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Mega-vitamin C and Babies |
Vitamin C II |
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"WARNING: KEEP
THIS MEDICINE OUT OF THE REACH OF EVERYBODY! Any physician who gives twelve courses of antibiotics to
an infant under a
year old is not qualified to practice medicine. I know more than one doctor who still does. Ray, a health
professional himself, brought his 11 month old son Robbie to me. The
child was very sick, and had been for over a week. No one, and I mean no
one, in their family had had any sleep in a long time. They were up
night after night with this child, who had a high fever, glazed watery eyes,
tons of thick watery mucus, labored breathing, would not sleep, and did
little else but cry. Day and night, night and day. Robbie was under
the care of a pediatrician, who had been prescribing serious antibiotics all
along. Antibiotics were clearly not working. This was all too
apparent to Ray. "Twelve rounds
of antibiotics for a baby under a year old, and all the doctor wants to do is
give more antibiotics?" he said. "That makes no sense at
all." "Ray,
antibiotics are their knee-jerk answer to a lot of things. There is a
saying: 'When the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend
to see every problem as a nail.'" "Well, we've
thoroughly tried the medical route, and cooperated one hundred percent with
the pediatrician. At this point," Ray said, "Robbie is worse, not
better. We have got to do something ourselves, and we are going
to. My wife is just as emphatic about that as I am." She was home,
taking care of the other children.
I promptly
acquainted Ray with the vitamin C doctors.
"So the bottom
line is to give Robbie as much vitamin C as he can hold without having loose
bowels," Ray said. "Yes." "We can do
that," he said. And he did, too. So now I have a new
case history record to offer: 20,000 milligrams of vitamin C daily for a 20
pound baby of 11 months of age. That's how much it took to cure Ray's baby
of severe congestion, fever, and listlessness. That is 1,000 milligrams
of vitamin C per pound per day; 2,200 mg "C" per kilogram body
weight per day, nearly twice what Dr. Frederick Klenner customarily ordered
for patients. And even at that huge amount, the baby never had diarrhea! You have to marvel
at where it was all going. More marvelous is how quickly it worked. Ray
kept in touch on the phone. "Robbie was
noticeably improved in under twelve hours, and slept through the first
night." Ray told me two days later. "He was completely well in 48
hours. Symptom free. Completely well!" Even without
considering the harmful side effects of massive antibiotic therapy, we can
look at the futility of all those repeated doses. Antibiotics are either
going to work with the first or second round, or they are not going to work
at all, period. There is no point in emptying twelve water fire
extinguishers on an electrical fire. More of the wrong thing is just more
wrong. And in a baby, just plain stupid. One simply must
find the best, safest, and most effective way, especially with
infants. The great vitamin C advocates (Linus Pauling, Frederick Robert Klenner,
Emanuel Cheraskin, William J. McCormick, Irwin Stone, Robert F. Cathcart III,
and, ah... me) will tell you that you have a genuine option: consider using
vitamin C as your first choice antibiotic. Taking enough C
results in the three C's: patient comfort, low cost, and parental
control. Without necessitating the use of invasive technology nor the
trauma of hospitalization, parents can regain confidence and mastery over
illness to a degree that they might never have thought possible. We have
now gone light years beyond the medical profession's customarily
paternalistic, condescending attitude towards self-care. For this reason,
vitamin C therapy will be decried and denounced as irresponsible
quackery. It takes some real ego strength for a parent to stand firm and
say, "This is what I am going to do: I am going to follow the
Klenner/Cathcart vitamin C protocol." The vitamin C doctors'
shared knowledge of how it is done is the buttress that makes such a stance
possible. When I was a kid,
everybody got miracle drugs. From sulfa to Physohex, we followed the crowd
from waiting room to prescription counter. Our parents gave us
"safe" children's aspirin. Oops, not so safe for high fevers,
it was discovered. So then it was children's Tylenol (acetaminophen) for
everybody. Hmm: it turns out there's some liver and kidney side effects with that,
too. And, as drugs go, acetaminophen is really safe. But drugs all
carry side effects; you just choose your poison carefully. Vitamins are
vastly safer. Law: the number one
side effect of vitamins is failure to take enough of them. If you do choose to
employ antibiotic drugs, bear in mind that they interfere with normal
digestion by killing off beneficial colon bacteria. These are the very
bacteria that make vitamin K, the B-vitamins cobalamin and biotin, help us
digest many plant and dairy foods, strengthen the immune system, and repress
the overgrowth of pathogenic microorganisms. After antibiotic therapy,
all persons should take yogurt and an acidophillus supplement for a month or
two to help restore a normal, healthy bowel environment. I have found
shamefully few doctors who tell this to their patients. And this is not
just about antibiotics. In the 1980 Physicians' Desk Reference,
Prednisone didn't even have the "diamond" symbol of a
frequently-prescribed drug next to its listing in the table of
contents. Now it is used almost indiscriminately. For instance, I
know a sixteen year old girl who had a lousy diet, innumerable colds, and
