NHS Shetland, the health authority in the Scottish archipelago, has authorized doctors to prescri... more NHS Shetland, the health authority in the Scottish archipelago, has authorized doctors to prescribe interactions with nature as a supplement to traditional health care. The hope is the practice will demonstrate to the traditional medical community the value of such non-traditional and subtle treatments to the health of the human body and mind.1
Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, Oct 1, 2014
Oral dichloroacetate sodium (DCA) is currently under investigation as a single agent and as an ad... more Oral dichloroacetate sodium (DCA) is currently under investigation as a single agent and as an adjuvant for treatment of various cancers. One of the factors limiting its clinical use in a continuous oral regimen is a dose-related, reversible neurotoxicity, including peripheral neuropathy and encephalopathy. The intravenous (IV) route has a number of potential advantages, including (1) pulsed dosing to achieve higher concentrations than feasible with oral use, (2) a longer washout period to reduce the potential for neurotoxicity, and (3) a bypassing of the digestive system, which is particularly significant for advanced-stage cancer patients. Data were available on high-dose IV DCA (up to 100 mg/kg/dose) that have confirmed its safety, both in healthy volunteers and in critically ill patients, allowing the authors to begin off-label treatment of cancer patients. In several of their patients treated with IV DCA, the authors observed clinical, hematological, or radiological responses. ...
Alternative therapies in health and medicine, 2014
Oral dichloroacetate sodium (DCA) is currently under investigation as a single agent and as an ad... more Oral dichloroacetate sodium (DCA) is currently under investigation as a single agent and as an adjuvant for treatment of various cancers. One of the factors limiting its clinical use in a continuous oral regimen is a dose-related, reversible neurotoxicity, including peripheral neuropathy and encephalopathy. The intravenous (IV) route has a number of potential advantages, including (1) pulsed dosing to achieve higher concentrations than feasible with oral use, (2) a longer washout period to reduce the potential for neurotoxicity, and (3) a bypassing of the digestive system, which is particularly significant for advanced-stage cancer patients. Data were available on high-dose IV DCA (up to 100 mg/kg/dose) that have confirmed its safety, both in healthy volunteers and in critically ill patients, allowing the authors to begin off-label treatment of cancer patients. In several of their patients treated with IV DCA, the authors observed clinical, hematological, or radiological responses. ...
NHS Shetland, the health authority in the Scottish archipelago, has authorized doctors to prescri... more NHS Shetland, the health authority in the Scottish archipelago, has authorized doctors to prescribe interactions with nature as a supplement to traditional health care. The hope is the practice will demonstrate to the traditional medical community the value of such non-traditional and subtle treatments to the health of the human body and mind.1
Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, Oct 1, 2014
Oral dichloroacetate sodium (DCA) is currently under investigation as a single agent and as an ad... more Oral dichloroacetate sodium (DCA) is currently under investigation as a single agent and as an adjuvant for treatment of various cancers. One of the factors limiting its clinical use in a continuous oral regimen is a dose-related, reversible neurotoxicity, including peripheral neuropathy and encephalopathy. The intravenous (IV) route has a number of potential advantages, including (1) pulsed dosing to achieve higher concentrations than feasible with oral use, (2) a longer washout period to reduce the potential for neurotoxicity, and (3) a bypassing of the digestive system, which is particularly significant for advanced-stage cancer patients. Data were available on high-dose IV DCA (up to 100 mg/kg/dose) that have confirmed its safety, both in healthy volunteers and in critically ill patients, allowing the authors to begin off-label treatment of cancer patients. In several of their patients treated with IV DCA, the authors observed clinical, hematological, or radiological responses. ...
Alternative therapies in health and medicine, 2014
Oral dichloroacetate sodium (DCA) is currently under investigation as a single agent and as an ad... more Oral dichloroacetate sodium (DCA) is currently under investigation as a single agent and as an adjuvant for treatment of various cancers. One of the factors limiting its clinical use in a continuous oral regimen is a dose-related, reversible neurotoxicity, including peripheral neuropathy and encephalopathy. The intravenous (IV) route has a number of potential advantages, including (1) pulsed dosing to achieve higher concentrations than feasible with oral use, (2) a longer washout period to reduce the potential for neurotoxicity, and (3) a bypassing of the digestive system, which is particularly significant for advanced-stage cancer patients. Data were available on high-dose IV DCA (up to 100 mg/kg/dose) that have confirmed its safety, both in healthy volunteers and in critically ill patients, allowing the authors to begin off-label treatment of cancer patients. In several of their patients treated with IV DCA, the authors observed clinical, hematological, or radiological responses. ...
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