Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin
C
The Clinical Experiences of Frederick R. Klenner, M.D.,
abbreviated, summarized and annotated by
Lendon H. Smith, M.D.
abbreviated, summarized and annotated by
Lendon H. Smith, M.D.
2233 SW Market Street, Portland, Oregon 97201
Preface
After Frederick Klenner died in
1984, his friend (and mine), Arthur Rybeck, a nutritionally-oriented dentist
practicing in Wheeling, West Virginia, asked if I would be interested in going
over the 27 papers Klenner had written from the early 1940’s to the early
1970’s. The whole idea would be to let the world know how thoughtful and
careful a researcher he was, and to encourage others to continue his work. If a
compendium of Vitamin C (and other nutritional) therapy could be compiled from
the published work of Dr. Klenner, maybe we could get more traditional
medicine-oriented doctors to use his methods for the relief of sickness and
suffering.
Standard doctors tend to believe
studies and reports if published, but tend to disbelieve hearsay stories about
treatments that patients have read in a “health” newsletter.
I have used Dr. Klenner’s methods on
hundreds of patients. He is right. It helps almost every condition and
situation, and my failures were due to inadequate amounts.
The timing of such a paper might be
most appropriate. Doctors are suffering from low public esteem because they are
perceived to be money-grubbing and mistake-laden. This would be a
scientifically documented - from the medical literature - therapy for a variety
of conditions: cardiovascular, allergies, infections, malabsorption, (see
index), and even AIDS, for which prescription drugs may be hazardous. Now the
doctors can say, “We have a safe, reasonably natural way of treating your
condition that is fairly cheap. We might just keep you out of the hospital.”
That last part might make the
insurance carriers perk up their ears. The patients might dash back to the
doctors’ offices because the word is getting out that doctors are helping
people without side effects. Notice also, the dates on these articles and
references - these things were known decades ago.
Take this booklet to your M.D. and
suggest that he read about these documented studies. Take Dr. E. Cheraskin’s
“Vitamin C Connection” along for further documentation. If your doctor doesn’t
know, how can he help you?
Foreword
by Linus Pauling, Ph.D.
by Linus Pauling, Ph.D.
The early papers by Dr. Fred R.
Klenner provide much information about the use of large doses of Vitamin C in
preventing and treating many diseases. These papers are still important. Dr.
Lendon Smith has done a valuable service in making the work of Dr. Klenner
available to the public.
Introduction
I have before me the published words
of Frederick Robert Klenner, B.S., M.S., M.D., F.C.C.P., F.A.A.F.P. He
graduated from Duke University, School of Medicine back in 1936. After three
years of hospital training he entered the private practice of medicine in
Reidsville, North Carolina. His main subspecialty was diseases of the chest,
but he became interested in the use of massive doses of Vitamin C in the
treatment of virus diseases and other illnesses as well. He inspired Linus
Pauling and Irwin Stone to expand the research on the great benefits of Vitamin
C. Dr. Klenner died in 1984.
What follows is a review, and
abbreviation, a summary and a critique of the 27 scientific papers he wrote. In
the light of the recent developments and research in the use of Vitamin C, it
is essential that the roots of its usage be reviewed. Briefly, Vitamin C does
attenuate most virus infections by aiding the production of interferon,
controls many cancers, relieves some depression, modifies much pain and changes
the course of many diseases, like multiple sclerosis, amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis, spider bites, the bites of poisonous insects and reptiles. The
watchword is, “If in doubt, give Vitamin C.”
Dedication
If Dr. Klenner had lived he would
have wanted this book to be dedicated to the following:
Anne Klenner for her patience and
understanding.
Fritz for the lively discussions in chemistry.
Mary Anne and Gertrude for being ‘guinea pigs’.
Fritz for the lively discussions in chemistry.
Mary Anne and Gertrude for being ‘guinea pigs’.
General Remarks
He believed in the healing power of
nature, but believed that natural remedies could enhance that power and were
safer and usual1y more effective than drugs. Hippocrates said, “Of several
remedies the physician should choose the least sensational”. Vitamin C
fills that criterion.
In 1948, he published his first
paper on the use of large doses of Vitamin C in the treatment of virus
diseases. In 1960, he realized, “Every head cold must be considered as a
probable source of brain pathology.” Hold on to this thought; it is significant
for the understanding of diseases like multiple sclerosis. He also felt—as do
Archie Kalikarinos and Glen Dettman of Australia—that the dreaded Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome was basically a Vitamin C deficiency. His maxim: the
patient should “get large doses of Vitamin C in all pathological
conditions while the physician ponders the diagnosis.”
