Turmeric, Nutrition
In this video, Christian Wilde spends about 17 minutes speaking on "Turmeric, Nutrition" at the 41st Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
Thank you. Thank you very much. I want to add a simple note to full presentation before me. Having written the turmeric and stem cell research, the research report for several years. I want you to know, in case you've wondered what's going on in the world of stem cells, because suddenly you're not hearing about it as much as you were. I want you to know there are forty four hundred adult stem cell trials in progress with the FDA. There is only one embryonic stem cell trial. Those are embryonic stem cells. So far have created tumors. They've migrated to places they were not intended to go and they have been rejected. And therefore, a person would have to be on a lifetime of immune suppressive drugs. I can tell you briefly that at the Feinberg School of Medicine, they are treating twenty three autoimmune diseases with one single treatment, and it's working for all of them. Many of you have probably heard me talk about heart failure and the people who have called in on the radio shows. There are now 10 of them who were in the last stage, no option status, and they have had their hearts rejuvenated in a one time stem cell procedure. And one of the major learning centers, there are more than two thousand that have been done. But we are here today. I am here today to talk about turmeric. Now, how do you pronounce it? Is it turmeric or tumeric here? Is it Coumadin, Coop, Colker, Kulin or curcumin? Potato. Potato. It doesn't matter. This spice is known in 18 different cultures by different names. The Indians call it Helvey, the Spanish and the Italians both call it Kurkova. So it has a history going back as much as six thousand years in China and possibly more. The Assyrians accepted it into their diet and into their health care at about 12 50 A.D.. Marco Polo was sent by his emperor to China in the 12th century to find the treasures of that country. And what excited him most was bringing back bales of this spice not an herb, but a spice called turmeric. You know, it seems you can't pick up a Sunday newspaper section or a magazine or turn on your computer in the morning that you can't hear about. Some study on another thing that turmeric is supposed to do, help our health. It's pretty amazing. It is. Dr. Andrew Weil said the therapeutic benefits of turmeric are almost too much to mention. If you did a Google search on curcumin, curcumin, whichever you prefer, and turmeric, you will come up with 20 million. Entry's 20