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An Indian medicine for hepatitis B

Nearly 20 per cent of the people in Southeast Asia are carriers of hepatitis B,

one of the deadliest diseases of modern times.

In India, 4-4.75 per cent carry the virus. Only less than 2 per cent of

Americans are carriers, but the incidence rate is much higher among Asians

living in the US.

"Many studies have shown that in Asian and African populations, hepatitis virus

has much more chances to cause chronic carrier problems rather than in the

White population. It could be the genetic susceptibility of the population that

is causing the problem," says Dr S P Thyagarajan, head of the Department of

Microbiology at the Madras University's Dr A L Mudaliar Institute of

Post-graduate

Another alarming fact about the hepatitis B virus is that it is more infectious

than HIV, scoring 33 per cent on an 'infectivity' rate scale against HIV's 0.3.

With nearly 42 million carrying the hepatitis B virus, India is bracketed in the

'intermediate zone' [between 2-7 per cent of the population].

Of the five hepatitis viruses -- A, B, C, D and E -- the first and the last are

waterborne and, therefore, spread less easily.

Hepatitis B, C, and D are very dangerous and, like HIV, can be passed on through

blood transfusion, needles, body fluids and sexual intercourse.

These three viruses not only produce acute jaundice, but slowly lead to diseases

like liver sclerosis and liver cancer.

Treatment of hepatitis B carriers is expensive. An injection of Interferon costs

Rs 6,000 and the patients have to take these every week for at least a year.

Another option is Lamuvidine tablet and a single one costs Rs 30. The treatment

may go beyond five years. The efficacy is between 30-40 per cent and the

treatment is reported to have many side effects.

It is against this background that the scientific discovery of Dr Thyagarajan

becomes important. The ayurvedic physicians of Kerala have been using an

extract from a plant locally termed Keezharnelli for centuries to treat

jaundice. But like all traditional Indian medicines, it has never been

scientifically tested. It was the medicinal qualities [empirically found

effective, but still anecdotal in terms of Western science] of Keezharnelli and

the alarming spread of hepatitis B that attracted the attention of Dr

Thyagarajan and he began doing his PhD on the plant in 1979.

When we met Dr Thyagarajan in 1999, he had successfully extracted the active

substances of the plant and had applied for a patent for Keezharnelli, or

phyllanthus amarus in the name of the University of Madras.

He was also developing the drug clinically. It was through years of hard work

and a series of clinical and scientific tests that he proved that the extracts

could cure hepatitis B.

Three therapeutically active substances of phyllanthus amarus show activity

against the hepatitis virus, improve the body's immune system and protect the

liver.

Dr Thyagarajan extracts all these three substances separately and converts them into tablets.

"This is a major breakthrough because this is one plant that has been

scientifically evaluated in our country and is accepted the world over. In

India, there is a wealth of information available in the traditional ayurveda

and siddha branches of medicine. But the problem is we have not bothered to

study them scientifically," Dr Thyagarajan says.

It was not an easy journey for Dr Thyagarajan. He got acceptance and support

only after international scientists, particularly Dr Baruch Blumberg, who won

the Nobel Prize for discovering the hepatitis B virus, accepted his findings.

Dr Blumberg, along with Irving Millman, also invented the hepatitis B vaccine.

Dr Thyagarajan did a lot of collaborative work with Dr Blumberg in testing the

extracts in animals for acute and chronic toxicological studies.

That was long ago.

The ayurvedic formulation from Keezharnelli was awarded a patent in the US [June

2002], South Africa [september 2002] and North Korea [October 2002]. The process

to acquire a patent for the formulation is on in ten other countries, including

the UK and Japan.

"Usually there is a criticism in the Western countries that there is lack of

standardisation in the case of traditional medicine in general and in the case

of herbal drugs in particular. That is mainly because a lot of herbs are

included in a medicine, and the herbs are collected from different parts, and

you cannot generally guarantee uniformity. They may not have the same efficacy

during all times of the year. In fact, this is already indexed in ayurvedic

literature. We have addressed that part of the criticism. So there will not be

any batch-to-batch variation in our plant-based drug. That is the basis of our

patent," Dr Thyagarajan explains.

Once the tablet was tested, Rallys India Pharmaceuticals [which has merged with

Sreya Life Sciences, Mumbai] expressed a desire to sign a memorandum of

understanding with the University of Madras.

The formulation in the tablet form was named Virohep [the compound is called

Hepavirin] and launched on December 23, 2000. The tablet is now available in

India and many other countries.