We have misled ourselves with the
mistaken notion that all C was supposed to do was keep us from scurvy. If,
however, we base our needs on the amounts other mammals manufacture with their
intact enzyme it comes to 2-4 grams daily in the unstressed condition. Under
stress 70 kg of rats make 15 grams of C. [Burns; Salomon; Conney]
We are willing to accept the premise
that some of us are born with genetic defects that lead to problems that can be
somewhat controlled with diet and supplements (i.e. phenylketonuria,
galactosemia, and alkaptonuria and pernicious anemia). Can’t we accept the fact
that we all have a genetic deficiency of the enzyme, l-gulonolactone oxidase
and have to take Vitamin C for health, even for life? [Burns, 1959]
Irwin Stone calls this human genetic
lack, this inability, hypoascorbemia. The point that Dr. Klenner is
making: “The physiological requirements in man are no different from other
mammals capable of carrying out this syntheses.” If one is anemic due to poor
iron intake, is it cheating to swallow iron tablets for a while? If you are
hypoascorbemic because you cannot manufacture Vitamin C from sugar, extra
glucose in your diet will not help, you need to take Vitamin C.
He reports that one of the Pilgrim
Fathers wrote to a friend in England in 1621: “Bring juice of lemon, and take
it fasting. It is of good use.”
Folklore has revealed to us what
natural remedies have been helpful and even curative. We have been lured into
the trap of modern medicine which prescribed a drug for every condition. But
consider acerola: Puerto Rican legend has it that if the tree bearing this
fruit is in one’s backyard, colds will not enter the front door. This fruit
bears 30 times the amount of C than oranges. Dr. Klenner credits Boneset
with the health of the Klenner family during the great influenza pandemic of
1918. This plant was made into a tea, bitter but curative. He assayed the tea
for Vitamin C; they were getting 10-30 grams at a time!
The small amount of Vitamin C,
recommended by the RDA (75 mg then and 60 mg now) is enough to protect the
person from gross disease, but not the amount to maintain good health.
Dr. Klenner quotes Kline and Eheart, who in 1944 realized there are wide
variations in the need for Vitamin C, in otherwise “normal” individuals.
In 1945 Jolliffe suggested that the optimum requirements might be more than 10
times the small doses recommended.
Scurvy develops slowly. Crandon (in
1940) found that the Vitamin C level of the blood plasma fell to zero for
90 days before there was obvious clinical evidence and that this was as long as
132 days before the first signs appeared.
How it Works
How does it work: as an oxidizing
agent massive amounts, i.e., 5-150 grams, intravenously, for certain
pathological conditions, if allowed to run in rapidly (20 gauge needle), acts
as a “Flash Oxidizer” and may correct the condition in minutes. It can be a
reducing agent. It neutralized toxins, viruses and histamine. The more serious
the condition, the more C is required.
It appears that Vitamin C acts
as a reducing agent, an oxidizing agent, an anti-clotting agent, an
antihistamine, and as an anti-infective agent.
He summarized the function of C in
poliomyelitis:
- Virus destruction.
- Dehydrates the brain and the spinal cord safely.
- Supports and normalized the stressed adrenal glands.
- It preserves the lining of the central canal and
maintains more regular spacing and less crowding of ependymal cells
(surface cells of the spinal cord).
Ascorbic acid enters all cells. It
“proceeds to take up the protein coats being manufactured by the virus nucleic
acid, thus preventing the assembly of new virus units.” Cells expand, rupture
and die, but there is no virus particles available to enter and infect new
cells. If a virus has invaded a cell, the Vitamin C contributes to its
breakdown to adenosine deaminase, which converts adenosine to inosine. Purines
are formed which are catabolized (broken down) and cannot be used to make more
virus nucleic acid.
Viral nucleic acid has a protein
coat which protects this parasite as it rides the blood or lymph highway to
gain specific cell entry. [Larson] it is possible that if the ascorbic acid can
remove that protective protein coat in the blood stream or in the cells, the
white cell phagocytes and immune globulin could then neutralize these
vulnerable virus particles.
I like this from Dr. Klenner:
“Ascorbic acid also joins with the available virus protein, making a new
macromolecule which acts as the repressor factor.” (interferon?) Multiplication
of new virus bodies is inhibited.
He summarizes the study of Lojkin,
(1937), who discovered the inactivation of one virus was due to a specific
intermediate product formed in the course of the oxidation of C but needed the
stimulation of copper ions. It is a peroxide and is decomposed as rapidly as it
is formed. This study indicates why Vitamin C works better in the body and
not the test tube. Every function of the body requires enzymes, some vitamins
and some minerals to act as coenzymes. If enough Vitamin C is supplied,
the enzyme system that breaks down invading viruses and bacteria, will be able
to do its job properly. Quote: “Unless the white blood cells are saturated with
ascorbic acid, they are like soldiers without bullets.”
