FLCCC protocol for immune compromised? (CLL)

  • FLCCC protocol for immune compromised? (CLL)

    Posted by cadfaelfan on February 16, 2024 at 5:15 am EST

    Hi, so happy you have formed a forum. Long story short, I’m recently diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, which the doctor believes stretches back to at least January 2020 and was undetected at that time. That means the FLCCC prevention (followed for about two years except for ivermectin which I couldn’t reliably source) and early exposure protocols (the latter one followed twice) kept me safe throughout the pandemic, despite an unknowingly compromised immune system. To be clear I did not take any MRNA vaccines so the leukemia has nothing to do with that.

    Anyways, it looks like the early exposure protocol is no longer on your website. Are there are tweaks I should make to the prevention protocol given my immune status? My leukemia has apparently progressed because I’m picking up every little cold going around, so I really want to boost my immune system to the max.

    I am so GLAD I didn’t know I had leukemia throughout the pandemic!! It would have added to my stress since the medical pressure would have been insane, compounding the nudge politics.

    Sincere thanks 🙂

    cadfaelfan replied 11 months, 4 weeks ago 3 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Karen_flccc

    Moderator
    February 16, 2024 at 8:44 am EST

    Not sure about tweaks for immune compromised but there is still a prevention protocol and an early treatment protocol on the FLCCC website:

    Prevention: https://imahealth.org/protocol/i-prevent-covid-flu-rsv/
    Early treatment: https://imahealth.org/protocol/i-care-early-covid-treatment/

  • cadfaelfan

    Member
    February 16, 2024 at 9:21 am EST

    Thanks, Karen 🙂 I meant early exposure, ie if a friend might come down with COVID the day after we were in close contact with them. I remembered it as a separate protocol but it looks like it’s in the prevention protocol. 👍

  • pmarik

    Member
    February 16, 2024 at 11:33 am EST

    CML is one of very few cancers caused by a chromosomal mutation. the philadelphia chromosome. It codes for a specific protein called a tyrosine kinase. Oncologists have a specific therapy for this leukemia namely a tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Your oncologist should be treating you with this…. if not ask him/her. In addition, I would certianly ensure that you take high dose Vitamin D. I would also consider melatonin, metformin and curcumin.. and possibly ivermecin. Have you downloaded the cancer care care guide from our website:

    https://imahealth.org/reviews-and-monographs/cancer-care/

    Paul.

  • cadfaelfan

    Member
    February 16, 2024 at 11:50 am EST

    Thanks so much Sir. Mine is actually lymphocytic, not myeloid. A friend has CML and told me about that gene<div>

    My doctor says chemical exposure of some kind might be to blame in my case, and I’m exploring that theory more (especially an industrial explosion in my city a few years back…).

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    I’ll look at the links given and keep up the Prevent protocol! Thanks.

    In my research, I didn’t understand what was meant in the following article, that ivermectin is linked to cytotoxicity. I understand that means cell death, but in this case does it mean killing the cancerous cells?

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3779154

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