Re: Oleander ingredients
Thanks.
I did not know of all those other ingredients were in oleander,...several I have never heard of and cannot reference wikipedia.
You know, anyone reading my postings can see how I am a big "oxygen" guy.
My website touts oxygen as a curative substance for almost all diseases.
My favorite saying is, " If a disease hates oxygen, maybe we should give it more oxygen!"
Anytime I see a substance cross treating cancer and viruses, or malaria, or autoimmune, I automatically assume there is an oxygen connection. I mean, it would be hard to imaging the mechanism of action is different in different ailments. One can look at clinical studies and see at least ten very promising treatments for cancer and all of them are used to treat viruses, etc.
It would be easier to conclude the mechanism of action is common to these different diseases.
The only treatment model that can easily identify a common trait between cancer, virus, and parasites,..etc., is to say that all of these different diseases exploit anaerobic conditions and any substance that treats "everything" is only treating one aspect of all these diseases,...how it breaths!
So, when I saw all these other ingredients in
Oleander I was not surprised to see sterols, bioflavenoids, carboxyl groups hanging off most of these substances.
It is no surprise. What I like about the carboxyl groups in some of these substances is that they are huge structures. Anything with a corboxyl group readily donates H+ off the carboxyl group and then that exposes two oxygen molecules that are highly chemically active.
Bioflavenoids also do this,...donate hydrogen,(sometimes as an antioxidant,) leaving double bonded oxygen exposed.
The hearty structure means that the molecule should be generally stable over time,...meaning this carboxyl group can donate oxygen where low O2 tension is found, (cells,mitochondria)and then accept O2 where high O2 tension is found towards the lungs.
Almost all of the successfull alternative treatements out there can do this.
"DMSO" especially is sensative to O2 tension, (krysalis.net)
Some oxygen donors can only donate the oxygen and can not pickup oxygen.
Polysacharides I feel are more important as far as immune system and can be readily effective against viruses. To be more accurate lipopolysacharides are actually used in vaccines to stimulate cell production. Lipopolysacharides will stimulate production of various white cells dependending on length. Short, medium, complex, and very complex molecules will initiate white cell production of different cells.
In cancer, immune stimulation only is relevant if the cancer can be metabolically injured or inhibbitted. Otherwise it will stay hidden and appear normal to the immune system. This is why immune therapies do not cure cancer.
Even if you could find a cancer antigen, grow dendrite cells to communicate this antigen to attacker cells. The newly excited attacker cells still wont find the antigen in the cancer membrane. Viable cancer makes a histocompatability molecule and disguises the antigen that the killer cells are hunting for.
So, in cancer I usually don't devote much energy to expousing the attributes of lipopolysacharides. However, having said that,...if you do slow cancer metabolic ability to make this HK molecule,...then the immune system can actually be part of the answer.
Not knowing a whole lot about
Oleander at first, I will make this bold prediction.
I am declaring it as an oxygen therapy and I predict it is, or will be used to treat any disease that is anaerobic loving. This list would include diseases like, autoimmunes, (viral), HIV, Hepatitis, fungal, yeast, and not just cancer.
Why? Because every other oxygen therapy cross treats these diseases!!!
Summary:
Several types of cardiac glycosides have shown anticancer activity, (anthroquinone being one,)oleandrin especially. I consider this an oxygen therapy as it has been proven, rasied ph means raised O2 perfusion.
These other fine ingredients in oleandrin are some of the most complex molecules containing a carboxyl group you can find. Carboxyl groups are believed to attack cancer's anearobic needs via oxygen donation.
Also, bioflavenoids appear to be donors of oxygen too, and
Oleander contains these as well.
All in all, I am not surprised to say,...oleander is an oxygen therapy!
Now, the only question is,....how much does it cost for a month supply?
Thanks for the info.
I am researching these substances right now as you read this I am sure.
Bret