Cancer Doctor
Cancer Doctor

Parasites, Cancer

In this video, Omar Amin spends about 27 minutes speaking on "Parasites, Cancer" at the 35th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.

About Omar Amin

OMAR AMIN, Ph.D. was born in Egypt and received his M.Sc. Degree in Zoology and M.S. in Medical Entomology from Cairo University. He later received his Ph.D. Degree in Parasitology and Infectious Diseases from Arizona State University, Tempe and his Post-Doctoral in Tick Borne Diseases Research from Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia. This was followed by Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever Research at the Center for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia.

His employment consisted of work at U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit #3 in Cairo, Egypt and University of Wisconsin, Kenosha teaching Epidemiology and 4 different courses in Parasitology.

Also he received many awards and grants given to him by different state agencies in support of his Parasitology Research. His Persian Gulf research was supported by Fulbright Research Scholarships.

Dr. Amin has over 160 published research papers to his credit. An equal number of presentations were made by him to various international and national scientific groups as well as a 5-part educational video set on parasites.

Presently, Dr. Amin is the Director of the Parasitology Center, Inc. (PCI) located in Tempe, Arizona. He can be reached by phone 480-767-2522, fax 480-767-5855, website www.parasitetesting.com and email [email protected].

The Center provides 2 services — Diagnostic Services of human and animal borne parasitic organisms and agents of medical and public health importance. Testing is done through the Center’s mailable kit.

The Educational Services include continuing education seminars and workshops. Consultations with referring practitioners and protocols for Herbal, Alternative and Allopathic Treatments are provided courtesy of the PCI.

Transcription

Good evening. Thank you for being here. I think some of the practitioners that work with parasitology does seem to them as parapsychology because as you perhaps know, many doctors have not discovered parasitology yet as the genuine science and as a group of organism. It does affect public health in more ways than you think they do. We have a center in Scottsdale, Arizona, Sonora, Mexico and Mali, West Africa, that does a lot of work on parasitology and the research.

And this presentation I'm going to be getting today is a two hour presentation, which I'm feel like I'm being asked to tell you everything I know in five minutes. So I'll give it my best shot. I will overlook the slides, which have to do with technology and methodology and artifacts and go in the heart of the matter, which as far as you're concerned, if you just leave this presentation with those thoughts in your mind. Parasites are important for chronic disease manifestation in at least two major ways. One is how it affects the immune system, how it compromises the immune system in a matter that does not allow the immunity to work. To combat the chronic condition that is involved. So any help you can give to control parasites would be an added help to strengthen the body, to resist whatever it is that is expected to resist. And secondly, parasites quite often have invasive ability as well as migratory ability to move within the life tissue causing many injuries, injuries which are caused by the parasite migratory pattern or by the parasites invasiveness as it attempts to feed on live tissue for nourishment is going to end up by causing tissue injury and the body will attempt to regenerate the tissue. And in the process of tissue regeneration, tissue reproductive cycle goes into high prolific rates, ending up in the formation of many generations of of regenerative cells. And when the rate of reproduction is higher than usual, sometimes it is hard to address. Sometimes the body does not know when to stop and the tissue metastasized, causing cancer. So in those two respects, I'm gonna be projecting to you a number of parasite patterns and pathology of a number of parasites in the human tissue. And you will see the degree of invasiveness that can compromise the body in this to a particular facets. I mean, logical facets. And the reason the rate of Fassett, uh, caused by the injury, the parasites cause also the parasites can and do produce metabolic waste as they are live organism living into a biological system, which is our bodies. Uh, the metabolic wastes of the

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