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Essiac News: Back from the Brink JoAnn Guest Aug 12, 2003 17:49 PDT

ESSIAC NEWS:- Back from the Brink

 

 

Excerpt from Report Magazine

 

One year ago, John Scrymgeour appeared to be on his deathbed. The

long-time Calgary business-man had all but lost a 10-year battle against

prostate cancer.

Conventional chemotherapy and radiation treatments had been tried, had

ultimately failed, and the doctors had given up. For the first time in

his life, Mr. Scrymgeour was an invalid, wheelchair-bound, barely able

to move his legs and dependent on round-the-clock nursing.

 

But in what many assumed were his dying weeks, Mr. Scrymgeour learned

of a herbal tea dismissed as quackery by most oncologists.

 

He began drinking it, and has been taking it twice a day for the past

year.

 

Today, at 79, Mr. Scrymgeour is out of the wheelchair and playing golf

twice a week. Blood tests indicate his cancer cell-count is way down.

 

He credits the tea, named Essiac, for his second chance at life.

 

Two years ago Gaetano Montani was diagnosed with small-cell lung cancer

and given a life expectancy of just six months, even under aggressive

conventional treatment. " We were told that this type of cancer was the

most vigorous, and was inoperable, " says his wife, Carolyn.

" My husband's chance of survival was especially terrible--he had already

suffered burns in a fire, two previous heart attacks, open-heart

surgery, a stroke and gallbladder surgery. "

 

But soon after, the Indiana couple's youngest daughter brought home a

box of Essiac. The cancer specialists more or less shrugged their

shoulders, so Mr. Montani began drinking the tea. Like Mr. Scrymgeour,

he kept right on drinking it. Soon after, says Mrs. Montani, his cancer

was gone.

 

Cancer continues to exact a grim toll, but there are a remarkable number

of stories of people suffering its worst forms who recover from it,

apparently thanks to alternative therapies such as Essiac.

 

Their scientific foundation remains shaky. Alternative therapies range

from entirely unknown to barely studied though promising to utterly

discredited.

 

Still, Canadians and others eagerly embrace almost anything offering

hope against this array of usually deadly diseases. There will be more

than 130,000 new cases of cancer diagnosed in Canada in 2000, and 65,000

will succumb to cancer this year.

 

A random survey of Ontario breast cancer patients, published in the

Journal of Clinical Oncology, found that 67% of respondents were using

alternative medicine.

 

Americans are estimated to be spending a staggering $27 billion per year

on alternative cancer treatments.

 

The alternatives include radical diet changes, green tea, a derivative

of shark cartilage, and a host of herbal remedies.

 

The two most credible alternatives appear to be Essiac and a compound

known as 714X.

 

Both, interestingly, were developed by Canadians, the first by a nurse

in the 1920s, the second by an ostracized Quebec physician in the '70s.

 

Many certified oncologists continue to be disturbed at the scarcity of

methodologically rigorous studies of alternative remedies. But to cancer

sufferers, these are merely pedantic objections.

 

A major attraction is that the alternatives are far less physically

harsh than the three conventional approaches--surgery, radiotherapy and

chemotherapy, which critics have dubbed the " slash, burn and poison

trio. "

 

When mixed with hope and desperation, plus the powerful testimonials of

those who say they were cured, the alternatives have almost irresistible

appeal.

 

Although these remedies exude a faint odour of mysticism, the people who

take them seem to be sensible enough. Mr. Scrymgeour, for one, made his

name in Alberta's oil patch, an industry not without its own purveyors

of false hopes and costly tricks.

 

Several decades ago, he became an entrepreneurial legend, founding and

running Westburne International Industries until 1986, later retiring to

Bermuda and New York. He is also a major patron of Vancouver's Fraser

Institute, and a part owner of this magazine.

 

Mr. Scrymgeour's comfortable retirement routine was brutally

interrupted, however, with the news he had cancer.

 

He found out on Valentine's Day 1990, and it inspired in him an instant

resolve: he was determined to beat it.

 

He was able to obtain the best of conventional treatment, and it did

initially lower his count of PSA, prostate-specific antigen, the key

measure of the activity of cancer cells in his body.

 

But the cancer returned last year with a severity that convinced

doctors Mr. Scrymgeour had little hope.

 

In the 11th hour, a friend told him about a Canadian nurse who had

reportedly healed thousands of ostensibly incurable cancer victims using

four common herbs.

