemo drugs effective against microsatellite stable colon cancer. The heat death treatment is a long shot and untested, but it makes sense to me and I want to try it.

 Would you be willing to meet either tomorrow (Tuesday) or Friday after I get the pump taken off?

 Thank you and bless you.

Adam