Vitamin C in vitro
at body temperature inactivates certain toxins at an unbelievable rate. Back in
1938 some researchers [Klegler] placed Vitamin C in test tubes with
toxins. After incubation for 48 hours the toxins were not lethal to mice when
injected. The more toxin in the tube, the faster the C disappears. “The rate of
disappearance of the C in toxin and ordinary broth was more striking the
greater the concentration of Vitamin C.” Dr. Klenner concluded: “The
degree of neutralization in a virus infection will be in proportion to the
concentration of the vitamin and the length of time which it is employed.”
This has been Dr. Klenner’s
main complaint: failure to benefit from Vitamin C use is usually due to
inadequate amounts being used for too short a period of time.
Vitamin C combines directly
with the toxin/virus. This new compound is oxidized by Vitamin C; the
toxin/virus and the Vitamin C are destroyed. This must be why C has to be
continued after the apparent cure.
It acts as a respiratory catalyst,
aiding cellular respiration by acting as a hydrogen transport. The liver has a
better chance of detoxifying the blood stream of poisons, toxins, viruses and
bacteria if the plasma is saturated with Vitamin C. Fever, toxins and
bacteria reduce the level of C. Therefore, Dr. Klenner theorizes, if a
high level of C is maintained, all tissues return to normal despite the fever
and the bacteria; and because of its action “as a respiratory catalyst, it
enables the body to build up adequate resistance to the invader.”
The anaerobic condition in the
tissue is relieved. Acidity is decreased and large amounts of Adrenaline
disappear. The constriction of the blood vessels ceases and the liver and
pancreas can receive the proper nutrients to function. Properly calculated
doses of C on a continuing basis will restore the normal physiology of the
body.
The adrenals and Vitamin C are
interrelated. During an infection Vitamin C is absent from the urine and
is decreased or absent in blood, even when moderate amounts are being given
intravenously. Vitamin C in the adrenal glands was greatly reduced in
animals succumbing to polio. (Dr. Klenner cites the literature of 1934-35
to document this.) Hans Selye knew how the adrenals would show damage with
stress. He found that all patients ill with a virus would show petechial
hemorrhages (small leaks of blood into the skin) when a tourniquet was applied
to increase venous backpressure. Capillary weakness is a sign of low levels of
Vitamin C. Sugar in the urine, associated with the petechiƦ, disappeared
when adequate serum levels of Vitamin C were obtained.
It is known the C regulates the
intercellular substance of the capillary wall. The collagen of all fibrous
tissue structures is dependent on an adequate level of Vitamin C.
Increased capillary fragility is observed in individuals when the blood level
of C drops to 1 mg per liter. These weak capillary walls may allow a simple
virus to invade the brain (see “Insidious Virus”).
In addition, Vitamin C acts as
catalyst in the assimilation of iron.
(Ascorbic acid is a necessary
coenzyme in the metabolic oxidation of tyrosine. The latter is necessary to
break down protein to a usable amino acid.)
Dr. Klenner states, “The
importance of Vitamin C as an antibiotic and as the precursor of antibody
formation lack scientific appreciation because of its simplicity.” The
reluctance of the medical profession to employ it in massive doses like
antibiotics has allowed the appearance of allergies as a major problem.
Vitamin C is known to be
essential for life. He quotes the studies that show that when Vitamin C is
given intravenously to patients with a deficiency, fibroblasts begin to form
connective tissue and capillary buds invade blood clots within just a few
hours. In a similar time frame when used as an antibiotic, fever falls and the
white count climbs.
Dr. Klenner points out that the
standard treatment of colds was based on the alkalinizing effect of forcing
juices down the patient’s throat. Highly alkaline urine has less
Vitamin C. The Vitamin C would be thus retained in the tissues
helping to guard against the viruses and bacteria. When Vitamin C levels
drop, glycogen in the liver is converted to glucose: a response to stress.
Dr. Klenner is convinced that C
will work in any problem but the negative results reported are only because an
insufficient amount was used. A tragic error in judgment has been made by the
National Academy of Science and the National Research Council: the minimum daily
requirement for C. All of us need more; some need a lot more.
Factors that determine need:
- age
- habits, alcohol, drugs, tobacco
- sleep, especially if drugged
- trauma of infection, of physical injury, of work, of
emotions, of surgery
- Kidney threshold
- environment
- physiological stress
- climate changes
- loss of C in stools
- absorption
- binders in tablets
- individual difference in body chemistry
- drugs, pesticides, carbon monoxide exposure
- weight
- poor storage.