 

Today, Mr. Scrymgeour's PSA count is almost non-existent, and he is

fully satisfied there is only one reason: his twice-daily dosage of

Essiac tea.

 

Essiac users are now estimated to number in the thousands across North

America.

 

One user's wife saved what she believed is physical proof of its

effectiveness.

Richard Schmidt was diagnosed with bladder cancer in 1985. The

Torontonian had nine operations to excise tumours from his bladder. At

one point, he was comatose, on life support and suffering a severe

infection, pneumonia and kidney failure, all while requiring another

tumour operation. In short, he was considered a near-hopeless case.

 

Mr. Schmidt's wife Hannelore in desperation sought out a naturopath, who

recommended Essiac.

After three weeks of drinking the tea, black chunks of tumour and skin

began passing with his urine.

 

Mrs. Schmidt preserved 40 pieces in a formaldehyde-filled jar (see photo

above). Soon doctors could find no more cancer. Mr. Schmidt recovered to

thoroughly enjoy his early 80s, gardening and puttering about the

couple's home. At 86 he suffered a stroke and passed away peacefully,

cancer-free.

 

" Essiac brought him many good, happy years, " recalls Mrs. Schmidt.

 

The family of Luke Stevens will likely put it similarly some day,

although Mr. Stevens is still very much alive.

 

Four years ago, the then-17-year-old son of a South African chiropractor

developed a giant cell tumour on his left knee, which grew so rapidly it

destroyed most of his upper tibia.

Surgeons removed the tumour and rebuilt the boy's tibia. Four months

later, Mr. Stevens' body rejected his bone graft and the tumour returned

with a vengeance, breaking through the skin and growing into a hideous,

fist-sized mass.

 

Mr. Stevens' father grew disillusioned with oncologists, ignoring their

advice to amputate his son's leg and begin massive chemotherapy.

 

Then the elder Stevens heard about 714X. Developed by Dr. Gaston

Naessens, a French-born scientist living in Rock Forest, Que., 714X is a

mixture of nitrogen, camphor and mineral salts. It is administered via

injection into the lymph node in the right side of the groin. Working on

the lympatic system and supplying nitrogen to cells, 714X is believed to

aid the body's defence systems.

 

Now 77, Dr. Naessens also claims to have invented a revolutionary,

dark-field microscope he calls a somatoscope, which permits the unique

and unprecedented observation of living blood. This, he says, led to his

discovering a primitive biological entity which he takes to be a

precursor to DNA. He labelled it a somatid, and after comparing the

blood of healthy and diseased individuals, noticed that its life cycle

provides an uncanny indicator of the state of the body's immune system.

Dr. Naessens says he can predict the onset of degenerative disease up to

two years before other noticeable symptoms, in time for possibly

preventative changes to diet or lifestyle.

 

At Dr. Naessens' lab, the somatoscope vividly showed Mr. Stevens' blood

trying to fight off a ravenous cancer. He began 714X treatment

immediately. The changes were swift and astonishing: the tumour

disappeared. Subsequent X-rays documented 100% bone regeneration,

considered medically impossible. Today, at 21, Mr. Stevens attends

university and rows on his school's team. He gives all the credit to Dr.

Naessens' therapy.

 

Alternative therapies have stirred up a host of controversies, some of

them remarkably bitter, among both competing purveyors and an

increasingly divided medical community.

 

A growing number of doctors appear willing to roll some alternatives

into their anti-cancer regimen, if only because it makes patients feel

better.

Matthew Fink, president and chief executive of Beth Israel Medical

Center in New York, explains, " It would be silly for doctors and

hospitals to ignore something that will be a large part of healthcare

for years to come. "

 

Nearly one-third of U.S. hospitals with 500 or more patient beds now

offer alternative therapies.

 

In Canada, some oncologists are joining forces with holistic

practitioners to research popular herbal treatments. One example is

Vancouver's Tzu Chi Institute for Complementary and Alternative

Medicine. The institute works closely with oncologists from the Fraser

Valley Cancer Centre, blending conventional medicine with alternative

therapies.

 

Such alliances will also at last help subject alternative therapies to

rigorous study. Dr. Darlene Ramsum, Tzu Chi's research manager, reports

two now underway. A Phase I study on 714X has just been completed,

revealing no adverse reactions.

