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Ivermectin/Stomectol


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I imagine there is a thread on this already....

 

So mods.... merge this if you want to...I'll be adding more on some other herbal aids as well....

 

Off label usages of Hydroxychloroquine and Ivermectin have been smeared by the CDC...Govenments....MSM....and some Physicians....

 

The human version of Ivermectin is Stomectol....a 50 year old drug approved for other uses with a safe usage history when prescribed by a Physician...

 

Take 10 minutes to review the video link below that will give you the raw data on the off label benefits when used for covid 19 patients....

 

World media makes it sound like there is no one in their right mind who would take this.....let alone prescribe it as a Physician...(this isn't about the stuff you buy at the feed store)

 

The fact is in the US there were 88,000 prescriptions issued alone for the human version just last week....

 

It is available....you just need to look for the Physician's who have an open mind to what the data concludes.....

 

Dosage is based on weight...and the sooner you start the medication after a diagnosis, the quicker the recovery ....

 

Some preparation before hand would be a great plan....so if you get that positive test you already know who to go to in your area....   CL

 

 

 

 

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1 hour ago, nstoolman1 said:

My daughter took it on a Saturday afternoon after a + test result and by Tuesday was feeling great. 1 day of misery in-between. Stuff works. We got it through an online Dr. 

Glad to hear this....Thanks...

 

Looks like my auto spell check mis-spelled  Stromectol twice......if you search the subject you'll want the correct spelling..  

CL 

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5 hours ago, nstoolman1 said:

My daughter took it on a Saturday afternoon after a + test result and by Tuesday was feeling great. 1 day of misery in-between. Stuff works. We got it through an online Dr. 

my niece is positive, went to hospital last night got the 4 shot monoclonal and is suffering today , I hope she’s like your daughter and is better tomorrow 🙏🏻

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51 minutes ago, Shelley said:

my niece is positive, went to hospital last night got the 4 shot monoclonal and is suffering today , I hope she’s like your daughter and is better tomorrow 🙏🏻

Yes, Yes. A friend of mine and his wife got it from their daughter who visited them; back in Oct . They eventually were hospitalized , and got monocolonal shots and were discharged 4 and 6 days later. Though their cardio pulmonary issues arose. It took them about a month or so to be able to do their daily walks without oxygen from a travel O2 concentrator. I have been taking NAC 600mg ( helps liver function, liver detox, and lung function), Liposomal Vit C 1000mg, Quecertin 1000 mg , Zinc 50-100 mg , Chaga Mushroom 600 mg, supplements every day . Or no less than every other day. Plus a bunch of other vitamins. I test weekly now for my work and am free of C19. Viagra was designed to treat blood pressure. During trials, the male participants were asked "How does it work ? " They answered, " For blood pressure, not so good; but hey look at this , which I couldn't show anybody for a while now. " A ED treatment was born. That being said, many drugs , designed to treat one thing also have what is called a off script effectiveness in treating other diseases . Ivermectin and HCQ are anti-malarial drugs , 50+ years old each . HCQ, off script use is as the main treatment for the auto immune disease Lupus . Both of these anti malarial drugs work by stopping the malarial virus ability to replicate . Interrupt the life cycle chain here, the malarial virus dies, people get cured from this outbreak. Ivermectin and HCQ have this same effect on Covid 19 , its that simple . They both stop the covid 19 virus's ability to replicate . Ivermectin is so effective, not 100%, but it is so effective Japan has made it their first course of treatment for Covid 19 patients ; Malaysia as well I believe.  Along with many "third world" countries that have access to Ivermectin and HCQ but not vax jabs. Thus explaining their ability to mirror the effective battle against Covid 19 that "first world" countries have. With equal to or lower death rate figures. London Journal of Medicine has many positive articles on them as well. 

 

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5 minutes ago, new york kevin said:

alldaychemist.com             inhousechemist.vu

I’m on most everything you are taking , minus the mushrooms … in their place I take Pepcid AC everyday , it has the chemical Famotidine that trump swore by , so far I’ve been C19 free with negative test results … here’s 🙏🏻 Negative tests in the future . Thanks for all your info and websites I will be checking them out tonight 

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Thank you Kevin, Shelley and Nstoolman for posting...

 

Infornation on a natural remedy is found below.....

 

Government and media down play it .....most comical is the statement by the WHO as to the benefits for malaria.....it works....but if too many people use it and are cured....malaria may replicate itself into something worse....

 

You can't fix crazy...

 

By coincidence hydroxychloroquine is a 70 year old antimalarial drug...when used off label for covid it has seen some success....

