Mistletoe Cancer Prevention Inoculation
In addition to being a cancer treatment therapy, mistletoe is now used in as a cancer preventative. This course of prophylaxis is not a matter of inoculation in the customary sense where vaccines are produced for mass inoculations. Mistletoe cancer prevention inoculation is an individualized mistletoe injection based on the patient’s particular personality, organ at risk, physical and mental characteristics.
We know that cancer begins developing five, ten and possibly twenty years before there are overt signs and symptoms. A pre-cancerous stage occurs primarily in the early-mid forties to mid-fifties (or younger based on symptoms) usually coinciding with major life changes such as pending retirement, divorce, empty nest, job loss, death of a loved one, major accidents, abrupt changes in health and other life-changing events.
The following are risk factors that should be discussed with the prescribing physician:
- Persons with a genetic predisposition to cancer
- Persons with a strong family history of cancer
- Cancer patients in remission
- Pre-cancerous symptoms:
- a. Obesity
- b. Constantly feeling cold, shivering and almost never feeling warm
- c. Tiredness, often to the point of exhaustion.
- d. Difficulty in falling asleep and frequently awakening throughout the night
- e. Constant night sweats.
- f. An increase in warts and other skin lesions.
- g. Attacks of dizziness
- h. History of smoking more than 10-cigarettes a day.
- i. Psychological traumas e.g. serious illness, death of a spouse, divorce, loss of employment/ financial difficulties and other events that cause mental stress.
The therapeutic regimen consists primarily of once weekly subcutaneous injections (under the skin like insulin injections in diabetics) for seven-weeks, a one-week break, followed by another seven-weeks of injections. Intravenous injections may be added if needed in the opinion of the physician.