If the treatment under allopathic regimen is expensive and long, it is necessary

to treat patients suffering from jaundice for only two weeks with Virohep, says

Dr Thyagarajan. In the case of carriers of hepatitis B, the treatment continues

for 3-6 months. One tablet costs only Rs 6.

Dr Raghuram of the Vijaya Hospital, Chennai, has been treating his patients with the drug.

"I was also a collaborator in the research. So you can say we have been using it

for the last 20 years. The only difference is that it has been experimentally

proven now. Virohep is the same as Keezharnelli. The most important aspect

about Virohep is that it does no harm to the individual, while the allopathic

medicine has a lot of harmful effects, and it can be used in chronic cases.

Also, the allopathic medicines are very costly. We have found that in 40 per

cent of individuals who are carriers of hepatitis B virus, the virus has been

eradicated from the system. I am quite satisfied with Virohep," says Dr

Raghuram.

Dr Eric Walker, who is now the Consultant Physician of Scottish Centre for

Infections, Glasgow, UK, first noted the use of phyllanthus amarus as a herbal

remedy for jaundice when he was working in primary care at the Christian

Medical College, Vellore in the 1970s. Then he met Dr Thyagarajan, 'and became

very much interested in his scientific work'.

Later, in the 1980s, as a part of a multi-centre trial with Dr Thyagarajan, he

started prescribing the medicine to his patients.

"I am convinced of its properties in protecting the liver from infection and

encouraging the body to eliminate the virus from liver cells," says Dr Walker.

He adds, "Our trials in Scotland have been small but confirm the work done in

Chennai that around 60 per cent of hepatitis B carriers will eliminate

E-Antigen to their obvious benefit in preventing eventual complications and

removing infectivity. We have encouraging preliminary evidence that it may also

give some benefit to hepatitis C carriers."

Prakashchand Jain came to know that he was a carrier of the hepatitis B virus

when he went to donate blood. His physician, Dr Shanmugha Sundaram, immediately

directed him to Dr Jayanthi, the gastroenterologist who in turn asked him to

meet to Dr Thyagarajan. During that period, Dr Thyagarajan was in the process

of developing the extract of Keezharnelli.

"At the University of Madras lab, I was tested positive. He had not made any

tablet then. I was given a powder. After taking the medicine for quite

sometime, I was tested negative. If I am well today, I have to thank only that

professor," he says.

Paandi, another patient who was treated with the powdered extract of Keezharnelli was also cured.

They now plan to market the drug in the US and Asian and African countries. A

multi-centric trial is essential for international regulations like the FDA

clearance.

 

Dr.Anu

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Sorry for disturbing for your precious time I have no other option so I am writting the same to you.

 

Myself is Kuriakose N.J. hailing from Kerala, working in a Private firm and residing in Delhi. My son aged 17 years having Hepatitis B positive with cronic carrier. Presently his DNA qualitative test is negative and quantitative test value is less than 2000. Now he is suffering from jaundice for last one month as viral lhepatitis.

 

Now his biliurbin is 2.2 for last 2 weeks and presently (from 10.10.06 onwards)giving some Ayurvedic medicines from The Arya Vidya Pharmacy Coimbatore for jaundice from their Delhi branch.

 

Now I have seen about your medicine from the net, no information obout the availability and from where it can be purchased. Please advice me if I can give my child your medicine virohep, if so please inform me from where I can purchase it, If any agency hving the medicine in Delhi or not, dozage and duration.

 

I once again request you to give me the same information so that my child be saved.

 

Hoping that your goodself will do the needfull and oblige.

 

With Thanks and regards

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My son aged 17 years having Hepatitis B positive with cronic carrier. Presently his DNA qualitative test is negative and quantitative test value is less than 2000. Now he is suffering from jaundice for last one month as viral lhepatitis.

 

Now I have seen about your medicine from the net, no information obout the availability and from where it can be purchased. Please advice me if I can give my child your medicine virohep, if so please inform me from where I can purchase it, If any agency hving the medicine in Delhi or not, dozage and duration.

 

With Thanks and regards

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My son aged 17 years having Hepatitis B positive with cronic carrier. Presently his DNA qualitative test is negative and quantitative test value is less than 2000. Now he is suffering from jaundice for last one month as viral lhepatitis.

 

Now his biliurbin is 2.2 for last 2 weeks and presently (from 10.10.06 onwards)giving some Ayurvedic medicines.

