luni, 23 mai 2011

Intravenous Protocol

What you need:
- 1 bag of 250 ml of saline or glucose solution with the standard needle and tubing for IV. Generally, saline is used but if we expect a drop in blood pressure, then glucose is better to use because it tends to maintain a higher blood pressure. It has been suggested by a doctor that it is best to use no more than 250 ml solutions for 1 hour drips. He mentioned that it can cause water on the lungs in larger doses. Tie the bag in place and get set to use it.
- A bottle of MMS
- A bottle of 10% citric acid solution
- A hypodermic syringe
- A doctor or nurse

Use a dry clean glass. Do not worry about disinfecting the glass as the MMS will do that. Use 1 drop MMS, 5 drops of 10% citric acid solution, shake to mix, wait 3 minutes, using the syringe remove several ml from the IV bag, squirt the solution from the bag into glass and mix with the MMS. Suck the solution mixed with the MMS back into the syringe and squirt it back into the IV bag. Shake the bag a bit to mix it. It's ready to use.

Set the drip for approximately one hour. The herxheimer reaction, if there is one, will probably start in 1 to 2 hours. Keep the patient warm. Normally it lasts 2 hours or less.

Do the same MMS IV dose the second day or twice in one day, morning and evening. Continue until there is no herxheimer reaction and then go to the next higher dose. Continue at that dose until there is no reaction at that level and then go to the next higher dose again until you have reached 22 drops of MMS and 110 drops of citric acid. Continue at this level until the patient reports that he is better or cured.

Of course, observe the patient and make sure that reactions are herxheimer reactions and not other problems. Do not make the patient sick. Reduce the number of drops used if the patient continues to experience chills, or headaches, or nausea, or diarrhea. Do not stop, just drop back in the number of drops being used until the patient can tolerate the condition without discomfort.
About the pain of IV infusions: Normally there should be no pain involved in IV infusions. A number of doctors have mentioned to me that they expected pain because of the citric acid used. But that doesn't make a lot of sense. For example in a large dose of MMS, like 15 drops plus 75 drops of citric acid solution when mixed you create one teaspoon of MMS at a pH (acid/alkaline balance) of 4.8. That is not a strong acid. And when that is added to 250 ml of IV solution you are not going to change the pH balance by enough to record unless you have a very delicate instrument. I guarantee not enough for the inside of your veins to feel. If you use pH test paper I guarantee that you will not be able to tell the difference in the pH balance between before adding the MMS and after adding the MMS.

The pain is either created by poorly inserting the needle or by using the veins in the hands. I'm sorry I don't know why the hand causes the pain, but it seems to cause it. It is some sort of a neurological response as opposed to the feeling of acid against the vein walls. When the needle is properly inserted in the arm instead of the hand, there is almost never any pain. If the pain was coming from the blood vessel, it would only hurt right at the vessel, but that isn't the case. The whole arm hurts and that has to be some sort of a nervous reaction.

The needle must penetrate the skin and the vein in the same place. If the needle slides along the vein before it penetrates there will be pain and usually inflammation. So it sort of gets to be a scientific art. You got to get it right to prevent the pain. Just a tiny bit of MMS in the skin or tissue and you have the pain and that multiplies.

Un comentariu:

  1. Hi, nice post. I have some concerns after reading this:
    "(4) NEVER USE CITRIC ACID OR ANY OTHER ACID to activate the mms when used as an IV. Add the drops to the bag of IV solution and wait one hour. the pH of the bag itself activates the mms without acid."

    What do you think about it because in your post you're saying mix it with acid? TIA

    source:
    http://jimhumble.biz/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=13&Itemid=33

    RăspundețiȘtergere