Bill Sardi See book keywords and concepts |
This remarkable case was reported by doctors at the hiroshima City Hospital in hiroshima, Japan. [World Journal Gastroenterology 11: 6722-24, 2005]
Vitamin C and cancer: mutant humans
The chronic malnourished state of Americans creates a false sense of health. All human beings are vitamin C deficient when compared to most animals that continually produce vitamin C through the enzymatic conversion of blood sugar in their livers or kidneys. |
Mark Sircus See book keywords and concepts |
The First Department of Internal Medicine, hiroshima University School of Medicine, 1-2-3 Kasumi, Minamiku, hiroshima, Japan
17 Magnesium, The Nutrient That Could Change Your Life: http://www.mgwater. com/rod07.shtml
18 See: www.bioticsresearch.com/PDF/Thyrostim.pdf
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Transdermal Magnesium Mineral Therapy in Sports Medicine
Magnesium nutrition is an area that no serious athlete can afford to overlook. |
Devra Davis See book keywords and concepts |
In 1996 a team of researchers looked into the health of men who had worked at the Poison Gas Resource Center located on Okuno Island, right at the harbor of hiroshima, one of Japan's centers of military production during World War II. The allies had been hesitant to bomb the concentration camps and gas factories of the Nazis, perhaps because they were so close to major economic centers of great interest to Allied firms. They also heeded pleas from the Rockefellers and Roosevelts to leave the ancient temples of Kyoto untouched. They showed no such reluctance with hiroshima. |
Bill Sardi See book keywords and concepts |
This remarkable case was reported by doctors at the hiroshima City Hospital in hiroshima, Japan. [World Journal Gastroenterology 11: 6722-24, 2005]
Vitamin C and cancer: mutant humans
The chronic malnourished state of Americans creates a false sense of health. All human beings are vitamin C deficient when compared to most animals that continually produce vitamin C through the enzymatic conversion of blood sugar in their livers or kidneys. |
Gabriel Cousens See book keywords and concepts |
As Jane Plant, PhD, remarks in The No Dairy Breast Cancer Prevention Program:
The Japanese cities of hiroshima and Nagasaki have similar rates of breast cancer: and remember, both cities were attacked with nuclear weapons, so in addition to the usual pollution-related cancers, one would also expect to find some radiation-related cases. If, as a North American woman, one was living a Japanese lifestyle in industrialized, irradiated hiroshima, you would slash your risk of contracting breast cancer by a half to a third. The conclusion is inescapable. |
Mark Sircus See book keywords and concepts |
The First Department of Internal Medicine, hiroshima University School of Medicine, 1-2-3 Kasumi, Minamiku, hiroshima, Japan
17 Magnesium, The Nutrient That Could Change Your Life: http://www.mgwater. com/rod07.shtml
18 See: www.bioticsresearch.com/PDF/Thyrostim.pdf
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Transdermal Magnesium Mineral Therapy in Sports Medicine
Magnesium nutrition is an area that no serious athlete can afford to overlook. |
Thomson Healthcare, Inc. See book keywords and concepts |
Cytoprotective activity of components of garlic, ginseng and ciuwjia on hepatocyte injury induced by carbon tetrachloride in vitro. hiroshima J Med Sci; 34:303-309. 1985.
Newall C, Anderson L & Phillipson J. Ginseng, Panax. Herbal Medicines: A Guide for Health Care Professionals. London. The Pharmaceutical Press:145-150, 1996.
Ng TB, Li WW & Yeung HW. Effects of ginsenosides, lectins and Momordica charantia insulin-like peptide on corticosterone production by isolated rat adrenal cells. J Ethopharmacol; 21:21-29. 1987.
Obermeier A, Zur Analytik der Ginseng- und Eteutherococcusdroge. |
Devra Davis See book keywords and concepts |
They showed no such reluctance with hiroshima. With numerous industrial facilities going full bore, that city became, with Nagasaki, a target for the devastating blast of the world's first atomic bombs in 1945.
The ability of the Japanese to send missiles with poisonous materials from submarines onto the Pacific coast of America was rightly feared. They had shown no hesitation in using such gases on their enemies in various Asian theaters, and had also used gas on a large scale to kill prisoners of war. |
| World War II in the Japanese cities of hiroshima and Nagasaki. Of the estimated 600,000 people affected by the atomic bombs, fewer than 270,000 are alive today. There is a possibility that this record has created an interesting bias. Those who died of radiation sickness relatively quickly were probably weaker than those who survived the blast. As a result, the grounds on which we base our estimate of radiation-related cancer may tell us what happens to healthy survivors but not their far weaker neighbors who succumbed to the blasts. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Think hiroshima in World War II, but that it keeps happening every year, right here in the United States.
Ignorance is a very powerful weapon for drug companies and politicians. It is no surprise that both would vigorously oppose any law that might seek to end widespread ignorance and shed light on the atrocious safety record of pharmaceuticals.