 

Now I have seen about your medicine from the net, no information obout the availability and from where it can be purchased. Please advice me if I can give my child your medicine virohep, if so please inform me from where I can purchase it, If any agency hving the medicine in Delhi or not, dozage and duration.

 

Kuriakose N J

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An Indian medicine for hepatitis B

Nearly 20 per cent of the people in Southeast Asia are carriers of hepatitis B,

one of the deadliest diseases of modern times.

In India, 4-4.75 per cent carry the virus. Only less than 2 per cent of

Americans are carriers, but the incidence rate is much higher among Asians

living in the US.

"Many studies have shown that in Asian and African populations, hepatitis virus

has much more chances to cause chronic carrier problems rather than in the

White population. It could be the genetic susceptibility of the population that

is causing the problem," says Dr S P Thyagarajan, head of the Department of

Microbiology at the Madras University's Dr A L Mudaliar Institute of

Post-graduate

Another alarming fact about the hepatitis B virus is that it is more infectious

than HIV, scoring 33 per cent on an 'infectivity' rate scale against HIV's 0.3.

With nearly 42 million carrying the hepatitis B virus, India is bracketed in the

'intermediate zone' [between 2-7 per cent of the population].

Of the five hepatitis viruses -- A, B, C, D and E -- the first and the last are

waterborne and, therefore, spread less easily.

Hepatitis B, C, and D are very dangerous and, like HIV, can be passed on through

blood transfusion, needles, body fluids and sexual intercourse.

These three viruses not only produce acute jaundice, but slowly lead to diseases

like liver sclerosis and liver cancer.

Treatment of hepatitis B carriers is expensive. An injection of Interferon costs

Rs 6,000 and the patients have to take these every week for at least a year.

Another option is Lamuvidine tablet and a single one costs Rs 30. The treatment

may go beyond five years. The efficacy is between 30-40 per cent and the

treatment is reported to have many side effects.

It is against this background that the scientific discovery of Dr Thyagarajan

becomes important. The ayurvedic physicians of Kerala have been using an

extract from a plant locally termed Keezharnelli for centuries to treat

jaundice. But like all traditional Indian medicines, it has never been

scientifically tested. It was the medicinal qualities [empirically found

effective, but still anecdotal in terms of Western science] of Keezharnelli and

the alarming spread of hepatitis B that attracted the attention of Dr

Thyagarajan and he began doing his PhD on the plant in 1979.

When we met Dr Thyagarajan in 1999, he had successfully extracted the active

substances of the plant and had applied for a patent for Keezharnelli, or

phyllanthus amarus in the name of the University of Madras.

He was also developing the drug clinically. It was through years of hard work

and a series of clinical and scientific tests that he proved that the extracts

could cure hepatitis B.

Three therapeutically active substances of phyllanthus amarus show activity

against the hepatitis virus, improve the body's immune system and protect the

liver.

Dr Thyagarajan extracts all these three substances separately and converts them into tablets.

"This is a major breakthrough because this is one plant that has been

scientifically evaluated in our country and is accepted the world over. In

India, there is a wealth of information available in the traditional ayurveda

and siddha branches of medicine. But the problem is we have not bothered to

study them scientifically," Dr Thyagarajan says.

It was not an easy journey for Dr Thyagarajan. He got acceptance and support

only after international scientists, particularly Dr Baruch Blumberg, who won

the Nobel Prize for discovering the hepatitis B virus, accepted his findings.

Dr Blumberg, along with Irving Millman, also invented the hepatitis B vaccine.

Dr Thyagarajan did a lot of collaborative work with Dr Blumberg in testing the

extracts in animals for acute and chronic toxicological studies.

That was long ago.

The ayurvedic formulation from Keezharnelli was awarded a patent in the US [June

2002], South Africa [september 2002] and North Korea [October 2002]. The process

to acquire a patent for the formulation is on in ten other countries, including

the UK and Japan.

"Usually there is a criticism in the Western countries that there is lack of

standardisation in the case of traditional medicine in general and in the case

of herbal drugs in particular. That is mainly because a lot of herbs are

included in a medicine, and the herbs are collected from different parts, and

you cannot generally guarantee uniformity. They may not have the same efficacy

during all times of the year. In fact, this is already indexed in ayurvedic

literature. We have addressed that part of the criticism. So there will not be

any batch-to-batch variation in our plant-based drug. That is the basis of our

patent," Dr Thyagarajan explains.

