h***@anony.net
2015-01-30 19:23:33 UTC
One tablet a week of doxy should be enough
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/eightyearold-girl-suggests-possible-cure-for-cancer-10009891.html
Daughter of husband and wife cancer research team in Manchester,
Camilia Lisanti suggested using antibiotics to treat dangerous cells
and the lab results are promising
An eight-year-old girl may have come up with a cure for cancer while
chatting to her parents over the dinner table.
Camilla Lisanti, from Manchester, was eating dinner when her father
Michael a cancer research scientist asked her how she would cure
cancer.
The eight-year-old child thought for a moment and then suggested using
antibiotics, like when I have a sore throat, to her sceptical
parents.
Professor Lisanti and his wife Federica Sotgia, a husband and wife
cancer research team at Manchester University, tested her theory at
their lab and were astounded when several cheap and widely used
antibiotics destroyed the cancerous cells.
Some antibiotics stop cells from making mitochondria, which supply
cells with energy.
READ MORE: Scandal of GPs who get cash from healthcare firms
Public satisfaction with the NHS at near-record levels
Teenage Cancer Trust at the Royal Albert Hall 2015 line-up
Cancer stem cells, which create tumours and keep them alive, often
have high numbers of mitochondria.
Their research showed that four common antibiotics, which can cost as
little as six pence a day compared to some of the latest drugs which
can cost hundreds of pounds, killed these stem cells in samples from
breast, prostate, lung, ovarian, pancreatic, skin and brain tumours.
Health news: in pictures
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/eightyearold-girl-suggests-possible-cure-for-cancer-10009891.html
Daughter of husband and wife cancer research team in Manchester,
Camilia Lisanti suggested using antibiotics to treat dangerous cells
and the lab results are promising
An eight-year-old girl may have come up with a cure for cancer while
chatting to her parents over the dinner table.
Camilla Lisanti, from Manchester, was eating dinner when her father
Michael a cancer research scientist asked her how she would cure
cancer.
The eight-year-old child thought for a moment and then suggested using
antibiotics, like when I have a sore throat, to her sceptical
parents.
Professor Lisanti and his wife Federica Sotgia, a husband and wife
cancer research team at Manchester University, tested her theory at
their lab and were astounded when several cheap and widely used
antibiotics destroyed the cancerous cells.
Some antibiotics stop cells from making mitochondria, which supply
cells with energy.
READ MORE: Scandal of GPs who get cash from healthcare firms
Public satisfaction with the NHS at near-record levels
Teenage Cancer Trust at the Royal Albert Hall 2015 line-up
Cancer stem cells, which create tumours and keep them alive, often
have high numbers of mitochondria.
Their research showed that four common antibiotics, which can cost as
little as six pence a day compared to some of the latest drugs which
can cost hundreds of pounds, killed these stem cells in samples from
breast, prostate, lung, ovarian, pancreatic, skin and brain tumours.
Health news: in pictures