Click here to read the Consumers Union press release on this topic. |
Gabriel Cousens See book keywords and concepts |
If, as a North American woman, one was living a Japanese lifestyle in industrialized, irradiated hiroshima, you would slash your risk of contracting breast cancer by a half to a third. The conclusion is inescapable. Clearly, some lifestyle factor not related to pollution, urbanization, or the environment is seriously increasing the Western woman's chance of contracting breast cancer. |
Mark Lynas See book keywords and concepts |
In just ten minutes of burning at the peak of that firestorm, more energy was released than by the hiroshima atomic bomb. Enormous fire-driven thunderstorm clouds -termed pyro-cumulonimbus - built up over the flames due to the intense convection and heat. No rain fell, but black hail pounded the ground 30 kilometres to the east. An F2-strength tornado touched down just to the west of the city's fringe. |
Shannon Brownlee See book keywords and concepts |
The immediate result of the therapy was that her mother's chest, says McAndrew, "looked like she'd been sunbathing topless at hiroshima." The long-term result for Jean was that by the early 1990s she was having chest pains and finding it increasingly difficult to breathe. The radiation treatment had scarred her right lung, and this subsequently overtaxed her heart as it tried to pump blood to her stiffening lung. By 1995, Jean was tethered to an oxygen tank and declining steadily. It was clear she was going to die of either sudden heart failure or her lungs simply giving out. |
| More than half of hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors were exposed to relatively low doses of radiation; nonetheless, they went on to develop cardiovascular disease and several types of cancer, including leukemia, thyroid cancer, and breast and lung cancer. In a report by the prestigious National Academy of Sciences, issued in 2006, experts estimated that a sixty-year-old who undergoes an annual whole-body CT scan over the next fifteen years has a 1 in 220 risk of dying from cancer due to radiation exposure. The risk of dying in a car accident, by way of comparison, is nearly the same, 1 in 200. |
Lester A. Mitscher and Victoria Toews See book keywords and concepts |
The possibility of green tea as a supportive agent during cancer treatment first emerged in the minds of researchers as a result of the exposure of Japanese civilians to massive levels of radiation after the atomic bombings of Nagasaki and hiroshima. Later, during the 1970s, Chinese investigators started to examine the potential of green tea extract as a protective agent against the effects of ionizing radiation. In 1994, several departments of the Second Affiliated Hospital of the Zhe Jiang Medical University began a clinical trial of green tea polyphenols. |
Henry Hobhouse See book keywords and concepts |
There is evidence that the two generations born since hiroshima are considerably more curious than their ancestors. Yet the Japanese answer the question "How?", very rarely the question "Why?"
Whether Japanese isolation from 1641 to 1853 was caused by religious (not racist) xenophobia or by their desire to do without gunpowder, the effect has been more than profound. The decision taken in 1641 has made Japan the only non-white country to have resisted Europe. This is what, in different circumstances, could have happened in India 3r China. |
Bruce H. Lipton See book keywords and concepts |
The atomic bomb dropped on hiroshima that day demonstrated the awesome power of applied quantum theory and dramatically ushered in the Atomic Age. On a more constructive note, quantum physics made possible the electronic miracles that are the foundation of the Information Age. The application of quantum mechanics was directly responsible for the development of TVs, computers, CAT scans, lasers, rocket ships and cell phones.
But what great and marvelous advances in biomedical sciences can we attribute to the quantum revolution? |
Joseph E. Mario See book keywords and concepts |
The living fossil, the oldest tree on Earth (300 million years old) survived the ice age, and able to resist all parasites, insects, molds, and air pollution; grows over 100 feet tall, and lives 1000 years; the firstplantto bloom after the atomic explosion at hiroshima. An easily digested longevity elixir, has Ginkgoheteroside substances found in no other plant, 24% Ginkgolin flavonglycosides and Ginkgolides for reversing Brain aging, and reducing cerebral and peripheral circulation blockages 38%, better than any other substance (or drug) known. |
Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN See book keywords and concepts |
But a study of 34,759 women in hiroshima and Nagasaki,
Japan, found no significant association between breast cancer risk and consumption of soy foods.41 In their petition, the Solae Company dismisses this study as irrelevant because it was carried out in cities where women were exposed to high levels of ionizing radiation after the atomic bomb,42 but the fact that women consuming high levels of soy protein did not enjoy special protection is very significant. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Repeated exposure to CT scans raises a patient's cumulative radiation to levels experienced by many hydrogen bomb victims in hiroshima. In addition, rigorous studies have concluded that CT scans offer no medical benefit whatsoever.
See http://www.newstarget.com/004060.html
Lie #7: The U.S. health care system is the best in the world.
