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Another miracle remedy has come to light that the independent media is already referring to as “the other ivermectin” – except this one deals with strokes, neurological damage, and other matters of the heart.
The remedy is known as dimethyl sulphoxide, or DMSO, and it is just as unknown as ivermectin was pre-Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19). Synthesized by Russian chemist Alexander Zaytsev back in the late 19th century, DMSO is a byproduct of paper and wood pulp manufacturing that just so happens to also protect healthy cells throughout the body from fatal stressors.
Because of the way DMSO guards cellular health from oxidative and others forms of damage, it shows incredible promise as a remedy for ailments of the heart, brain and spinal cord.
“It protects cells from death, is helpful in a variety of circulatory disorders, is a promising treatment for heart attacks, is a paradigm-shifting stroke therapy, treats many critical aspects of traumatic brain injuries, brain bleeds, concussions and spinal cord injuries, and development disorders and many cognitive disorders will respond to DMSO,” reports explain.
“Additionally, it has shown promise in diseases that result from misfolded proteins, including cystic fibrosis, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and amyloidosis. Amyloidosis is one of the most well-known protein misfolding conditions which has also been linked to the covid ‘vaccines.’ For amyloidosis, DMSO appears to dissolve the amyloid aggregates and eliminate them from the body.”
DMSO: a miracle remedy for brain, spinal injuries?
Physician and writer Justus R. Hope actually refers to DMSO as “the other ivermectin” in an article about its many miraculous traits. He describes his own personal experience with DMSO as an “awakening experience,” especially since he now knows it has received the same maltreatment as ivermectin.
“… words cannot begin to express my disdain over how DMSO was treated or the human cost of the callous bureaucratic dictates which have kept it from being adopted within the medical system,” writes “A Midwestern Doctor” (AMD) on his “The Forgotten Side of Medicine” Substack page.
“The FDA was [ ] able to squelch [DSMO] … [It] is particularly tragic because of how much suffering (and economic cost) many of the disorders discussed [in the article below] create and the fact that decades of research and billions of research dollars have brought us no closer to solving them.”
AMD, as A Midwestern Doctor also goes by, spent months researching the merits of DMSO, poring over thousands of pages of literature to present what he says is the most accurate assessment of the substance. Based on this, AMD believes that DMSO could save millions of people from the deleterious effects of brain and spinal injuries.
Conditions that the conventional medical establishment considers to be “untreatable” could respond, he says, to DMSO. AMD’s essay on DMSO is still ongoing, and the first six parts are available here.
The latest miracle remedy news can be found at Cures.news
The “full” article to which you refer readers is shorter and less comprehensive than the editor’s article! Question: Are all the lead articles with no byline written by the editor? If not, would you please include the name of the author under the article’s title? I am referring particularly to your DMSO article. (I first learned of DMSO from reading AMD’s substack article.)
Hello Aaron:
JW Williams, Mr. Griffin’s assistant, here.
I wrote the summary in the gold description box, which I took from the body of the article from Natural News. I straight-up copied and pasted the article.
Thank you for your support and participation. You may already know about Amandha Vollmer, a practitioner trained in Naturopathic Medicine in Canada, as she has written a book about DMSO that may interest you.
Thanks JW, I bought the Kindle version of Amandha’s book for $2.99 on Amazon. I would have bought the paperback, but I am out of shelf space in my apartment.
Like ivermectin, DMSO has long had a place in Veterinary medicine as well as human in treating sprains and such, absorbing directly through the skin. Also facilitating same action with other topical agents that generally don’t absorb well. It leaves a slight garlic taste or smell to your breath after rubbing it on. Another related sulfur compound called MSM (methyl-sulfonal-methane) has some overlapping properties/uses with DMSO, but I’m not aware of those specific new DMSO uses mentioned here. It’s advisable to only use pure DMSO stored in glass bottles, as chemicals from plastic may leach into the DMSO solution. The… Read more »