International LDN Awareness Week eBook 2009. Cris Kerr & Linda Elsegood for the LDN Research Trust
Many people have written books on LDN that are both informative and inspirational for those researching LDN.
International LDN Awareness Week eBook 2009. Cris Kerr & Linda Elsegood for the LDN Research Trust
International LDN Awareness Week eBook 2010 by Cris Kerr & Linda Elsegood for the LDN Research Trust. Contains 201 patient testimonies of health success with LDN. FREE to read, save, or share forward.
Diagnosed with Progressive Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis, Joseph Wouk refuses to accept the doctor's opinion that there is nothing more to be done for his medical condition. He plans to go to the Amazon to try to cure himself with a Shaman's ayahuasca ceremony. Told with humor and honesty, Wouk pulls the reader through his thought processes as he watches his mind dissolve from the subcortical dementia caused by his particular variety of MS.
Right before he is scheduled to leave for Peru, all his MS symptoms suddenly disappear from his taking LDN. Google LDN ! is Wouk's attempt at Dana Paramita, the Buddhist version of Christian "good works". You'll laugh and cry through the first part of the book and be inspired by the second part. A man who refuses to give up in the face of insurmountable odds ends up completely healed despite the hopelessness that western medicine tells him he faces.
HONEST MEDICINE introduces four lifesaving treatments that have been effectively treating--and in some cases curing--people for 25-90 years. However, for reasons of profitability (or lack thereof), these treatments have not been universally accepted.
LDN: Niedrig dosiertes Naltrexon - eine vielversprechende Therapie bei MS, Morbus Crohn, HIV, Krebs, Autismus, CFS und anderen Autoimmun- und neurodegenerativen Erkrankungen [Broschiert]
Josef Pies (Autor)
by Robert Rodgers (Author), Lexie Lindstrom (Author)
by John Kim MD (Author), Kimberly Blair Ely (Editor)
by Dr. Rudy Cartwright and Scott Cartwright MPH
"Scary Diagnosis" is a book and handbook about what you should and shouldn't do before and after hearing a Scary Diagnosis from your Doctor. It is written to give perspective to not only the "patient" but also to loved ones and friends. The author's wife has survived 2 bouts of cancer and the author is dealing with his own Scary Diagnosis daily (MS - Multiple Sclerosis). Regardless of your symptoms or diagnosis, this book can help you and those around you. It is a particularly important read for anyone dealing with any of the autoimmune diseases, cancer, heart or circulation issues as well as autism, Lyme disease or unidentified long term symptoms.
by Elizabeth J Rhodes and Sanchita Dutta
Yoon Hang John Kim
A Special free eBook for The First International Low Dose Naltrexone Awareness Week. This eBook tells the history of LDN and just about everything you ever need to know.
by Linda Elsegood (Author)
Potential Benefits in Cancer, Autoimmune, Neurological and Infectious Disorders - by Elaine A. Moore, Samantha Wilkinson, Yash Pal Agrawal (Foreword by)
Naltrexone is an opiate antagonist drug developed in the 1970s and approved by the FDA in 1984 as a safe and effective treatment for opiate and drug abuse. When used at much lower doses in an off-label protocol referred to as low dose naltrexone (LDN), the drug has been shown to halt disease progression in Crohn's disease and certain cancers, including pancreatic cancer, and to reduce symptoms in multiple sclerosis and autism. While ongoing clinical trials are evaluating the use of LDN in treating fibromyalgia and HIV/AIDS, it has been shown to improve numerous autoimmune and neurodegenerative conditions, including Parkinson's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
The new 2010 edition of 'Those Who Suffer Much, Know Much' contains an explanatory article, 51 LDN case studies, 19 health professional interviews and perspectives, LDN references, and research. FREE to read, save, or share forward.
The story is simple. It is about love, life and hope. After years of battling with the onslaught of her husband's Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis, Mary stumbled on a little known doctor in New York City, Dr. Bernard Bihari. Many people on the internet claimed that Dr. Bihari knew how to stop every type of MS from progressing. Even better, it was claimed that he could help everyone with an autoimmune disorder, ranging from psoriasis to AIDS.