chronic bronchitis. After bucketsful of antibiotics, the HMO doctors put
her on Prednisone. Prednisone is a drug of desperation. When they pull
out the corticosteroids, they don't know what else to do. Prednisone can
cause the following nutritional problems, among others: sodium and fluid
retention, potassium loss, osteoporosis, carbohydrate intolerance and
increased insulin requirement, and a variety of gastrointestinal
complications. Why subject a sixteen year old kid to this? On the other hand,
I have in my possession two United States Pharmacopoeia statements on
vitamin C for injection asserting that "there are no counterindications
for the use of ascorbic acid (vitamin C)." Additionally, it
works. Intelligently employing vitamins can eliminate many dangerous
side effects that come from over-reliance on over-the-counter and
prescription drugs. This goes for
viruses, too. Lowered resistance
can trigger an outbreak of latent herpes viruses. Marta, age
30, was in her sixth month of a long-desired pregnancy. She came to
see me specifically because of genital herpes. Her obstetrician had
correctly told her that she could not deliver vaginally as long as there were
active lesions. Exposure to herpes constitutes a real danger to a
newborn. The doctor had said that if the lesions were inactive, and
preferably gone, for a period of so many weeks, he'd OK a natural delivery. Otherwise,
it would be a Cesarean for her. Her question was
expected. "Is there any
way to get rid the lesions with nutrition?" Marta asked. Conformist,
party-line dietitians will vigorously deny such a possibility, but then, they
don't read their own journals, and certainly not Linus Pauling's books or the
Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine. So the truthful
answer, the one I'd have to give if under oath, is: Yes, there probably is:
very large doses of vitamin C. I ran this past
Marta, and her concern was, once again, entirely predictable. "Are megadoses
of vitamin C safe for the baby?" I knew that
Frederick R. Klenner, MD (the trailblazer of vitamin C megadosing) gave large
doses to over 300 pregnant women and reported virtually no complications in
any of the pregnancies or deliveries (Irwin Stone, The Healing Factor,
chapter 28). Indeed, hospital nurses around Specifically,
Klenner gave: 4,000 milligrams during the first trimester, 6,000 mg during
the second, and 10,000 milligrams of vitamin C a day - or even 15,000 mg -
throughout their third trimester. This was his routine prescription for
healthy women. He would respond to any sickness with daily vitamin C
injections totaling many times that.
Over a nearly 40
year practice, Klenner (and previous animal studies) rigorously ascertained
the safety and effectiveness of vitamin C during
pregnancy. Specifically, there were no miscarriages in this entire group
of 300 women. There were no postpartum hemorrhages at all. There
was no cardiac distress and there were no toxic manifestations (Stone, p.
191). Among Klenner's patients were the Fultz quadruplets, who, at the
time, were the only quads in the southeastern U.S. to survive. Upon
admission to the hospital for childbirth, Klenner gave all mothers-to-be
"booster" injections of vitamin C. So my answer to Marta's
question of safety was an unfettered "yes." Additionally,"
I added, "For the ladies who had all the vitamin C, labor was both
shorter and less painful." Soon to be facing
her first delivery, Marta had a vested interest in that little side benefit. "I've never
given birth myself," I went on, "But my wife's two deliveries
confirmed what Klenner said. Her first labor was two hours and forty-five
minutes total, and her second labor was one hour and forty-five minutes from
the very onset to "it's a girl."
Wow!" Marta
said, happier than ever. "I hesitate to
keep this going, but there's still more. The obstetrical nurses at
Klenner's hospital repeatedly verified that stretch marks were seldom seen on
Klenner's post-partum patients. I can personally vouch for this being
true with my spouse. After two kids, the second with a birthweight of 10
pounds, two ounces..." Marta's eyes grew
large at the very idea. "...My wife
had a single, half-inch stretch mark. Pretty neat, eh?" Marta nodded
several times. "Well, I
really want to get rid of this herpes thing so I can have a natural
childbirth," Marta said. I know that herpes is most certainly not safe
for the baby. And from what I've read, Cesarean delivery, like all
operations, carries risk, too. It seemed that my balance sheet favors
trying the vitamin." "Well," I
said, "If you are going to do it, Marta, you might as well do it
right. This means building up your C level to saturation. That's
bowel tolerance, remember?" She did. "And you mean
that I might have to take much more than I'd expect to, right?" Marta
added. "Yes," I
said. "You do not take the amount of vitamin C you think you should
take; rather, you take the amount of vitamin C that the body responds
to. When your symptoms leave, that's the right level for you at that
time. As you get better, you will not be able to hold as much of the
vitamin. The dose is self-adjusting, and you need no equipment to
monitor it. Just take as much as you can comfortably hold, just enough to be
symptom-free, but not so much as causes loose bowels." Marta said,
"How long will it be before I see any progress?" "It depends on
how much vitamin C you take, and how much vitamin C you need. A dry
sponge holds a lot of water. The body seems to have an enormous capacity
for vitamin C when infected with a virus. We'll all find out how much
