Summary
Highlights
Cancer behaves remarkably like a parasite, utilizing ancient, inefficient energy-producing pathways called glycolysis to thrive. By consuming significant resources and bypassing standard cellular death signals, cancer functions through machinery shared by parasites and fungi.
Cancer utilizes three key survival systems: internal scaffolding for rapid division, signals that prevent programmed cell death, and heavy reliance on glycolysis for fuel. Antiparasitic agents, such as fenbendazole and natural herbs, work by breaking down this scaffolding, removing the 'do not kill' signals, and inhibiting the fuel sources cancer requires.
Limited mainstream clinical trials exist because the drugs in question are inexpensive and patents have long expired. However, independent research from various international labs and case studies indicate that these compounds can combat chemo-resistant cancer cells and cancer stem cells.
Beyond medication, managing cancer involves starving it of preferred fuels like refined carbohydrates and rotating diets to prevent adaptation. Strengthening the immune system via vitamin D, fasting, exercise, and proper sleep is presented as a vital strategy for supporting killer T cells and natural killer cells in detecting and eliminating cancer.