Once the tablet was tested, Rallys India Pharmaceuticals [which has merged with

Sreya Life Sciences, Mumbai] expressed a desire to sign a memorandum of

understanding with the University of Madras.

The formulation in the tablet form was named Virohep [the compound is called

Hepavirin] and launched on December 23, 2000. The tablet is now available in

India and many other countries.

If the treatment under allopathic regimen is expensive and long, it is necessary

to treat patients suffering from jaundice for only two weeks with Virohep, says

Dr Thyagarajan. In the case of carriers of hepatitis B, the treatment continues

for 3-6 months. One tablet costs only Rs 6.

Dr Raghuram of the Vijaya Hospital, Chennai, has been treating his patients with the drug.

"I was also a collaborator in the research. So you can say we have been using it

for the last 20 years. The only difference is that it has been experimentally

proven now. Virohep is the same as Keezharnelli. The most important aspect

about Virohep is that it does no harm to the individual, while the allopathic

medicine has a lot of harmful effects, and it can be used in chronic cases.

Also, the allopathic medicines are very costly. We have found that in 40 per

cent of individuals who are carriers of hepatitis B virus, the virus has been

eradicated from the system. I am quite satisfied with Virohep," says Dr

Raghuram.

Dr Eric Walker, who is now the Consultant Physician of Scottish Centre for

Infections, Glasgow, UK, first noted the use of phyllanthus amarus as a herbal

remedy for jaundice when he was working in primary care at the Christian

Medical College, Vellore in the 1970s. Then he met Dr Thyagarajan, 'and became

very much interested in his scientific work'.

Later, in the 1980s, as a part of a multi-centre trial with Dr Thyagarajan, he

started prescribing the medicine to his patients.

"I am convinced of its properties in protecting the liver from infection and

encouraging the body to eliminate the virus from liver cells," says Dr Walker.

He adds, "Our trials in Scotland have been small but confirm the work done in

Chennai that around 60 per cent of hepatitis B carriers will eliminate

E-Antigen to their obvious benefit in preventing eventual complications and

removing infectivity. We have encouraging preliminary evidence that it may also

give some benefit to hepatitis C carriers."

Dr.Anu

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sir,iam suffering from hepatitis-b(chronic) since 3 years

it was accidently detected

is there cure for that with you ?

if so reply the address of correspondence and about availablity of medicine

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Dear Kuriakose N J

I had seen your reply and come to know that your son is suffering from Hepatities B.. just i want to know that what Dr Anu mentioned in his articles about hers and properties with clinical evidence regarding to the cure of hepatities.. just i want to say that already with high usage of antibiotics and it decrease the resistance power of body with lots of side effect.. due to thing as persent time do quality of herbs is so strong only by taking single herbs it have miracle result..

all those tablets and result looks good in books and articles but can any one write and give surety on stamp paper that by taking those tablets 100% it cured.. ?? i m sure no scientist and doctor will come forward to wirte on..

i was in health Mela in Pragati maidan and there was big UK based herbal company comapining advertisement about the Obesity tablets that in one months taking those tablets weight can reduce upto 7-10kg and with many doctor and scitentist as well as vaidya opionion to having weght loss but once i told them give me in written about the weight loss no one come forward.. so what i want to explain is that There is no doubt about Ayurveda and i m being ayurveda practiosher i would like to say only that if many thousands of herbs and rasyan are there in Ayurveda they are effective but it depends completely aobut the NIDAN. The diagnose and Ayurveda is completely based Upon the Nidan. Diagnose.. we are working for system not for symptoms..

and if you have any doubt you can mail me.. any time..

regards

vaidya adwait tripathi

 

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I wish to share my views here..

 

I agree to the comments and hope my comment would be helpful as well.

 

Note: This comment is for those patients who are suffering from cirrhosis of liver due to hepatitis b virus.

 

Diet:

One should strictly follow the following diet.

A) Vegetarian (no to any non-veg items) for 2-5 years.

B) Filtered water stored in bronze or copper vessels. Take 3-5 litres a day.

C) Take no spicy food. Adhere to boiled food with fluids. Boiled Oats soup is the best choice when taken with buttermik(SHOULD NOT BE SOUR, SALTY,PUNGENT AND ACIDIC).

D) Take boiled vegs after regular intervals of 4-5 hours.

E) Avoid milk for first 6 months.

F) Take bed-rest even if not sleeping. When awake, do pranayam by breathing slowly and in-depth.

G) For first 2 months, take complete bed rest.