Truth #7: The health of U.S. citizens is actually the worst of any industrialized nation. We pay double, triple, and even quadruple the price for prescription drugs as any other country. |
James Howard Kunstler See book keywords and concepts |
Berlin was reduced to gravel; London was badly mutilated; and, of course, hiroshima and Nagasaki became radioactive ashtrays. The casualties of World War I had been enormous, astonishing, appalling beyond civilized peoples' wildest dreams, but the victims had been overwhelmingly soldiers. The casualties in World War II were overwhelmingly civilians and in much greater aggregate numbers.
Through the 1950s and 1960s, Europe, Japan, and Russia succeeded in eventually resuming industrial activity. |
Kenny Ausubel See book keywords and concepts |
The horror of the dropping of the atomic bombs on hiroshima and Nagasaki created a massive public relations problem for atomic energy. The result was a spirited campaign by the military to give radiation a positive image, and "our friend, the atom" presently donned a benign medical face. As the AMA claimed in 1947, "Medically applied atomic science has already saved more lives than were lost in the explosions at hiroshima and Nagasaki. |
volker schulz and Rudolf Hansel See book keywords and concepts |
Ginkgo in the Treatment of Cognitive Deficiency
QyQI Introduction
The first green growth to appear at the center of hiroshima in 1946 was the sprout of a ginkgo tree. Like all other flora and fauna in the city, the ginkgo tree originally there was incinerated when the atomic bomb was dropped on august 6,1945. The new plant showed all the usual traits of its species and grew into a normal, full-size tree.
Extreme hardiness seems to be a characteristic of ginkgo trees, which have lived on earth for approximately 300 million years. |
Dianne Onstad See book keywords and concepts |
A report from the hiroshima University School of Dentistry indicates that stevia actually suppresses dental bacteria growth rather than feeding it as other sugars do. Japanese and Latin American scientists have discovered other attributes as well, including its use as a tonic and a diuretic, as well as its ability to combat mental and physical fatigue, harmonize digestion, regulate blood pressure, and assist in weight loss. Stevia is the one sweetener people suffering from Candida and other yeast-type conditions can toletate. |
Tanya Harter Pierce See book keywords and concepts |
It is probable that Americans were also exposed to fallout blown over the Pacific from the World War II detonations at hiroshima and Nagasaki, test detonations carried out in the Pacific, test detonations carried out in the Soviet Union, and from nuclear power plant disasters such as Chernobyl and Three-Mile Island.
This wind-blown fallout from domestic tests, as well as from sources abroad, resulted in a great deal of "direct" radiation exposure to many people who later developed cancer. But it also settled onto our crops and into our soil and water. |
| No big studies have ever been undertaken to assess the radioactive exposure caused by: (1) "Cold War" nuclear testing in the former Soviet Union that might have blown over the United States, (2) exposure from our own nuclear testing in the Pacific that might have blown back over our country, or (3) radioactive fallout from the detonation of the bombs over hiroshima and Nagasaki which might have blown back to our country. |
The Life Extension Editorial Staff See book keywords and concepts |
Many reports have come from Japanese research studies that followed the nuclear catastrophe resulting from atomic bombs that were dropped on the cities of hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. In a report to the Genetal Meeting of the Pharmaceutical Society of Japan on an early study in animals, Ichimura (1973) reported that chlorella (8 grams daily) increased elimination of cadmium: threefold in feces and sevenfold in urine. Other researchers from Japan showed that chlorella helped detoxify uranium and lead (Horikoshi et al. 1979). |
Hemp TodayEd Rosenthal See book keywords and concepts |
| That grown in hiroshima, in the south, is tall, with a rather coarse fiber; that in Tochigi, the principal hemp-producing province, is shorter, 5 to 7 feet high, with the best and finest fiber, and in Hokushu it is still shorter.
Seeds from hiroshima, Shimane, Aidzu, Tochigi, and Iwate were tried by the United States Department of Agriculture in 1901 and 1902. The plants showed no marked varietal differences. They were all smaller than the best Kentucky hemp. The seeds varied from light grayish brown, 5 millimeters (1/5 inch) long, to dark gray, 4 millimeters (1/6 inch) long. |
Doris J. Rapp, M.D. See book keywords and concepts |
Guillette, Elizabeth, "New Ways to Investigate Contamination and Health," International Symposium on Environmental Endocrine Disrupters, November 2002, hiroshima, Japan.
120 Gerhard, Ingrid, "Prolonged Exposure to Wood Preservatives Induces Endocrine and Immunologic Disorders in Women," American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, August 1991: 165 (2) 487-88.
121 Moses, Marion, M.D., "Designer Poisons," 1995. Pesticide Education Center, P.O. Box 420870, San Francisco, CA 94142-0870. 415.391.8511. Cost $19.95.
122 Lawson, Lynn, Staying Well in a Toxic World. 1993. Noble Press, Chicago. |