Enzymes, Cancer
In this video, Linda L. Isaacs spends about 22 minutes speaking on "Enzymes, Cancer" at the 44th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
About Linda L. Isaacs
LINDA L. ISAACS, M.D. received her Bachelor of Science Degree from the University of Kentucky, and her Medical Degree from Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. She is certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine, most recently completing recertification in 2011. Dr. Isaacs worked with her colleague Nicholas J. Gonzalez, M.D. for more than twenty years, using a nutritional approach for treating patients diagnosed with cancer and other serious degenerative illnesses. Dr. Gonzalez had previously done research on the methods of William Donald Kelley, D.D.S. and the treatment protocols Dr. Gonzalez and Dr. Isaacs used are based on Kelley’s work. Dr. Isaacs and Dr. Gonzalez co-authored the book The Trophoblast and the Origins of Cancer, as well as numerous scientific articles including a series of case reports in the peer-reviewed journal Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine. After Dr. Gonzalez’ untimely death in July 2015, she continues to keep the work alive for future generations of scientists and patients. Contact Dr. Isaacs at her office by phone 212-213-3337, or visit her website at www.DrLindal.com.
Transcription
So thank you so much, Frank, for that introduction and thank you to all of you for being here to listen to me. I know that some of you are probably wondering about enzymes and cancer, but others have. You might want to know about my relationship with Dr. Nicholas Gonzalez and where things will be going forward with our work. And as Frank mentioned, Dr. Gonzalez did pass away last year completely unexpectedly. And he and I had worked together for many years before that.
And I never expected to be continuing on my own. But life doesn't always work out the way we planned for it to.
Having said that, I actually knew at the time that I graduated from medical school that my career path would be a little bit different from that of my classmates because I had met Nick a few years earlier when I was a third year medical student and he was an intern in internal medicine. We worked together for six weeks as part of my own internal medicine rotation. He was a brilliant doctor, very sharp, very quick.
He stood out even at Vanderbilt, where there were a lot of smart people, but he also is loved by his patients, had good connections with them. And he was also every day. One of the first interns out of the door.
Dr. Kelly's Studies
And I learned that as I got to know him, that the reason he was so efficient was that he wanted to get home so that he could go ahead and work on his own research project that he was trying to keep going even in the face of the demands of internship. A few years earlier, he had met a man named Dr. William Donald Kelly. Dr Kelly was also a presenter here at the Cancer Control Society back in the 1970s, I believe. And Dr. Kelly was an orthodontist who had created a nutritional program for treating various types of illnesses, but mostly cancer. Nick had embarked on a research project talking about Dr. Kelly's work that was eventually put together in a book called One Man Alone. And there are some copies for sale available at the Price Patterns, your nutrition foundation table in the back. If anyone is interested after hearing this presentation now, Nick was willing to talk about his research to anyone who would be willing to listen. And I was one of the people that was definitely interested. The case is that he told about told me about, helped convince me that this work needed to be followed up on one way or another, for example. Well, just to give you a little more of an