Posted on 04/28/2025 7:48:23 PM PDT by airdalechief
For decades, the pharmaceutical industry and its enablers in the FDA, CDC, and mainstream medicine have systematically suppressed the truth about DMSO (Dimethyl Sulfoxide)—a powerful, natural compound extracted from trees that holds the key to tissue regeneration, cancer remission, inflammation reversal, and chronic pain relief.
(Excerpt) Read more at 100percentfedup.com ...
Today, I’m pulling back the curtain on this forbidden cure, exposing how DMSO (alongside nature’s other hidden remedies like fenbendazole and therapeutic peptides) hold the potential to:
Reverse cancer (including cervical, prostate, and breast tumors). Regrow some nerves, potentially heal spinal cord injuries, and restore damaged organs. Eliminate chronic pain (without opioids or surgery). Detoxify heavy metals and spike protein fragments lodged in tissues. Supercharge cellular signaling to activate the body’s innate healing power.
(Enjoyed reading the article. You guys and gals pick it to pieces)
Industrial solvents are always great medicine.
Right. Just ignore all the evidence.
Any contaminant you have on your skin will be dissolved and absorbed into the underlying tissue.
No.
The opposite. Lots of evidence.
It’s snake oil.
Pushed by 60 minutes 45 years ago.
It’s good if you want increased chance of cataracts.
My dad used DMSO back in the late 70’s, maybe early 80’s to help with pain and inflammation. I don’t know if it really helped him or not. Maybe some? He had chronic pain for years. Even after using it.
I remember this from the 1960s. Lots of scams going around then about it’s miracle abilities.
It went over like “Fish Flour”. Remember that one?
PING
***Industrial solvents are always great medicine.***
I remember reading of two men who thought Demso would make a great solvent to remove bug spray from their hands. Instead the Demso allowed the bug spray to penetrate their skin and they almost died.
I remember reading an article about this in the 1960s.
The article said you can get put some on the back of your hand and taste it in your mouth in a few seconds.
I think it was in Popular Science.
I believe I used this stuff in a gel in the ‘80s for some kind of pain. Stunk, garlicky
https://dokumen.pub/dmso-natures-healer-9781101662342.html
“On March 23, 1980, and again on July 6, 1980, the popular television program 60 Minutes reported on DMSO. In a broadcast segment titled “The Riddle of DMSO,” CBS news correspondent Mike Wallace gave broad national attention to this chemical. On the program, Dr. J. Richard Crout, the chief FDA opponent of DMSO, said that double-blind studies were mandatory before approval would be forthcoming from his agency. Yet, researchers can’t conduct double-blinds because of the distinctive odor of the product. Within a few minutes of putting it on your skin, you can taste it on your tongue; it penetrates the skin and runs through the blood stream so effectively.”
In the early 1980s, the public perception that DMSO was being unfairly persecuted by FDA was aired in the popular press.
Yes.
DMSO is used for absorbing things, eg drugs, in to the body through the skin.
One drug examined was Dimethyl Sulfoxide (DMSO) along with its promoter Dr. Stanley Jacob.[14] KHOU’s documentary predated CBS News’ 60 Minutes investigation of DMSO by ten years.[15]
The documentary, written by reporter Ron Stone[16] earned a 52 share of the evening Houston television viewing audience and praise from local media. The Houston Chronicle said the program was “made by and for Houstonians, but its appeal should be national... I guarantee you’ll be fascinated”. The Houston Post said “A hard-hitting piece of video journalism. A big-time, professional look”. US Senator Ralph Yarborough subsequently appeared on KHOU’s news programs, praised the producers and promised his US Senate Subcommittee on Health would hold hearings to probe drug licensing procedures.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed_Godfrey
“ My dad used DMSO back in the late 70’s, maybe early 80’s to help with pain and inflammation.”
I think it can do that. It’s been used for horses that way. Called a liniment.
Are there better things. Probably.
“The article said you can get put some on the back of your hand and taste it in your mouth in a few seconds.”
absolutely: i’ve done that; tastes like garlic ...
It smelled funky. I can tell you that much.
IIRC, DMSA has a great affinity to be absorbed through the skin.
In my career in Nuclear Medicine, we used to use DMSA tagged with Technetium-99m to perform kidney scans. That was many years ago.
Now I think they only use DTPA or MAG3 bound to Technetium-99m.
Funny. Long time ago. At the end of May, I am retiring after 39 years in Healthcare, and 29 years after I last injected someone with radioactive istotope.
I had not even remembered doing DMSA scans until I came into this thread and saw DMSA. Haven’t thought about it in about 30 years, used to do them all the time.
I’ve seen many changes, been right there in the transtition from the old world of Radiology (films, darkrooms, file rooms, paper requisitions, tape recorders and transcriptionists, to digtial everything, paperless, speech recognition.
I was one of the last groups of Techs who worked with primitive rectilinear scanners for thyroid scans, which burned tiny holes in paper with a spark from an electrode to a conductive metal surface the special paper was on as a medium. They were big, clunky machines with gears, screws, and pulleys. As you took the scan the room would smell like burning paper!
We used to use Polaroid cameras on a scope displaying the radioactive material in real time, and manually taking one picture every few seconds in a flow study of the blood vessels, laying them out in a row as they were acquired, using the special fluid on the Polaroid films to seal the film, then gluing the Polaroids onto sheet of thin cardboard for display.
An amazing ride.
Even though there are many things I am disillusioned with in Healthcare now, it was a the closest I would get to a childhood dream of being a doctor. And that is pretty cool.
When I was 12, our family doctor, a Lieutenant in the Navy in Subic Bay, gave me a copy of Gray’s Anatomy because he saw how interested I was in all things medical. The book was a big, thick tome with hand-drawn medical illustrations. He also gave me a dissecting kit, and living in the Philippines, there were a lot of animals that I dissected.
But I was no student. I was awful. Terrible. So I became a jet mechanic in the Navy. By the time I got out of the Navy, I was ready to go to college and really learn, but it turned out for me to be Chemistry and Nuclear Medicine, not Medical School. Best choices I ever made, next to marrying my wife.
Then I went into the IT end of things.
And I am exiting the scene just as they are beginning to teke the steps in Medicine generally, to Radiology specifically, to the next revolution with AI. Just got my toes wet with AI. I am hopeful for good things from it, though I admit I distrust the concept of AI in general at this time. I tend to think the people who will use it for evil will cause a lot of damage we will never have foreseen. But that’s me. I guess I’m just a codger now. The Old Guy...:) I trust the younger people to be more forward thinking than I can be.
Wow. I not only feel like a witness to the major transtional history of Radiology, I took part in it too, and had incredible people teaching me all I needed to know as I went along.
How lucky is that? But then, my whole life has been that way-people helping me along, helping me to learn things I never knew. (Including here on FR, by the way, on a daily basis!)
You can probably tell-this made me quite sentimental when I saw “DMSA”...:)
...”forbidden cure”. That tells you all you need to know. That’s right all these years the cure for cancer was right there but Big Pharma forbid it.🙄🙄🙄
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