New Cure for Lyme Disease Explained by Dr. Julian Douwes
|
Time
Text
My name is Julian Dawes and I come from St. George Hospital in Germany and we treat chronic Lyme disease and other chronic infections and also cancer.
So what are you doing here at a food independence summit?
One of my patients was John Miller and he invited me and he's one of the co-founders of this event and he told me, Julian you have to come.
You actually cured me of Lyme.
He came to our clinic, was very sick, he passed out several times and he couldn't basically take part in life.
And then he came to us for three weeks and now he's cured.
You know, my father is the one who detected the treatment and established the first thing.
Now I'm one of the main people for the new research.
Hold the presses.
You cured him of Lyme disease.
It's not generally understood that Lyme disease can be cured.
Yeah, so we're also the only known place where that is possible because we mechanically kill off the spirochetes.
We heat the body to 106.8 Fahrenheit, so that's 41.6 degrees Celsius.
And it has been shown that the spirochetes, the bacteria behind Lyme disease, actually dies off at that temperature.
And you somehow managed to get the person to survive this.
Yes, actually, so my father was one of the pioneers of this treatment for cancer treatment.
So actually we researched this treatment for stage 4 cancer patients that actually receive chemotherapy while being under that heat.
Everybody can withstand this high fever.
That's the maximum our body can fever spike to without taking damage.
The main fundament behind this treatment actually comes from the year in 1927.
There was a guy, Professor Julius Wagner Jaurek, who treated syphilis patients who came back from war.
And syphilis is actually a very simple, but this bacteria is from the same family as Lyme disease.
It's also spirochetal disease.
And back then we have to remember there were no antibiotics.
So he wanted to treat that and he actually decided to take the blood of malaria patients, injected the syphilis patients with the blood of malaria patients.
So they got severe fever spikes and they were cured.
So 18, these were in that study what he received the Nobel Prize for, for his malarial.
He had 18 patients and 16 of them came out of a wheelchair.