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Subject A Day in honor of DR Fred R. Klenner, pioneer of high dose vitamin C !(Reidsville NC practice, Duke graduate) cured polio! in 1949!
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Original Message As we approach the aniversery of Fred Klenner's passing(May 20th) it makes one wonder why there is no day in honor of him?
Why don't you know of him in the least little bit?
Who would keep this essentially valuable knowledge from us?
What need have we of a polio vacine when he achieved 60 out of 60 cures with vitamin C ?
When is the wrong gonna be righted?
When? why in the day of the internet of course.
Please read these excerpts and read full articles and possibly save the life of someone you know , surely even yourself.
God please bless Dr Fred Klenner for ever and ever and now raise him to stature he richly deserves.

[link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)]

[link to www.doctoryourself.com]

n 1949 Klenner published in and presented a paper to the American Medical Association detailing the complete cure of 60 out of 60 of his patients with polio using intravenous sodium ascorbate injection[8] Galloway and Seifert cited Klenner's presentation to the AMA in a paper of theirs.[9] Generally, he gave 350 to 700 mg per kilogram body weight per day.

He described giving up to 300,000 milligrams (mg) per day of neutral pH sodium ascorbate. Klenner published 27 medical papers, most about vitamin C applications for over 30 diseases, two about treatment of severe neuropathies including multiple sclerosis using aggressive supplementation.[10] He wrote a 28th paper ca 1980, an unpublished update about MS treatment. It was posthumously summarized by Lendon Smith in the Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C.

His maxim: the patient should "get large doses of vitamin C in all pathological conditions while the physician ponders the diagnosis."

He inspired Linus Pauling and Irwin Stone to expand the research on the wider benefits of Vitamin C. In the foreword of the Clinical Guide, Linus Pauling wrote: "The early papers by Dr. Fred R. Klenner provide much information about the use of large doses of Vitamin C in preventing and treating many diseases. These papers are still important."[11]


Reprinted with permission from J Orthomolecular Med, 2007. Vol 22, No 1, p 31-38.

“Some physicians would stand by and see their patient die rather than use ascorbic acid because in their finite minds it exists only as a vitamin.” (F. R. Klenner, MD)

VITAMIN C AGAINST POLIO

Claus W. Jungeblut (1) had the initial idea; William J. McCormick (2) was an early proponent of frequent gram-sized doses. But it was Frederick Robert Klenner who first gave polio patients tens of thousands of milligrams of vitamin C per day. He had been doing so since before D-Day.

This is indeed a large amount of vitamin C. Such use exemplifies the modern orthomolecular physician. Klenner’s doses were enormous, flexible and symptom-driven. The sicker the patient, the higher the dose.

Massive ascorbate treatment cured every one of 60 polio cases Klenner saw.

He published his report in Southern Medicine and Surgery in July of 1949. (7) All patients were well in three days. None had any paralysis.

n 1951, “In an especially incredible case,” Levy says, “Klenner (9) described a five-year-old girl stricken with polio. This child had already been paralyzed in both her lower legs for over four days! The right leg was completely limp, and the left leg was determined to be 85% flaccid. Pain was noticed especially in the knee and lumbar areas. Four consulting physicians confirmed the diagnosis of polio. Other than massage, vitamin C was the only therapy initiated. After four days of vitamin C injections the child was again moving both legs, but with only very slow and deliberate movement. Klenner also noted that there was a “definite response” after only the first injection of vitamin C. The child was discharged from the hospital after four days, and 1,000 mg of oral vitamin C was continued every two hours with fruit juice for seven days.

Another Greensboro Daily News article written by Miller recounts how Klenner first used injections of vitamin C:

“Dr. Klenner remembers using (ascorbate) for a man, who was lying near death from severe virus pneumonia, but refused to be hospital­ized. ‘I went to his house and gave him one big shot with five grams or 5,000 milligrams of vitamin C,’ he recalled. ‘When I went back later in the day, his temperature was down three degrees and he was sitting on the edge of the bed eating. I gave him another shot of C, 5,000 milligrams and kept up that dosage for three days, four times a day. And he was well. I said then, well, my gosh! This is doing something.’" (17)

VITAMINS AGAINST MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

Nearly every person with multiple sclerosis that I’ve met has had two things in common: a lack of hope, and a lack of vitamins. Klenner’s patients lacked neither, with a treatment schedule calling for massive quantities of B-vitamins to, said Klenner, “effect nerve repair.” He based his protocol in part on work, in the late 1930’s, by “Stern from Columbia University, (who) was employing thiamin hydrochloride intraspinally with astonishing results in multiple sclerosis. He reported taking patients to the operating room on a stretcher, and following 30 mg thiamin given intraspinally, they would walk back to their room.” (24) While, Klenner commented, “the response was relatively transient,” it indicated that multiple sclerosis might be a severe form of avitaminosis.

Niacin (B-3): “100 mg to 3 grams, thirty minutes before meals and at bed hour, and also during the night if awake – whichever dose will produce a strong body flush.”

Pyridoxine (B-6): “100 mg to 200 mg is given before meals and bed hour. At least 100 mg daily is given intramuscularly.”

Cobalamin (B-12): “1000 mcg three times each week by needle.”

Ascorbic Acid (C): “Ten to twenty grams should be taken daily by mouth in divided doses.”

Riboflavin (Vitamin B-2): “40 mg to 80 mg given daily by needle I.M. 25 mg before meals and bed time.”

Choline: “700 mg to 1400 mg after each meal and at bed hour.”

Lecithin: “1200 mg soybean lecithin after each meal.”

Magnesium: “100 mg after each meal.”

Calcium gluconate: Two 10 grain tablets “after each meal and at bed hour.”

Calcium panthothenate: 200 mg “after each meal and at bed hour.”

Aminoacetic acid (glycine): “One heaping tablespoon of the powder in a glass of milk four times each day.”

Zinc gluconate: “10 mg three times each day has some value in Myasthenia Gravis. Take several hours after vitamin B-2.”

Klenner also offered what he considered to be an abbreviated, compromise program. “Should a given patient’s physician refuse to administer this schedule, I have this recommendation:

One gram thiamin hydrochloride one hour before meals and at bed hour, and during the night if awake.
Niacin taken at the same time, and in amounts sufficient to produce a good body flush.
Two hundred mg calcium pantothenate and 100 mg pyridoxine before meals and at bed hour.
Ten grams ascorbic acid, taken in divided doses.
Amino acetic acid: one heaping tablespoon in a glass of milk, four times each day.

Naturally, the full schedule will afford more dramatic response.” He declares:
“We categorically make this statement: Any victim of multiple sclerosis who will dramatically flush with the use of nicotinic acid, and who has not yet progressed to the stage of myelin degeneration, as witnessed by sustained ankle clonus elicited in the orthodox manner,
can be cured with the adequate employment of thiamin hydrochloride and other factors of the vitamin B complex in conjunction with essential proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and injectable crude liver.” (27)
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