Home | Start The Analyst | FAQ | Search | Health Discussion Forum
Hydrazine Sulfate
  Hydrazine Sulfate
 Recommended for…
 


The largest study of hydrazine sulfate (740 cancer patients in the Soviet Union) found that hydrazine sulfate produced stabilization or regression of the tumor in 50.8% of the patients. Other studies have not found similar results but may have been flawed. According to Dr. Joseph Gold, who pioneered this use of hydrazine sulfate, there are few side effects - mild numbness of the digits, nausea and slight drowsiness. Nerve inflammation can be cause by long-term use, but this can be diminished or eliminated by taking vitamin B6 or reducing the dose of hydrazine sulfate.

NOTE that it is not approved by the FDA for cancer therapy and, if taken, should be used under the direction of your doctor. If a special diet (discussed below) is not adhered to, it can be useless at best and fatal at worst. Despite the care that must be taken, many people have found it helpful.

Hydrazine sulfate is usually administered orally to cancer patients in 60mg capsules or tablets, approximately one to two hours before meals. It is given at first once per day for several days, then twice, then three or four times daily, depending on the patient's response and the physician's judgment. On such a regimen, many terminal and semiterminal patients have derived considerable benefit, although patients in the early stages of the disease derive the most benefit from the treatment.

Approximately half of the patients to whom the drug is properly administered in the early stages of the disease show an almost immediate weight gain and reversal of symptoms; in some instances, the tumor eventually disappears. The common types of cancer most frequently reported to benefit from hydrazine sulfate therapy are recto-colon cancer, ovarian cancer, prostatic cancer, lung (bronchogenic) cancer, Hodgkin's disease and other lymphomas, thyroid cancer, melanoma, and breast cancer. Some less common types of cancer also benefit.

WARNING! Hydrazine sulfate is a monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitor and is incompatible with tranquilizers, barbiturates, alcohol and other central nervous system depressants. Foods high in tyramine, such as aged cheeses and fermented products, are also incompatible with MAO inhibitors. The use of tranquilizers, barbiturates and/or alcoholic beverages with hydrazine sulfate destroys the efficacy of this drug and increases patient morbidity.

"Whether hydrazine sulfate should be used in conjunction with other agents seems to be dependent on whether these agents are doing the patient any demonstrable good." says Dr. Gold. "In the instances in which these agents have been doing good, hydrazine sulfate should be used in conjunction with them. However, and especially with those cases on toxic drugs, in instances in which the drugs have been doing no evident good, it is probably best to withdraw such drugs and use hydrazine sulfate alone."





Hydrazine Sulfate can help with the following:
Tumors, Malignant  Cancer, General
 Cachexia (wasting) in cancer patients is produced by the cancer cells’ partial metabolism of glucose, which leaves lactic acid as a by-product. The liver expends enormous amounts of the body’s energy converting lactic acid back to glucose. As the cancer grows (and puts out more and more lactic acid) this process is intensified, and the body weakens and wastes away. Hydrazine sulfate works by blocking a liver enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of lactic acid into glucose. This both stops the constant energy drain on the body and robs the tumor of a significant source of energy.

  Breast Cancer
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.

  Prostate Cancer
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.

  Colon Cancer
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.

  Lung Cancer
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.

  Ovarian Cancer
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.

  Melanoma
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.

  Hodgkin's Lymphoma
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.

  Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.

  Thyroid Cancer
 See the link between Cancer (General) and Hydrazine Sulfate.


KEY
May do some good


GLOSSARY

Cachexia
Weight loss due to chronic disease or prolonged emotional stress.

Cancer
Refers to the various types of malignant neoplasms that contain cells growing out of control and invading adjacent tissues, which may metastasize to distant tissues.

Central Nervous System (CNS)
A collective term for the brain, spinal cord, their nerves, and the sensory end organs. More broadly, this can even include the
neurotransmitting hormones instigated by the CNS that control the chemical nervous system, the endocrine glands.

