PT Treatment for AIDS / HIV:
The biomedical research establishment, filled with infectious disease specialists ignorant of photomedicine (PT) has managed for twenty years to avoid testing PT against HIV. They have rejected pleas and proposals to fund testing of PT against HIV on a large scale. This conduct is found by many to be shocking and indefensible in the face of a global epidemic with few advances in treatment and prevention. Some call it a case of criminal negligence.
This story compounds the ignorance of not testing PT against HIV. USA Today ran a story called "A Ray of Light for Blood Supply," highlighted by a "revolutionary process" that destroys HIV and other deadly viruses in donated blood, making blood banks safer.
The heart of the revolutionary treatment was UV light. When this light was exposed to infected blood, the HIV virus was crippled—the DNA and RNA were bound so the virus couldn't reproduce. The scientific details of just how UV light affects viruses could fill many textbooks, but the effects are clear: UV light can stop HIV.
AIDS is unique in the ability to replicate into white blood cells--the tools of the immune system. In “How Does PT Work?” the reaction of white blood cells against PT is explained in detail; this is the heart of the effectiveness against HIV and AIDS.
Harris Medical Resources has applied the use of its HMR sublingual delivery PT machine to battling AIDS and HIV. Overseas, concentrated in Africa, HMR is tracking the viral load counts of people who are being safely treated with the HMR machine. So far, the results have been astounding. Visit the PT Data 1 page for viral load results.
Steam is picking up in the fight against AIDS. Sadly, the virus is beginning to form a resistance against the powerful and crippling drugs that many are given to treat the disease—and when there is no relief from drugs, where will those who suffer turn? Hopefully, large-scale application of PT will be the answer, if minds are opened in time to this effective procedure.
PT Treatment for Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis, or TB, has been a scourge of humanity for thousands of years. Antibiotics and other medical advances in the 1950’s made the disease curable at a low cost, but TB still eludes total control.
Many TB patients stop taking the drugs as soon as their symptoms begin to subside, permitting the development of drug-resistant bacteria. TB is also resurgent in places ravaged by AIDS, where the overlap is so considerable that they are considered a singular phenomenon.
Multi Drug Resistant TB has become a spreading, dangerous problem in Russian prisons, requiring 18 – 24 months of therapy with expensive drugs. In Russia, PT is used in conjunction with drugs, and the results have been published in Problemy Tuberkuleza, the leading Russian medical journal. Two groups were treated for TB, the first group with PT and drugs, the second group with drugs only. After three months, the first group was one hundred percent disease free as opposed to fifty eight percent for the second group.
There are no published reports as PT as a monotherapy for TB, but evidence from the former study and the overall effect against bacterial diseases suggest that PT would be highly effective as a monotherapy, reduce side effects, cut the length of therapy, and leave less residual damage. All this at a more significant cost savings and better accessibility to treatment.
PT Treatment for Asthma
Bronchial asthma is a debilitating ailment that effects five percent of adults and up to ten percent of children. While the asthma mechanism of action is disputed, clearly hypersensitive immune cells play a role in the narrowing of air passages and the resulting symptoms.
Many differing techniques have been used to treat or cure Asthma over the decades, and some were moderately successful, but none have resulted in a truly superior treatment or cure. A battery of drugs is employed to relieve attacks, but to great expense and disappointing effects on the ultimate course of the disease. That is to say, it is a treatment and not a cure.
To summarize the results of PT against bronchial asthma, it can be said that treating asthma is one of the larger success stories of PT. Numerous documented studies and cases, both American and Russian, have been conducted and the resulting findings reveal that PT can indeed have great effect on asthmatic patients, especially in children.
The longer the treatment, the better the success rate. Those treated for asthma with PT responded favorably at a 93 percent success rate when treated for one year. Also, the younger the patient, the more successful the results as well, regardless of treatment period. In essence, symptoms of bronchial asthma can be cleared up permanently, or at the very least and in severe cases, controlled, in almost all circumstances.
Medical doctors who treat asthma with less effective drugs are often blindly ignorant to the findings or may have never heard of the therapy.
PT Treatment for Cancer
PT can play an important role in the treatment of cancer.
Pain is one indication. PT can suppress severe, refactory cancer pain, and has been applied in this fashion for many years by one prominent American anesthesiologist. The overactivated immune cells that inflame and cause pain are of course destroyed by PT therapy, thus the relieving effect.
Ongoing PT treatments can have a prophylactic effect, suppressing the excessive growth of pre-tumor cells. So PT can be used as an alternative to preventive surgery say, in the case of a healthy woman with a family history of breast or ovarian cancer.
PT may have an excellent effect against the metastatic spread of tumors. While PT may be ineffective against larger tumors, the suppression of small spasms of metastisism, or the spreading of cancer, is a promising application. This, with the major benefit of reduced side effects, often a source of pain and disruption for cancer patients.
Now, the real question—can solid tumors be treated with PT?
There are documented but isolated cases of excellent results. The variable may be the dosage, where to treat a solid tumor, a higher, more frequent dose may be necessary. Findings in exploring these effects have found that in treating people for cancer, the PT actually eliminates plantar warts and other viral diseases that can give rise to various tumors. But as monotherapy, PT may be effective, but the jury is still out. However, the conclusion can be made that PT, in very high and frequent doses, can take a patient with a grim prognosis and be used as a monotherapy, or in combination with drugs or other interventions to help alleviate pain, prevent micrometastasis, and in certain cases, destroy a solid tumor.