 

Patients are currently being enrolled for a Phase I trial of

Flor-Essence, a herbal tea similar to Essiac. Half the participants will

receive palliative chemotherapy while drinking Flor-Essence. The rest

will undergo chemotherapy and receive a placebo. All have late-stage

colo-rectal cancer.

 

In January, the College of Naturopathic Medicine in Toronto will begin

the first human clinical trials of Essiac.

 

Two years ago, a task force of the Canadian Breast Cancer Research

Initiative reviewed available laboratory research into six popular

alternative therapies, including Essiac and 714X.

 

The review discovered that each of the herbs in Essiac has been shown to

trigger biological activity, defined as an effect on the structure or

function of cells, tissues or organs.

 

Burdock root injected into mice with transplanted solid tumours, for

instance, appeared to inhibit the tumours. The review noted that much of

the research was limited to individual herbs, which may not capture the

true " synergistic interaction " of herbal blends.

 

Encouraging results came recently for 714X as well, although prying the

results out of the researcher who conducted the study required

litigation. Dr. Naessens' company, Cerbe Industries, funded the study,

but to preserve its integrity, out-sourced it to Toronto researcher Dr.

Diane Van Alstyne, who in turn hired another researcher at the

prestigious Boston Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Dr. Lili Huang was not

told what product she was testing. The researcher's in-vitro

immunological testing concluded that the unknown product played a role

in killing tumour cells and appeared to elevate immune-system response.

However, once the researcher was told she was testing 714X, she

" misplaced " the original data and results.

 

Dr. Naessens' company had to sue to obtain the study it had paid for.

 

The episode suggests professional jealousy and resentment are an added

factor in the ongoing war between conventional medicine and alternative

therapy.

 

Dr. Ralph Moss, a prominent Brooklyn-based alternative medicine

advocate, charges that as long as billions of cancer-related dollars

flow through pharmaceutical giants and research institutes, conventional

medicine has little motive to find a real cure.

 

Least of all, he notes with great cynicism, one from an easily harvested

weed like burdock.

 

Government health agencies, in their role of protecting the public from

useless or harmful products, represent another major obstacle to

acceptance of alternative therapies. Dr. Naessens, for one, has

experienced vicious and almost uninterrupted resistance in his nearly

three-decade fight to have 714X granted official drug status. Although

he has some influential supporters, he was twice arrested and fined

heavily for practising medicine without a licence.

 

After three of his cancer patients died, Dr. Naessens was charged with

criminal negligence causing death. He was acquitted, perhaps because the

prosecution's claim that 714X caused the deaths of patients written off

by conventional medicine was a tad dubious. An uneasy truce was reached

in 1990, when Health Canada made 714X legally available through its

Special Access Program. The seriously ill can order the product through

a physician, and 15,000 Canadians have already done so.

 

Essiac once faced the same predicament, but its manufacturer adroitly

sidestepped its foes by re-labelling Essiac a health food supplement,

with no medical claims. For this reason, Essiac can be purchased easily,

and sales are well into the millions. A 12-week supply from manufacturer

Essiac International sells for about $360. 714X, meanwhile, in Canada

costs $100 for a 21-day program of daily injections (hypodermic needles

are extra). 714X is sold in 55 countries.

 

Many oncologists readily admit conventional cancer treatment is usually

not a cure.

 

Cancer surgery is painful and often disfiguring.

 

Chemotherapy causes nausea, vomiting, festering sores, loss of appetite,

hair loss and gradually diminishing white blood cell counts, forcing

many patients to discontinue therapy.

 

Less widely-known side effects are reproductive abnormalities, liver and

chromosomal lesions, and cardiac damage.

 

Surveys have revealed the shocking statistic that 80% of oncologists

would not follow their own treatment protocol.

 

Worst of all, the recurrence rate for cancer is distressingly high;

even amputating a limb does not guarantee the cancer will not show up

elsewhere.

 

Astronomical sums have been poured into conventional cancer research,

drug development and upgraded radiation equipment, with only limited

effect.

 

If current trends continue, cancer death rates will easily surpass

those of cardiovascular disease within 10 years. As it stands, one out

of every three women and two out of every five men will develop cancer

during their lifetime.

 

But many physicians and oncologists remain sceptical of what role, if

any, alternative therapies might play in the fight.

