Oncologists Guide to Curing Cancer using Abscopal Effect
From Computer Tyme Support Wiki
Introduction
My name is Marc Perkel and I am not a doctor. I am a cancer patient with stage 4 aednocarsonoma of the lung (NSCLC). I have however devised a treatment that seems to have worked taking advantage of the Abscopal Effect. I'm a computer programmer, electronics designer, and I have 45 years of electronic repair experience, all self taught. So solving these kinds of unusual probles is not new to me.
Claiming to cure cancer, especially by a non-doctor, is an extraordinary claim and should be treated as such. However, before you judge who I am or if this is possible, I encourage you to actually read and think through what I propose here on its own merits. I think I'm definitely onto something. Even if this ultimately doesn't work for me I think the fundamental concepts are correct and if this method were tried on 100 people who otherwise have no hope at all, that some of those people would walk away cancer free. And that if this method is tuned and perfected I think it has the potential to cure a wide variety of cancers.
My goal in writing this is to give a step by step instructional manual that is detailed enough that any oncologist can understand and implement. If you are an oncologist who has a patient that you no longer have any treatment for and there's nothing to lose, and you think what you read here makes sense, I encourage you to give it a try. The actual procedure uses standard drugs that are alread commonly used in oncology, and the use of radiation in a way that is a bit unusual, but easier to set up and safer than a normal radiation treatment. The process should involve no discomfort to the patient and will at least not make things worse.
If you are a patient or caregiver and you or someone you care for has no other options, then take this plan to your oncologist and ask for this. If your oncologist refuses and doesn't offer anything better then change oncologists till you get a yes. Even if it doesn't work and you die you are no worse off that you were. And this is experimental and there's no guarantees. However, your success, if you are successful, will inspire more development of the process. I am sure there's a lot of room for improvement.
So - if you will .... read on!
Overview
The Abscopal Effect references a process where cancer patients are effectively cured of cancers, even incurable cancers, because their immune system as learned to recognize the cancer and turned against it. It has been observed for decades retrospectively when it happens. However no one has really figured out why it happens, or more importantly, what to do to make it happen. It seems however obvious to me that figuring out how to reliable trigger the abscopal effect would be a holy grail in the treatment of cancers and therefore a worthy goal, and therefore that's what I set out to do.
Typically the abscopal happens to people getting immunotherapy drugs in combination with radiation. A story starts with someone who starts with chemo, then tries immunotherapy, and nothing is working. Then a lung tumor starts bleeding and they try some palliative radiation to stop the bleeding, and instead of dying, the patient starts getting better. Not only does the irradiated tumor die, but all other cancer in the body dies as well. But this is rare and it takes a long time to really figure out that it happened.
I looked at the problem more like an engineer and a troubleshooter. As anyone with my job will tell you, often you can fix things without really knowing anything about the device you are fixing. It's more about patterns and processes and persistence, and that solutions don't always come from the places you would expect. So even though figuring this out was a long shot to the extreme, as Elon would say, "success was at least one of the possible outcomes."
In cases where the abscopal effect was triggered, what was the common conditions. What is the abscopal effect really? And, more importantly, what steps need to happen for it to occur?