Tetanus & Vitamin C
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Tetanus
''1937 Dr. Jungeblut demonstrates that ascorbate (vitamin C) inactivated tetanus toxin.'' ~ Andrew W. Saul
See Vit C cures: Addiction (heroin) Cot Death (Prevention) Drug addiction Heart disease Viral hepatitis Pancreatitis Sepsis (Vitamin C) Scurvy Measles 1949 Meningitis 1974 Pneumonia Polio 1949 Whooping Cough
Levy, MD, JD,
Thomas E.
[2002]
Vitamin C,
Infectious Diseases, and Toxins: Curing the Incurable by Thomas
E. Levy, M.D., J.D.
[1988 Smith] Clinical Guide to the Use of
Vitamin C: Smith, 1988 Tetanus (Lockjaw). In two articles in the
Tri-State Medical Journal for June and July of 1954, he again scored some points
for Vitamin C in “The History of Lockjaw”, and “Recent Discoveries in the
Treatment of Lockjaw.”
He stated that lockjaw is not difficult to cure. He believed
that doctors rely on antitoxin as the sole therapy because some “authority”
recommends it. Many patients are sedated “to the point of narcosis.”
He felt that the practice of injecting the tetanus antitoxin
into the tissues near the wound was for medico-legal reasons as it had no
benefit and might even be harmful. The antitoxin “cannot travel from the
circulation into the nervous system and unless it be injected into the nervous
tissue, it is relatively valueless.”
Dr. Klenner reports on other research: Vitamin C inactivates
the toxin of tetanus.
He recounted the history of a six-year-old boy who had never
had any immunizations and developed tetanus after falling off his pony into some
brush. Over a period of three weeks the boy developed increasing muscle
tightness, abdominal cramps, inability to smile or open his mouth. Liquids were
all he could manage. If stimulated his back would arch so his body was as a
bridge resting on heels and back of head.
Dr. Klenner used Tolserol to control the convulsive spasm
without sedating the senses unduly (the FDA has taken it off the market;
Methocarbamol can be used intravenously with comparable results). The boy was
treated with Vitamin C, penicillin, tetanus antitoxin and Tolserol. He spent
eighteen (18) days in the hospital, but the use of tetanus antitoxin seemed to
aggravate the seizures and required more Vitamin C, sedatives and its use
definitely prolonged the hospitalization.
He received 2 to 4 grams of Vitamin C every four to six hours
depending upon the symptoms and within one hour he would be calm and free of
spasms. The idea was to help the body’s natural detoxifying process. He also
developed hives from the TAT or the penicillin and needed Benadryl and
Adrenaline for that.
He summarized the treatment of tetanus:
debride and clean any wound thoroughly. (He felt ether was good because it kills
most bacteria without destroying tissue.)
75,000 units antitoxin deep intramuscularly above the wound,
intravenous fluids,
massive doses of Vitamin C intravenously around the clock,
intradermal tetanus toxoid, 0.1 cc for five consecutive days,
intravenous Tolserol—now Methocarbamol. He felt all states should pass
legislation requiring tetanus toxoid for all ages.
He felt that the number of fatalities from the disease were equal to the number
of those who die from the treatment. He emphasized some principles of treatment
30 to 40 years ago that many of us have forgotten: namely, do no harm, and the
body has tremendous restorative powers if the doctor will supply it with the raw
materials to promote recovery.