Enzymes (Enzyme)
Specific protein catalysts produced by the cells that are crucial in chemical reactions and in building up or synthesizing most compounds in the body. Each enzyme performs a specific function without itself being consumed. For example, the digestive enzyme amylase acts on carbohydrates in foods to break them down.

FDA
The (American) Food and Drug Administration. It is the official government agency that is responsible for ensuring that what we put into our bodies - particularly food and drugs - is safe and effective.

Glucose
A sugar that is the simplest form of carbohydrate. It is commonly referred to as blood sugar. The body breaks down carbohydrates in foods into glucose, which serves as the primary fuel for the muscles and the brain.

Hodgkin's Disease (Hodgkin's)
Cancer of the lymphatic system and lymph nodes.

Liver (Hepatic)
The largest and one of the most complex organs of the body, the liver is responsible for much of the metabolism of fats, proteins and carbohydrates. It is the site of much of the body's detoxification. It is connected very closely with digestion and the regulation of blood sugar, among many other functions. Found behind the ribs on the right side of the abdomen, it has many important functions such as removing harmful material from the blood, making enzymes and bile that help digest food, and converting food into substances needed for life and growth. Hepatic: Pertaining to the liver.

Lymphoma (Lymphomas)
Any tumor of the lymphatic tissues.

Melanoma
A life-threatening type of skin cancer that occurs in the cells (melanocytes) that produce melanin, the pigment found in skin, hair, and the iris of the eyes.

Metabolism (Metabolic, Metabolize, Metabolizes, Metabolizing)
The chemical processes of living cells in which energy is produced in order to replace and repair tissues and maintain a healthy body. Responsible for the production of energy, biosynthesis of important substances, and degradation of various compounds. Also defined as the sum total of changes in an organism in order to achieve a balance (homeostasis): Catabolic burns up, anabolic stores and builds up; the sum of their work is metabolism.

Milligram (mg, Milligrams)
0.001 or a thousandth of a gram.

Monoamine Oxidase (MAO)
An enzyme catalyzing the removal of an amine group from a variety of substrates, including norepinephrine and dopamine. MAO inhibitors block the action of MAO, thus raising the levels of the monoamine neurotransmitters such as norepinephrine, epinephrine, dopamine, and serotonin - which have significant effects on mood and behavior. Epinephrine, norepinephrine and serotonin are normally deactivated by MAO-A while dopamine and phenylethylamine are normally metabolized by MAO-B.

Nausea
Symptoms resulting from an inclination to vomit.

Thyroid (Thyroid Gland)
The thyroid gland is an organ with many veins, anchored around the front of the throat near the voice box. It is essential to normal body growth in infancy and childhood. It absorbs iodine from the diet and releases thyroid hormones - iodine-containing compounds that help govern the rate of the body's metabolism (its total life processes), affecting body temperature, and regulating protein, fat and carbohydrate catabolism in all cells. They keep up growth hormone release, skeletal maturation, and heart rate, force, and output. They promote central nervous system growth, stimulate the making of many enzymes, and are necessary for muscle tone and vigor. To a high degree, metabolism is regulated by the hormone thyroxine, which can be made by the thyroid if enough organic iodine is available. An enlarged thyroid gland that is not cancer is sometimes called goitre.

Tumor (Tumors, Tumour, Tumours)
An abnormal growth of tissue resulting from uncontrolled, progressive multiplication of cells and serving no physiological function; a neoplasm. Literally, a swelling; in the past the term has been used in reference to any swelling of the body, no matter what the cause. However, the word is now being used almost exclusively to refer to a neoplastic mass, and the more general usage is being discarded.

Tyramine
An amino acid synthesized in the body from the essential amino acid tyrosine that has a sympathomimetic action and is derived from tyrosine.

Vitamin B6 (B6, B-6)
Influences many body functions including regulating blood glucose levels, manufacturing hemoglobin and aiding the utilization of protein, carbohydrates and fats. It also aids in the function of the nervous system.




Last updated: Dec 01, 2008


Home | Start The Analyst | FAQ | Search | Health Discussion Forum
Design by: RoyalWebHosting.com