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posts about #diyrftherapy more → Man Designs and Builds Machine To Fight His Own Cancer
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Man Designs and Builds Machine To Fight His Own Cancer |
10/21/09
10/22/09
10/22/09
Truly the loss is for those of us who are left behind. #diyrftherapy
10/21/09
Keep in mind, someone 20 years ago was the "hero" that worked out today's treatments for leukemia and other cancers. Look at Lance Armstrong if you need proof that conventional medicine can save and improve lives before you sign up for some unproven treatment with radio waves or start drinking your own urine. #diyrftherapy
10/21/09
"he would have been wiser to stay on conventional treatment and develop the machine at the same time. "
no way, think of the motivation! one tends to complete quicker that which he needs. i mean, you don't hurry to fix a car if you have another, working car. #diyrftherapy
10/21/09
10/21/09
10/21/09
Yep. You know what they call "alternative medicine" that works? They call it MEDICINE. #diyrftherapy
10/20/09
One, he didn't have any scientific knowledge. He seemed to think that cancer cells would die from exposure to radio waves. Almost every organic chemist knows exactly how radio waves interact with organic matter. It is part of how NMR works. When a cell turns cancerous, there is nothing that would change how it interacts with radio waves, much less a change that would lead to cell killing.
Two, even though he was uneducated about science, he disregarded the advice of his doctor and took himself off chemo, a decision that assuredly hastened his demise.
Ignoring experts and "trusting your gut" has been on the rise since G W Bush and it needs to stop. Giving airtime to "alternative medicine" gives credence to a variety of rip-off artists and causes measurable harm. #diyrftherapy
10/20/09
One, he didn't have any scientific knowledge. He seemed to think that cancer cells would die from exposure to radio waves. Almost every organic chemist knows exactly how radio waves interact with organic matter. It is part of how NMR works. When a cell turns cancerous, there is nothing that would change how it interacts with radio waves, much less a change that would lead to cell killing.
Two, even though he was uneducated about science, he disregarded the advice of his doctor and took himself off chemo, a decision that assuredly hastened his demise.
Ignoring experts and "trusting your gut" has been on the rise since G W Bush and it needs to stop. Giving airtime to "alternative medicine" gives credence to a variety of rip-off artists and causes measurable harm. #diyrftherapy
10/20/09
Assuming you paid attention to the video, injection of gold nanoparticles into cells, and then zapping them with radio waves *does* kill them.
The fact that research is still continuing on the guy's idea is testament, and makes him different from mere "nutcases". #diyrftherapy
10/21/09
10/21/09
I would never judge what someone does when they are desperate and the news was compassionate in their coverage but it should have been more clear in the video that there was no scientific basis for this. The way organic matter and radio waves interact is fully understood, there will be no therapy without those nanoparticles. #diyrftherapy
10/21/09
10/21/09
As for John doing the treatment on himself without the gold nano-particles, he knew the doctor wouldn't help and hoped that his theory of the cancer cells possibly having unknown intrinsic properties was true. If he knew more about the science of the disease, he probably would have still done it to see. He took it upon himself to forgo chemo treatment and he didn't advertise that everyone should do the same.
I wish he could have lived to see the clinical human trials but even with chemo, that may have not happened. The best thing is that his wife and the doctor are continuing the research.
I'll be drinking a Shiner for John and for his determination and sacrifice. #diyrftherapy
10/21/09
First, I thought it was odd that they got so excited about in vitro petri dish results. Turns out this is works in rats which is a much bigger deal.
Second, the idea isn't nearly as novel as they make it out to be. Research is already being done on gold nanoparticles that are heated with infrared light. The novel idea here is to use radio waves. They never made it clear what Kanzius invented and what was already known.
Third, it made it sound like this was coming soon. They said 2 maybe 3 years till clinical trials. They should have mentioned clinical trials take on average 8 years.
Fourth, they made Kanzius seem a bit crazy. They showed him sitting in the machine, hoping that some intrinsic property of cancer cells would interact with the RF and kill the cells. In fact, he knew better than that. His words from an interview with Popular Science:
"People always ask me if I ever treat myself," says Kanzius, who is still fighting leukemia. "No. I wrote the patents—I know it won’t work without that targeting particle. If it did, I’d be sitting in front of that thing every day."
Turns out Kanzius, contrary to what I said below, isn't nuts. 60 Minutes just made him out to be. Science journalism isn't great in general but this is pretty bad. I got most of this info from a paper he wrote in Surgery over a year ago. #diyrftherapy
10/20/09
Ignorance or even disregard of certain rules can lead one down paths that others may never ever find.
This idea in a way seems so obvious that it's startling that no one else ever thought of it.
What a legacy this man has created for himself. What a pioneer... #diyrftherapy
10/20/09
This is basically the same kind of procedure a lot of cancer researchers are working on all the time. #diyrftherapy
10/21/09
10/21/09
He's not a pioneer. he built a fabulous radio broadcasting machine, sure. But if anything, he's proof that detailed training and rigorous learning are necessary in ANY field of endeavour. #diyrftherapy
10/20/09
10/20/09
10/20/09