 

Medication:

 

1) Wake up at 6:00 clock in the morning. Drink 2 glass full of medicated water for clear motion (stool). Now, take 1 glass full of medicated water and urinate.

2) At 6:30 am, take 1 pinch of Indian Neem tender and new leaves juice (Azadiractika Indica), 2 pinch of Indian Tulsi leaves juice, 4 pinch of Bhumialmaki leaves juice(Phyllanthus niruri/amarus). Mix all of them with water of same quantity.

3) At 7:30 am take 2 tablets of LIV-52 HB from Himalaya and/or 2 tablets of Livfit from Dabur.

4) At 8:30, take a breakfast (boiled food).

5) At 10:30, follow the step 2 but do not use neem and go to sleep.

6) At 12:30, follow step 4.

7) At 14:30, follow step 5.

8) At 16:30, follow the step 1.

9) At 7:00, follow the step 2.

10) At 8:00, take the dinner (boiled food).

11) At 8:30, follow the step 3.

13) At 9:00 follow the step 4 and go to sleep.

 

This time-table and medicines can be modified as per the Doctor's prescription.

 

Precautions:

 

Prevent the patient from common ailments such cold, cough, dust, air-pollution, stress, sound-pollution. These things decrease the immunity power. The spicy food, alcoholic beverages, smoking, tobacco products, non-veg and eggs, sexual activities, physical work and improper hygiene (motions), can lead to disasterous effects.

 

Please feel free tocomment to add more details and make happy recovery to all.

 

Regards,

Satyendra

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An Indian medicine for hepatitis B

Nearly 20 per cent of the people in Southeast Asia are carriers of hepatitis B,

one of the deadliest diseases of modern times.

In India, 4-4.75 per cent carry the virus. Only less than 2 per cent of

Americans are carriers, but the incidence rate is much higher among Asians

living in the US.

"Many studies have shown that in Asian and African populations, hepatitis virus

has much more chances to cause chronic carrier problems rather than in the

White population. It could be the genetic susceptibility of the population that

is causing the problem," says Dr S P Thyagarajan, head of the Department of

Microbiology at the Madras University's Dr A L Mudaliar Institute of

Post-graduate

Another alarming fact about the hepatitis B virus is that it is more infectious

than HIV, scoring 33 per cent on an 'infectivity' rate scale against HIV's 0.3.

With nearly 42 million carrying the hepatitis B virus, India is bracketed in the

'intermediate zone' [between 2-7 per cent of the population].

Of the five hepatitis viruses -- A, B, C, D and E -- the first and the last are

waterborne and, therefore, spread less easily.

Hepatitis B, C, and D are very dangerous and, like HIV, can be passed on through

blood transfusion, needles, body fluids and sexual intercourse.

These three viruses not only produce acute jaundice, but slowly lead to diseases

like liver sclerosis and liver cancer.

Treatment of hepatitis B carriers is expensive. An injection of Interferon costs

Rs 6,000 and the patients have to take these every week for at least a year.

Another option is Lamuvidine tablet and a single one costs Rs 30. The treatment

may go beyond five years. The efficacy is between 30-40 per cent and the

treatment is reported to have many side effects.

It is against this background that the scientific discovery of Dr Thyagarajan

becomes important. The ayurvedic physicians of Kerala have been using an

extract from a plant locally termed Keezharnelli for centuries to treat

jaundice. But like all traditional Indian medicines, it has never been

scientifically tested. It was the medicinal qualities [empirically found

effective, but still anecdotal in terms of Western science] of Keezharnelli and

the alarming spread of hepatitis B that attracted the attention of Dr

Thyagarajan and he began doing his PhD on the plant in 1979.

When we met Dr Thyagarajan in 1999, he had successfully extracted the active

substances of the plant and had applied for a patent for Keezharnelli, or

phyllanthus amarus in the name of the University of Madras.

He was also developing the drug clinically. It was through years of hard work

and a series of clinical and scientific tests that he proved that the extracts

could cure hepatitis B.

Three therapeutically active substances of phyllanthus amarus show activity

against the hepatitis virus, improve the body's immune system and protect the

liver.

Dr Thyagarajan extracts all these three substances separately and converts them into tablets.

"This is a major breakthrough because this is one plant that has been

scientifically evaluated in our country and is accepted the world over. In

India, there is a wealth of information available in the traditional ayurveda

and siddha branches of medicine. But the problem is we have not bothered to

study them scientifically," Dr Thyagarajan says.