 

For me it seems logical that the dots connect....   

 

Thanks again for your input!

CL

 

 

 

Coronavirus: What do we know about the artemisia plant?

By Peter Mwai
BBC Reality Check

Published
11 August
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Composite image of malaria medication and artemisia plantIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
The artemisia annua plant, also known as sweet wormwood, has long provided a key ingredient in treating malaria

The World Health Organization (WHO) is to test a malaria drug on Covid patients, which is derived from the artemisia plant used in Madagascar.

 

The African island nation attracted a lot of attention last year when it announced it was promoting a drink containing artemisia plant extracts to combat coronavirus.

There's no evidence so far that this plant can combat Covid-19.

What is the WHO saying about artemisia?

Artesunate is one of three new drugs to be tested on hospitalised Covid patients.

It's a derivative of artemisinin found in the artemisia plant, used for decades to treat malaria.

The drug will be part of an on-going trial involving researchers in hospitals around the world, looking at treatments for the most seriously ill Covid patients.

 

Four other drugs that were part of an earlier phase of this trial were found to have little or no effect on hospitalised patients.

The WHO says there is currently no evidence that artemisia-derived products are effective in treating Covid-19.

 

The global health body has also helped Madagascar with its own trial of a drug using artemisia and other plant extracts, but says the data needs to be scientifically assessed before any conclusions can be drawn.

Where does the plant come from?

Artemisia annua is originally from Asia, but grows in many other parts of the world with sunny and warm conditions.

 

It's been used in Chinese traditional medicine for more than 2,000 years for treating a number of diseases, including malaria, as well as to relieve pain and combat fever. 

Rasamiharimanana Solofo, an agricultural engineer and researcher inspects plants of artemisia annua growing in greenhousesIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
Artemisia plants being grown in Madagascar

In Chinese medicine, it is known as "qinghao."  

 

It is also called sweet wormwood or annual wormwood, and is used as an alternative therapy - and even put into some alcoholic drinks.

 

President Rajoelina of Madagascar said last year that trials conducted on the Covid-Organics drink - which uses artemisia - showed its effectiveness against the disease. 

 

But the exact composition of the drink is not known, although the government says more than 60% is derived from the artemisia plant.

 

Mr Rajoelina says among the additional plants is ravintsara, an indigenous plant of the laurel family.

 

Madagascar also started producing capsules and a solution that can be injected, on which clinical trials were started.

The President of Madagascar Andry Rajoelina attends a ceremony to launch "Covid Organics" or CVO, in Antananarivo, on 20 April 2020.IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
President Rajoelina promoted the drink to combat coronavirus in Madagascar

German and Danish scientists have been testing extracts from artemisia annua plants, which they said showed some effectiveness against the new coronavirus in a laboratory setting.

 

The research - which hasn't been independently reviewed by other scientists - found that these extracts showed anti-viral activity when used with pure ethanol or distilled water.

 

These researchers are working with the University of Kentucky and were conducting human clinical trials in Mexico.

China has been conducting its own tests, based on traditional medicines that use the artemisia annua plant.

 

And scientists in South Africa have been doing laboratory tests on artemisia annua and another variety of the plant - artemisia afra - for effectiveness against Covid-19.

How is it used against malaria?

The active ingredient found in the dried leaves of artemisia annua is called artemisinin, and it does work against malaria.

 

Chinese scientists pioneered the discovery of its properties when they were searching for a cure for malaria in the 1970s.

Media caption,
Chinese scientists on the search for a malaria cure

Artemisinin-based combination therapies - known for short as ACTs - are recommended by the WHO against malaria, especially those types now resistant to chloroquine, which is one of the main drug treatments for the disease.

 

ACTs contain derivatives of artemisinin combined with other substances, and these reduce the number of malaria parasites in the body.

 

Increased access to ACTs in malaria-endemic countries has been cited as a key factor in helping reduce the global toll of the disease in the last 15 years.

What are the risks of drug resistance?

Because artemisia annua extracts have started appearing more widely as remedies for malaria, such as in tea, there's concern that unregulated usage could allow the malaria parasite to develop resistance.

Lab technician in Burkina Faso studying malaria parasiteIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
The malaria parasite is showing increasing resistance to some drugs

There are a number of countries in south-east Asia where this resistance has already been observed.

 

"We know that over time the [malaria] parasite will start to resist, but this time [period] needs to be as long as possible," says Jean-Baptiste Nikiema of the WHO.

 

The WHO now discourages the use of non-pharmaceutical forms of artemisinin, concerned that it could lead to growing malarial resistance.

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