you need when we see how much you can comfortably hold. It is not a
contest; just do what gets the healing. But it will take time to get to your
saturation level." "What can I
expect along the way?" she asked. "The first
thing you will notice is: nothing. There is a latency period, a
lag-time, while you load the body with the vitamin. It's a bit like
waiting for your computer to load a new program." "Can you try
another analogy?" Marta said. "Look at it
this way," I responded. "Let's say you were in a plane taking
off from "That is
exactly what it is like when you reach saturation of vitamin C. At a
certain altitude, higher than you expected, your symptoms go away. This
characteristically occurs with such ease that it is hard to believe it until
you experience it for yourself. Precious few medical professionals have
learned this. The medical-dietetic industry has a real fear of flying if
vitamin C is the aircraft. Too bad, when it is the safest and fastest
plane in the air. Marta was nobody's
fool, and worked closely with her obstetrician. She had heard about something
termed "rebound scurvy," and now asked me about it. "Rebound
scurvy, or the rebound effect, is when a person takes a lot of vitamin C,
usually with great success, and then abruptly stops taking it. At that
instance, symptoms come back, sometimes including a few classic vitamin C
deficiency signs. Research shows that such an effect does not occur in
the vast majority of situations. "However,
pregnancy is a special case. If the mother takes a lot of C while
pregnant, Klenner and others confirmed that her labor and delivery will be
shorter, easier and free of complications. If the vitamin helped while
Mommy was pregnant, it should most certainly be given to the baby. During gestation,
the baby got all the C he needed. But now, baby is on his own: no more C
through the placenta and umbilical cord. If the baby is used to, and
benefiting from, abundant vitamin C, it obviously should be provided for him
individually after birth. Klenner gave newborns about 50 milligrams a
day. Not doing that results in a scorbutic baby." "But doesn't
that just mean that the baby is dependent on vitamin C?" Marta
said. I told you she was nobody's fool. "No," I
answered. "No more than the baby is dependent on oxygen, or water, or
food. Consider this: If you have a really high paying job, and expenses to
fit it, and you are suddenly fired, you have a problem. Your problem is
not money. Your problem is a lack of money." Marta smiled
comfortably. "So don't stop
a good thing, then," she said. "That's
it," I agreed. "If vitamin C is important enough for the woman
to take before giving birth, then it is important enough for the baby to get
after it has been born." "I can see
that," she said. "But I'm going to breast feed my
baby. Is there vitamin C in breast milk?" "There is
some, but we do not know how much at any given feeding. Keep in mind
that the nursing woman is healing up and stressed out. Along with
recovering from childbirth, she is adapting to really momentous changes in
her lifestyle and sleeping schedule, and everybody knows that taking care of
a baby is a tremendous demand on a person. Mom needs a lot of vitamin C
herself. So her amount of available surplus C is small. For this reason,
breast milk is an unreliable source of vitamin C for babies. However,
mother's milk otherwise is the perfect food for infants. You absolutely,
positively are making the right decision when you breast feed. Just slip
the child a little C each day as you do it. Even a newborn can gum down
a tiny bit of a finely-powdered chewable children's C tablet. You can
put a little right on the baby's tongue. Vitamin C drops are also
available. My own kids got supplemental C from the very first days of
their lives." "What if a
baby was formula-fed?" Marta asked.
"Then
supplemental C is ever more essential," I said. "Very little
of the vitamin is found in formula, especially after it is manufactured,
packaged, opened, heated, poured, and oxidized during bottle feeding." "OK,"
said Marta. "I guess I should get started." She did. It was not that
long afterward that I had a follow-up conversation with her. "The delivery
is on," Marta said. "The herpes lesions are all gone, and have been
gone since I got to saturation with the C. Do you want to know how much it
took?" "You bet I
do." "44,000
milligrams a day!" she hooted. "Can you believe that? And
at that much I hardly had any bowel signs at all. So I dropped it to
about 35 to 40 thousand and stayed there. That's it!" Not quite. A
couple of months later, Marta had one of the most adorable baby girls I've
ever seen. That Dr. Klenner fellow. I'd have liked to have met him. (For more about Dr Klenner: http://www.doctoryourself.com/klennerbio.html
) Right now there are
a whole lot of researchers searching for a good new anti-viral
drug. They are the blind leading the blind. They already have
one. The pharmaceutical industry's mercenary scientists and their
medical doctor clones will, in fact, try everything but megadoses of vitamin
C. I think of them as birds that are willing to land on any branch
except one. Too bad, because that one branch is the best in the tree. YOU CAN READ BOTH THE CLINICAL GUIDE and THE HEALING FACTOR
FOR FREE Copyright C 2004, 2003
and prior years Andrew W. Saul. Andrew Saul is the author of the books FIRE YOUR
DOCTOR! How to be Independently Healthy (reader reviews at http://www.doctoryourself.com/review.html
) and DOCTOR YOURSELF: Natural Healing that Works. (reviewed at http://www.doctoryourself.com/saulbooks.html
) For ordering information, Click Here .
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