Molecular Therapy
In this video, Paul Ling Tai spends about 22 minutes speaking on "Molecular Therapy" at the 32nd Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
About Paul Ling Tai
PAUL LING TAI, D.P.M. President of Brasil American Academy of Aging & Regenerative Medicine, Double Board Certified Surgeon and an International Renowned Speaker on Cancer early diagnosis and treatment in Europe, Russia, Japan & South America.
Medical Consultant to thousands of doctors worldwide earning him the title of “Doctor’s doctor” Featured in renowned medical newsletters, international television appearances and radio health talk shows nationwide, is a best-selling author of 14 books and holds U.S. patents.
Contact Dr. Tai at Health Secrets USA, 24141 Ann Arbor Trail, Dearborn Heights, MI 48127, phone 313-561-6800, fax 313-561-6830 and e-mail [email protected].
Transcription
Well, good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I will be speaking about the molecular therapy, but before I start.
May I take a moment to share with you a person of experience.
I want to tell you about? A friend of mine, my very best friend. His name is Dr. Bill.
He's a remarkable surgeon.
A physician. And ophthalmologist. But what is most remarkable about him?
Is that he is a wonderful human being.
He spent about three to six months of his very busy practice traveling around doing volunteer work to help people see. He would go to places like South America, to Asia, to faraway places like Nepal. You know, he told me that some of the places that he went to. Don't even have a highway. Not even a road. He said that road that he was following, that he had to track by foot was made by a mountain goat. He would go to these. Faraway places that no surgeon has ever been to. No physician, not even a modern man, probably for the past century.
Because he wanted to help them to see. The rest of the year. He would actually beg.
For leftover medicine, for antibiotics, for those old used eyeglasses. And he would collect them all year. And it would take him. To this faraway places and give it to them for free.
You know. He's really my idol.
He's the model of a doctor that I wish to be someday. At near the sunset of his life, he is now around 70 years old. I had the privilege to enjoy his friendship. I've been his colleague at the hospital. We've done surgeries together. I have been his family surgeon, foot surgeon to his to him, to his wife.
But I'll tell you.
The most difficult thing that happened was when, early this year. He called me and he said. I'm having some real difficulty, severe pain of his bowels around his abdomen. He couldn't move his bowels. So after seeing a specialist in a number of CAT scans.
A provisional diagnosis. Of metastatic liver cancer.
Now, for some of you that may not know. Metastatic liver cancer can be pretty ugly. It's very aggressive. So very painful death. And it can be so fast that you may pretty much be dead. In a short few months. In his case, they found. A large four centimeter tumor on his liver. So the surgeons strategically decided to go ahead and have it removed. They opened him up. And found that beyond deliver.
First, all his bowels had tumors. So they had to resect large section.
Of Hizbollah's.
When they got to that liver and they