The therapy with Sodium Bicarbonate 4/7

Intestinal cancer

The choice of the treatment to perform with sodium bicarbonate depends on two factors: the size of the mass and the depth of infiltration in the intestinal wall. In the case when the neoplasia – regardless of its shape – is all inside the intestinal lumen, the most effective method to attack it is colonoscopy, through which it is possible to administer 150-200 grams of sodium bicarbonate in two litres of luke-warm water, going as far as the ileum-caecal valve.
Even when within a few days the masses regress conspicuously, it is best to program from seven to nine session for a period of three to four weeks, keeping in mind that the first ones must be first together to have an immediate effect, and that the last ones are for the purpose of consolidation.
The possible crossing beyond the intestinal wall, or the simultaneous presence of a hepatic metastases impose a specific therapy for these organs as well.
During or after each session with bicarbonate salts, temporary episodes of diarrhoea can take place, but this is not cause for the interruption of the therapy; at most, it may be appropriate to pause for some days.
Under certain dimension, and that is if the tumour has not completely invaded the intestinal lumen to the point of sub occlusion or occlusion, the endoscopic treatment turns out to be very efficacious for obtaining the regression of the masses.
Where, instead, there is an extreme situation or the simultaneous presence of other synchronous tumour, that is, existing in other sections of the intestine, and where it would be very difficult to reach after passing the first mass, then in such cases surgical intervention is indicated, as it saves the performance of the canalization down to the anus.
This is possible through terminal or lateral anastomosis  (terminal – terminale o latero – laterale) of the resected stumps, later treated both in the surgical theatre and through post-surgical draining with local and regional administration of sodium bicarbonate capable of preventing the formation of possible local or hepatic relapses.
When tissues are more vulnerable in the cicatricial points where reactivity equals zero, or at the hepatic level because of the toxic effects of the anaesthesia, the treatment with bicarbonate prevents that fungin regermination that most of the time causes a return of the disease impossible to tame. The indications for prevention in this case are the same as those for the therapy of peritoneal carcinosis.

Cancer of the spleen

The only efficacious method is selective arteriography of the spleenic artery. This provides excellent results immediately and in general does not cause troublesome side-effects.
Next to the speenectomy, which is the conventional chosen treatment, not only does it spare the organ, but it also prevents the possible neoplastic propagation at the hepatic or systemic level. In any case, even if surgical intervention is chosen, a preventive measure applied locally and generally with sodium bicarbonate turns out to be extremely efficacious to impede a return of the neoplastic pathology.

Tumour of the pancreas

Here too, the arteriographic therapeutic approach applies, although sometimes the side-effects are more disturbing than they are for the spleen. During the first infusions, in fact, the nausea and heaviness episodes are more acute, as well as the pain felt at the moment of the infusion at the pancreatic artery because of its small diameter, which causes reactions due to its temporary, forced stretching.
One positive element of reaction which indicates the quick sensitivity of the colonies to sodium bicarbonate is the fact attenuation of the existing dorsal pain. Sometimes when surgical or biliar interventions have been performed, it may be that anomalous vascular conditions have occurred. In this case, arteriographic therapy may not be very efficacious. The crossing of the colonies in adjacent tissues or in the liver imposes a specific therapy even for these pathological conditions.

Bladder tumour

The therapeutic approach depends on the anatomical configuration of the neoplastic invasion. That is, on whether the tumour is limited to the internal walls or if it goes over into the pelvic cavity. In the presence of carcinomas that are superficial or partially infiltrating, it is sufficient to administer bicarbonate solutions directly in the bladder through a catheter and also by administering an oral therapy of one teaspoon in a glass of water on an empty stomach to obtain very positive results almost all the time. In general, after two or three days and also in the presence of large projecting masses, we can observe a regression of the painful symptomatology and, if present, the elimination of hematuria episodes.
Dosage: 150-200 cc through catheter for four consecutive days, then every other day for two weeks, then one day on and two off for two further weeks, taking care of suspending for one or more days in the presence of evident pain or erythrocytaria diapedesis. The vesicle epithelium, in fact – burdened by the disease or by previous endoscopic instillations of mythomicine or other drugs – demands, because of its suffering condition, particular attention and vigilance. That means a continuous therapeutic modulation in function of the subject.
In the case of pelvic overflow, both selective arteriography and abdominal catheters are indicated, through which it is possible to attack the masses in a concentric and conclusive way. Sometimes a neoplastic affliction of the urethras may be present, and that is very difficult to perfuse with sodium bicarbonate solutions through the vesicle catheter. In this case, the position of a transdermal catheter in the afflicted urether – that is, a nephrostomy – allows the reaching and the destruction of those masses missed by the sodium bicarbonate. Vesicle tumours are very sensitive to the action of sodium bicarbonate, which almost always causes the regression of the masses.

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