 

Many doctors translate the ancient dictum " First, do no harm " into " If

in doubt, don't do anything. "

 

 

To a man like John Scrymgeour, back from the brink of the grave, these

people should stop defending old turf and take another look.

 

" My whole tumour is practically gone, " he declares. " Now, my urologist

has put other patients on Essiac.

 

I'm the proof. A year ago, my legs were like lead. " Mr. Scrymgeour still

walks with a cane, but only by choice. " I get great respect in the

streets of New York with my cane, " he chuckles. " People open doors for

me. "

 

 

Just what's in Essiac?

 

The four main botanicals in Essiac tea--sheep sorrel, burdock root, the

inner bark of slippery elm and Indian rhubarb--are each purported by

herbalists to have beneficial effects.

 

Sheep sorrel acts on the endocrinal system. Burdock root apparently

eliminates free radicals and purifies the blood. Slippery elm is

believed to dissolve mucous deposits in tissue, glands and nerve

channels, soothing inflamed membranes and organs.

 

And Indian rhubarb reportedly helps the body, especially the liver, rid

itself of wastes and toxins.

 

The Ojibwa Answer to Cancer

 

 

The cancer treatment known as Essiac dates back 80 years in its known

form, and may be hundreds of years older than that.

 

In the 1920s, a Canadian nurse named Rene (pronounced Reen) Caisse met

a woman whose breast cancer had apparently been healed by a tea brewed

from herbs provided by an Ojibwa Indian medicine man.

 

Mrs. Caisse wrote down the formula and later used it to treat thousands

of cancer sufferers. She called it Essiac, her name spelled backwards.

 

Even then, conventional medicine considered Essiac quackery. Throughout

her life, the nurse faced numerous charges of practising medicine

without a licence. Health officials repeatedly tried to shut down Mrs.

Caisse's Bracebridge, Ont., clinic. But each time, well-placed

sympathizers or her legions of supporters intervened. In 1938, 55,000

signed a petition in her favour.

 

Mrs. Caisse continued to treat patients at no charge for decades--an

estimated total of 40,000. She claimed to have performed experiments on

mice that suggested Essiac's benefits, but no official or clinical

trials were ever performed.

 

She adamantly refused to provide the miracle tea's recipe to

authorities, fearing they would misuse it. But shortly before her death

in 1978, by now well into her 90s, she relented, selling the recipe to

Resperin Corporation, now Essiac Canada International, which owns the

trademark for Essiac.

 

Dozens of would-be competitors have since tried to capitalize on cancer

sufferers' growing belief in Essiac, trotting out claimed duplicates or

imitations. Their rivalry is fierce, with insults and litigation threats

flying freely. Los Angeles chiropractor Gary Glum maintains he obtained

Mrs. Caisse's original recipe from her friends. Dr. Glum penned Calling

of an Angel, one of several Caisse biographies.

 

He apparently felt no similar calling, however, reportedly charging $560

for two cups of dried herbs claimed to be Essiac. Earlier this month,

Dr. Glum ceased sale of both book and herbs, turning to another

venture--seeking participants in the trial of an alleged cancer remedy

of unknown provenance known as Se-Kret, in conjunction with a Chinese

hospital.

 

Flor-Essence is another ostensibly Essiac-like formula, first promoted

by Vancouver radio host Elaine Alexander. Ms. Alexander also claimed to

have the original Essiac formula, which she sold to B.C.-based Flora

Manufacturing. Ms. Alexander died of breast cancer in 1996.

 

A handful of purported Essiac recipes have popped up on the Internet.

They appear to have essentially the same herbs, but in different

proportions. Some Web-savvy cancer patients are even trying their hand

at growing the backyard herbs, saying they can make Essiac tea for about

four cents a day.

 

 

Essiac International, based in Ottawa, is quick to point out that in

its contract with Mrs. Caisse, the nurse swears the company alone has

her true recipe. Essiac International's tea is also the product used by

the three cancer survivors profiled in the accompanying story. T.P.

Maloney, Essiac International's president, says he takes Essiac

prophylactically, and that he does not have cancer.

 

Last month, a memorial in honour of Mrs. Caisse was unveiled at the site

of her former Bracebridge clinic. Before a large crowd, Mr. Maloney

presented a bronze statue, paid for by his company, of the woman who

made Essiac available to humanity.

 

http://www.essiac-resperin.com/en/report01.html

 

 

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

DietaryTi-

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