Hypothermia, Metastatic Cancer
In this video, Alexander Herzog spends about 28 minutes speaking on "Hypothermia, Metastatic Cancer" at the 41st Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
About Alexander Herzog
ALEXANDER HERZOG, M.D. born in Hamburg, Germany, completed his Medical Studies at Ruperta Corola University, Heidelberg, Germany and Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, Scotland in 1983.
For the next 3 years he did scientific research in Immunology at the German-Cancer-Research-Center. His main topic of research was on Induction of T-Cell Mediated Immune Reactions against cancer cells. He also did research on Tumor Vaccination Therapies.
From 1986 to 1992 Dr. Herzog specialized in Internal Medicine and Oncology at the Medical University Hospital in Heidelberg, Germany. During several years as Consultant and Head Physician in different hospitals he specialized in Alternative and Complementary Therapies of cancer including the different techniques of Hyperthermia in cancer treatment.
Later, Dr. Herzog became the Head Physician and Medical Director of the Benediktus Hospital in Ortenberg, Germany featuring Integrative Cancer Therapy and Complementary Medicine.
Since 2002, Dr. Herzog has been the Medical Director of his Special Hospital Dr. Herzog located in Nidda, Germany specializing in Hyperthermia and Complementary Oncology. Beside conventional cancer treatments, Biologic Therapies, Enzyme Therapy, Magnetic Field Therapy, Mistletoe Lectines, Orthomolecular Medicine, Ozone Therapy, Phytotherapy and Thymus Peptides are used to support the immune system, to reduce chemotherapy related side effects and to maintain or improve the quality of life.
Dr. Herzog may be contacted through his Hospital by phone 011-49-6043-9830, fax 011-49-6043-983194, e-mail [email protected] and web-site www.hospitaldrherzog.de.
Transcription
Thank you, Frank Kosenko, for this nice introduction. Ladies and gentlemen, I'm here to talk about the hypothermia treatment, cancer, and it's you may understand it's very difficult to do that all in just half an hour. The war against cancer, the never ending battle. I think that's when something very important. That's why we all hear this. Still, you can see here, for example, at the breast cancer situation, the cost of the treatment is increasing. More and more is more much more expensive treatments, new treatments, which months in Europe take 50 percent. In addition, then you have dollars. So you see high cost. And what is the result? Ladies and gentlemen, here's a study from the University of Munich showing the result of patients with metastatic breast cancer, depending on the time when it was diagnosed. So you see in the early years, nineteen eighty, nineteen eighty. And you just had to see him f a very simple chemotherapy protocol compared to the later diagnosis until 2000, when we had very modern treatments like the Texans, like other new developments of chemotherapy. And what you'll see is the result is exactly the same. Even so, the costs have exploded. And this is a very difficult situation. The aims of cancer treatments, of course, destruction of cancer cells to cure patients, to prolong the life, to reduce symptoms and to improve the quality of life, the loss is very important because for many years this this term quality of life has not even appeared in the official studies. And hypothermia. And like every other treatment, we have to use hypothermia after and see what does hypothermia do. In these very important issues. Hypothermia is not a new treatments, a treatment which has a history, a history of thousands of years for the local hypothermia. Even the Egyptians used hot, glowing ironies to burn breast cancer, for example. So it's nothing very new. And the whole body hypothermia. The fever therapy has been detected about 300 years ago when Mr. Coli detected that after an infection. Infectious batteries and heavy fevers that some patients at that time also got cured from cancer.
If you look into the Internet, you'll find many published data about the hypothermia treatment. And if you see best hypothermia use, you'll see in about 12 university centers, most of them in Germany, but also in other hospitals and clinics. More than hundred worldwide hypothermia is used also in many countries, including Germany, Canada, Russia, Greece, Turkey and also a few places in the USA.
What does hypothermia mean, hypothermia means heating up tissue. And there are different ways to heat up tissue can hit the