Off The Record
Mel Gibson Allegedly Reveals “The Cure” For Cancer On Joe Rogan
When Mel Gibson disclosed the contentious methods his friends used to treat their terminal cancers, Joe Rogan was taken aback.
Gibson said that three of his pals had been diagnosed with stage four cancer and that they all had “some serious stuff going on” during the most recent episode of the Joe Rogan Experience.
According to Gibson, they took fenbendazole and ivermectin, which are medications often used to treat illnesses brought on by roundworms, threadworms, and other parasites.
The star of Lethal Weapon then made the shocking assertion that none of the three buddies “have cancer at the moment.”
‘This stuff works, man,’ he added.
Larger trials have not supported the preliminary findings that ivermectin, when used in conjunction with other treatments, can help reduce tumor size.
According to certain studies, fenbendazole, which is marketed under the brands Panacur and Safe-Guard, inhibits the proliferation of cancer cells, even some of the most aggressive ones.
Although preliminary findings are promising, experts warned that fenbendazole can have major adverse effects. Additionally, they caution that avoiding conventional therapies may be fatal.
Gibson said: ‘I don’t believe that there is anything that can afflict mankind that hasn’t got a natural cure for it. It just makes sense to me.
‘I couldn’t prove that, but I just believe that. There’s got to be something that cures things.’
‘This stuff does work, which is strange because it’s not profit,’ Rogan continued, referring to both medicines.
Additionally, he noted that both medications are contentious and speculated that because normal cancer therapies are more profitable, health authorities might be promoting them.
‘When you hear about things that are demonized and they turn out to be effective, you always wonder, “What is going on here?” Rogan continued. “How have our medical institutions failed us so that things that do cure you are not promoted because they’re not profitable?”‘
Although prices vary, 20 pills without insurance are anticipated to cost around $90.
According to a 2021 study by scientists at California’s City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, triple-negative breast cancer tumors in mice may be treated with ivermectin in addition to the anti-body anti-PD1.
The researchers did, however, warn against using ivermectin alone and noted that it is unknown if the same outcomes can be repeated in humans.
Alongside the immunotherapy medication pembrolizumab, which has been licensed for the treatment of endometrial, lung, and breast cancer, a team from City of Hope also began clinical trials of ivermectin.
The National Cancer Institute-funded trial was canceled, nevertheless. Why the research halted is unknown.
There have been preclinical studies investigating the use of ivermectin and similar medications to slow the growth of cancer cells in labs, but this is not the same as proving the drugs work in humans, Dr. Susanne Arnold, associate director for clinical translation at the Markey Cancer Center in Kentucky, told The Associated Press last year.
Although ivermectin was initially authorized for use in animals in 1981, it would take another thirty years for it to be promoted as a possible cancer treatment.
According to the earlier research, which was conducted in 2014 in Switzerland, ivermectin may be able to prevent the growth of some lung and colon malignancies.
However, rather than using human volunteers, the investigation was conducted on cells.
At the time, Dr. Peter P. Lee, the study’s author and chief of City of Hope’s immuno-oncology department, stated: “‘Certainly by itself ivermectin is not a cure or even an effective treatment for breast cancer.
‘I pride myself as a rigorous, fair-minded scientist. And in our hands, through many years of experiments, it has promise — but not by itself.’
It has also been demonstrated that ivermectin is mainly ineffective against COVID.
After Republican politicians, including President-elect Donald Trump, expressed support for the drug’s use against Covid, it became a contentious political issue during the pandemic.
The NIH stated on its website in 2022 that it ‘recommends against the use of ivermectin for the treatment of COVID-19, except in clinical trials.’
According to a Malaysian study from 2022, ivermectin did not stop Covid patients from being really sick.
Additionally, New York City researchers hypothesized that ivermectin-treated Covid patients might have had and been treated for strongyloidiasis.
The team discovered that, in the majority of cases, the medication did not result in substantial adverse effects, with the most often reported ones being exhaustion, vomiting, diarrhea, and itchy skin.
It has been demonstrated that ivermectin and the blood thinner warfarin interact because ivermectin can interfere with clotting factors, which increases bleeding.
Gibson further asserts that his buddies used fenbendazole, which is mainly administered to dogs to eradicate roundworms, hookworms, whipworms, and some animal tapeworms.
After receiving fendendazole, the tumors in all three of the patients in a 2021 case study with advanced cancer shrank. The authors emphasized the need for additional research, nevertheless.
Recent years have seen the publication of a few scientific studies indicating that fenbendazole has anti-cancer effects. One such study, conducted in 2020 by Tennessee researchers, discovered that the medication inhibited the growth of lung cancer in certain diseased mice.
Fenbendazole ‘stands out’ as a potential new cancer treatment, according to a different study last year that examined six people cases where tumors decreased after taking the medication.
Other research, though, has revealed serious dangers.
‘I know of no reports of clinical trials that yielded successful results in humans with cancer,’ she stated.
In South Korea, where the drug’s use to treat cancer increased dramatically in 2019, doctors reported that some patients developed intestinal necrosis, a serious illness in which a portion of the intestine dies.
After taking the medication for its purported anti-cancer effects, a 45-year-old British man was reported to have passed away from liver failure in October of this year.
In the past, Dr. Jason Williams, who treats cancer patients with experimental medicines, told DailyMail.com: ‘Fenbendazole may be useful in specific contents, but it is a double-edged sword.
‘In some cases, it could even promote cancer growth if not applied appropriately.
‘Its use must be carefully tailored to the individual patient’s situation and monitored closely.’
For dogs, fenbendazole is sold over-the-counter and online in liquid, powder, or paste form; a week’s supply costs approximately $9.
Additionally, it is not advised to use the medication to treat cancer in animals.
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