It was not an easy journey for Dr Thyagarajan. He got acceptance and support

only after international scientists, particularly Dr Baruch Blumberg, who won

the Nobel Prize for discovering the hepatitis B virus, accepted his findings.

Dr Blumberg, along with Irving Millman, also invented the hepatitis B vaccine.

Dr Thyagarajan did a lot of collaborative work with Dr Blumberg in testing the

extracts in animals for acute and chronic toxicological studies.

That was long ago.

The ayurvedic formulation from Keezharnelli was awarded a patent in the US [June

2002], South Africa [september 2002] and North Korea [October 2002]. The process

to acquire a patent for the formulation is on in ten other countries, including

the UK and Japan.

"Usually there is a criticism in the Western countries that there is lack of

standardisation in the case of traditional medicine in general and in the case

of herbal drugs in particular. That is mainly because a lot of herbs are

included in a medicine, and the herbs are collected from different parts, and

you cannot generally guarantee uniformity. They may not have the same efficacy

during all times of the year. In fact, this is already indexed in ayurvedic

literature. We have addressed that part of the criticism. So there will not be

any batch-to-batch variation in our plant-based drug. That is the basis of our

patent," Dr Thyagarajan explains.

Once the tablet was tested, Rallys India Pharmaceuticals [which has merged with

Sreya Life Sciences, Mumbai] expressed a desire to sign a memorandum of

understanding with the University of Madras.

The formulation in the tablet form was named Virohep [the compound is called

Hepavirin] and launched on December 23, 2000. The tablet is now available in

India and many other countries.

If the treatment under allopathic regimen is expensive and long, it is necessary

to treat patients suffering from jaundice for only two weeks with Virohep, says

Dr Thyagarajan. In the case of carriers of hepatitis B, the treatment continues

for 3-6 months. One tablet costs only Rs 6.

Dr Raghuram of the Vijaya Hospital, Chennai, has been treating his patients with the drug.

"I was also a collaborator in the research. So you can say we have been using it

for the last 20 years. The only difference is that it has been experimentally

proven now. Virohep is the same as Keezharnelli. The most important aspect

about Virohep is that it does no harm to the individual, while the allopathic

medicine has a lot of harmful effects, and it can be used in chronic cases.

Also, the allopathic medicines are very costly. We have found that in 40 per

cent of individuals who are carriers of hepatitis B virus, the virus has been

eradicated from the system. I am quite satisfied with Virohep," says Dr

Raghuram.

Dr Eric Walker, who is now the Consultant Physician of Scottish Centre for

Infections, Glasgow, UK, first noted the use of phyllanthus amarus as a herbal

remedy for jaundice when he was working in primary care at the Christian

Medical College, Vellore in the 1970s. Then he met Dr Thyagarajan, 'and became

very much interested in his scientific work'.

Later, in the 1980s, as a part of a multi-centre trial with Dr Thyagarajan, he

started prescribing the medicine to his patients.

"I am convinced of its properties in protecting the liver from infection and

encouraging the body to eliminate the virus from liver cells," says Dr Walker.

He adds, "Our trials in Scotland have been small but confirm the work done in

Chennai that around 60 per cent of hepatitis B carriers will eliminate

E-Antigen to their obvious benefit in preventing eventual complications and

removing infectivity. We have encouraging preliminary evidence that it may also

give some benefit to hepatitis C carriers."

Prakashchand Jain came to know that he was a carrier of the hepatitis B virus

when he went to donate blood. His physician, Dr Shanmugha Sundaram, immediately

directed him to Dr Jayanthi, the gastroenterologist who in turn asked him to

meet to Dr Thyagarajan. During that period, Dr Thyagarajan was in the process

of developing the extract of Keezharnelli.

"At the University of Madras lab, I was tested positive. He had not made any

tablet then. I was given a powder. After taking the medicine for quite

sometime, I was tested negative. If I am well today, I have to thank only that

professor," he says.

Paandi, another patient who was treated with the powdered extract of Keezharnelli was also cured.

They now plan to market the drug in the US and Asian and African countries. A

multi-centric trial is essential for international regulations like the FDA

clearance.

 

Dr.Anu

Friends. Fun. Try the all-new Messenger

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sir , Its been great to read ur blogs ,, my friend is suffer from hep b. and he is very upset,, pls advice me should i give viprohep t0 my friend ,, and should i give gaurantee to him that viprohep is cure hep B.

 

pls advice

 

thanks..

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