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Re: our mom - urgent assistance needed: c2 vertabrae fracture and vertebrae dislocation by Puh ..... The Truth in Medicine

Date:   5/18/2012 3:46:01 PM ( 12 y ago)
Hits:   1,969
URL:   https://www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=1941433

Dear James,

Since leaving the hospital (they made a pericardial window and drained the pericardial effusion) on March 23rd, our mom has been doing ozone differently, and hopefully properly, this time around. We bought a regulator, tank, and a special glass flask for making ozonated water (very fine bubbles) from Longevity Resources. We were previously using a DevilBliss oxygen concentrator that was unable to make the flask produce any bubbles, for reasons we are not entirely sure about. We also switched to the tank and regulator to be certain of the concentrations she's been getting instead of guesstimating by counting bubbles.

Her protocol has changed a few times since leaving the hospital, but this is it currently. She has been doing the ozone like this since 3/28 and the new Rife machine since early April.
--- Rectal insufflation: 1/8 Lpm; 36 ug/mL; 20 min, 3-4x  day
--- Ozone cupping: 1/32 Lpm; ~70 ug/mL; 30 min, 1x a day over left + right breast, liver/stomach, neck (2 hrs total)
--- Rife (with a new and highly recommended machine among users, the F165): 666.00 Hz; 30 min; 3-4x day

She has been inserting the catheter about 2 inches past the opening; we're not exactly sure what the sphincter muscle is, but it's about two inches in. We also cut the top of the catheter instead of using the side holes (it has no hole at the top so we made one bu cutting past the two side holes and just snipping it there). We're not sure if this is a good idea or not.

The issue now is that she is completely bed-ridden due to a c2 fracture and vertebrae dislocation. As we said earlier, a few hours before she left the hospital, she screamed in very excruciating pain, pretty much all of a sudden. She woke up during the operation a few days earlier (there was a severe lack of communication between the doctors and they were unaware that she is very morphine tolerant, even though I told the anesthesiologist RIGHT before the operation exactly what doses of oxycodone and hydromorphone she's been taking, and so they are playing the blame game with each other). Needless to say, she kicked and screamed as they were still cutting into her, and we don't know what happened before and after she was sedated. Just a few days ago, an x-ray was done in the house, and they found dislocation of the vertebrae and a fracture in the C2. I know that she had a lesion in the C2 based on the last PET scan in late November, but we think that something must have happened in the hospital to dislocate the vertebrae and cause the fracture, because she did not enter the hospital in this kind of condition. We also know, however, that lytic lesions in the spine are often associated with cancer, and that can lead to fractures as well (but not dislocation!). She has severe sharp pain in her neck that subsided a bit since coming home, and sometimes she has sharp pain in the head as well, but not for a while. We thought it may have been a pinched nerve, but it's probably the fracture and dislocation that is causing the pain.

The report states that "fracture and dislocation of C2 is consistent with cord transsection and quadriplegia." But she can move her arms and legs, but chooses not to, and lies down in a neck brace. She is afraid of the pain from any accidental movement. Plus, it's been about two months since this incident, and I would assume the paralysis would ensue? About three weeks ago, she was able to move her neck more, and was trying shoes on in her room, when one of her movements caused this severe pain again, and she pretty much "reset" any healing that took place, it seems, as her pain did improve somewhat after resting for several weeks.

She does not really feel pain in her breast, but she says that it may be because her neck pain is so much more severe. She sometimes feels like her whole right body is in pain, from the neck down to the legs. Not sure if this is a sign of nerve damage, cancer, paralysis, or something else. Her breast is completely crusted over, but it did crack and burst with blood a few days ago, so she has not funneled there with ozone for a week. No pus, no blood otherwise, no milk. Since she cannot go for a full body scan, we are relying on blood tests to see how she is progressing. Her CA 15-3 shot up to 1600 right before the hospital visit, and so we're waiting for the results from this last test to come in. (I know that you don't recommend looking at tumor markers, but again, she's felt her best when they were drastically cut back in November, and the cancer progressed the most (liver, severe malignant pericardial effusion) when her CA 15-3 was at the highest. At the moment, this is all we have.)

Her doctor recommends going for immediate neurosurgery, which is probably the best course of action. Can you please comment on our protocols and give any other suggestions and advice?
If she is not paralyzed now, two months later, how likely is it that she will become paralyzed later?
Also, about calcium levels and bone cancer: they were normal right before the hospital visit, but we have yet to see her most recent blood test. I've read conflicting opinions stating that only sometimes the calcium is elevated with bone cancer. Will bone cancer produce elevated calcium in every case?

You should have the report and neck/head scans in your e-mail inbox.


 

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