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To: ransomnote; Jane Long; All
***fenbendazole is not currently approved for use in humans by major ‍regulatory bodies such as the US Food and Drug Administration***

Mebendazole is a reformulated form of fenbendazole more friendly to human consumption. That name appears highlighted in the graphic at post #8. It has been mentioned that Mebendazole is more expensive than fenbendazole since it requires a doctor's prescription.

The Wikipedia page for Mebendazole used to contain this paragraph:

Several studies show mebendazole exhibits potent antitumor properties. mebendazole significantly inhibited cancer cell growth, migration, and metastatic formation of adrenocortical carcinoma, both in vitro and in vivo. Treatment of lung cancer cell lines with mebendazole caused mitotic arrest, followed by apoptotic cell death with the feature of caspase activation and cytochrome c release. Mebendazole induced a dose- and time-dependent apoptotic response in human lung cancer cell lines, and apoptosis via Bcl-2 inactivation in chemoresistant melanoma cells. The anti-cancer effect of mebendazole comes from preclinical studies and case reports.

Unhappily Wiki bowed to pressure and deleted this valuable information from that page. 🤷‍♂️

12 posted on 01/15/2025 1:41:09 PM PST by Bob Ireland (The Democrap Party is the enemy of freedom.They use all the seductions and deceits of the Bolshevics)
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To: Bob Ireland

You can buy FenBen from US suppliers, in pill form.


13 posted on 01/15/2025 1:54:00 PM PST by Jane Long (Jesus is Lord!)
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To: Bob Ireland
In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled Cancer treatments: When ivermectin and fenbendazole aren’t enough, Bob Ireland wrote:
***fenbendazole is not currently approved for use in humans by major ‍regulatory bodies such as the US Food and Drug Administration***

Mebendazole is a reformulated form of fenbendazole more friendly to human consumption. That name appears highlighted in the graphic at post #8. It has been mentioned that Mebendazole is more expensive than fenbendazole since it requires a doctor's prescription.

The Wikipedia page for Mebendazole used to contain this paragraph:

Several studies show mebendazole exhibits potent antitumor properties. mebendazole significantly inhibited cancer cell growth, migration, and metastatic formation of adrenocortical carcinoma, both in vitro and in vivo. Treatment of lung cancer cell lines with mebendazole caused mitotic arrest, followed by apoptotic cell death with the feature of caspase activation and cytochrome c release. Mebendazole induced a dose- and time-dependent apoptotic response in human lung cancer cell lines, and apoptosis via Bcl-2 inactivation in chemoresistant melanoma cells. The anti-cancer effect of mebendazole comes from preclinical studies and case reports.

Unhappily Wiki bowed to pressure and deleted this valuable information from that page. 🤷‍♂️

FWIW, Fenbendazole is a dog medicine, and since some are saying they've used it to recover from cancer, no captured regulatory organization will allow it to be approved for human use.

*picturing the CDC's future advert C'mon y'all, you're not a dawg!*

Online articles have said Fenbendazole is harder to obtain, but that was a month ago.

I recall Dr. Merrit (mil, bio warfare background) saying that 'cancer is parasites' or something like that. So she methodically took specific anti-parasitics to remove certain classes of parasites. There was one anti-parasitic which she too and said you should coordinate with an understanding doctor to take, because...trying to remember....it could be harmful, and I think it was because if you had a lot of that parasite, a large die off could cause brain swelling or something.

Parasites/cancer is a rare opinion I sometimes find on the  'net. More commonly, some non-indoctrinated  doctors will comment with surprise that anthelmintics (anti parasitic drugs) seem to have unexpected efficacy on cancer.


15 posted on 01/15/2025 2:04:46 PM PST by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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