Klenner quotes the Food and Life
Year Book, 1939, published by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (surely as
conservative and orthodox a group as one could ever find): “Even when there is
not a single outward symptom of trouble, a person may be in a state of
Vitamin C deficiency more dangerous than scurvy itself. When such a
condition is not detected, and continues uncorrected, the teeth and bones will
be damaged, and what may be even more serious, the blood stream is weakened to
the point where it can no longer resist or fight infections not so easily cured
as scurvy. Five grains of aspirin will not relieve kidney colic; don’t expect
control of a virus with 100 to 400 mg of C.”
Dosage
The amount of C depends upon the
severity of the disease but also upon the efficiency of the victim’s immune
system. The usual dose of 65 mg per kilogram of body weight may be expected to
take care of the usual virus infection when given every 2-4 hours by needle.
The more severe condition would respond to larger single injections.
However “if the activity of the
pathogen is completely stopped, the development of active immunity will be
interrupted.” Therefore, modification of childhood diseases is the aim of
Vitamin C treatment, not the complete overnight suppression that would
prevent the body from making immune memory. To accomplish modification, 250 mg
per kilogram should be given intramuscularly. If necessary, half of this amount
would be given in eight hours. Procaine 1.5-2% can be given with a separate
syringe with the same needle just prior to the C.
The itch, the irritability, the
pain, the vomiting of chicken pox measles and mumps was assuaged in one hour
with this last dose. Crusting of chicken pox was present in 5 hours instead of
7-9 days. 250 mg per kilogram eliminated the disease in contrast to the 65 mg
which just suppressed it. 350 mg per kilogram may be employed along with
antibiotics in treating stubborn bacterial infections. Because a virus
infection will deplete the Vitamin C reserve, bleeding from the nose or
chest would indicate an emergency situation; Vitamin C, using the above
noted dosage schedule, should be pumped in immediately.
He cites experimental work by others
indicating that in monkeys smaller doses of C could stop the disease from
appearing during the incubation period compared to the relatively large doses
needed to suppress the disease once the disease was diagnosed. It all suggests
that most of us will not get any serious virus disease if we would all take
sufficient Vitamin C daily. We need, however, to get a little sick so we
will develop some immunity, but if we get very sick a lot there is something
missing, usually Vitamin C. He is suggesting that the more serious the
disease, the more Vitamin C should be used to treat it. (We titrate the
sickness, as Dr. Cathcart says: “Well, you’ve got a 200 gram flu or a 50 gram
cold.)
In Dr. Klenner’s review of his
over 3000 cases about 15% required more Vitamin C than the average. This
ties in with the idea that we are all different. It also explains why some
dogs, who make their own Vitamin C would die of distemper. “I have cured
many dogs suffering with distemper by giving several grams of ascorbic acid, by
needle, every two hours.” 15% of 300 obstetrical cases required 15 grams of C
daily to remain within normal limits. The other 85% needed only 10 grams per
day. He felt some spillage into the urine indicated the body was saturated.
“White blood cells are useless unless they are full of ascorbic acid.”
Dr. Klenner argues that the
recommended daily allowances are only to prevent scurvy. “Acute scurvy and
chronic hypovitaminosis are metabolically different conditions.” We all are
much more vulnerable to stress, infections, and pollution.
A shortage is produced from a poor
diet but also poor hygiene, overcrowding, dampness, cold and physical work (or
play). There is a narrow margin between health and pathological changes.
For a very severe illness, the dose
he used was large and the most effective route was intravenous, but the
intramuscular route was satisfactory. He gave at least 350 mg per kilogram of
body weight. (A 70 kg man is 150 pounds; thus 70 x 350= 24,500 mg. He would use
a 25 gram dose for a 25 gram illness.) This amount was put in 500 cc of sterile
water, usually with dextrose, saline or Ringer’s solution. It was diluted so
that there was at least 18 cc of diluent to each gram of C. In small children,
2 or 3 grams can be given intramuscularly once every two hours. An ice cap to
the buttocks will prevent soreness and induration. As much as 12 grams can be
given in this manner into 2 or 3 different muscle sites with a 50 cc syringe;
larger amounts must be diluted with dextrose or saline and run in by I.V. drip.
If big concentrated doses are given by push (25 grams in a 100 cc syringe), the
brain may become dehydrated causing convulsive movements of the legs.
Intramuscular injections are always 500 mg to 1 cc solution. At least one gram
of calcium gluconate must be added to the fluids each day. Massive doses of C
pull calcium ions from platelets; and the clotting mechanism is weakened.
Nosebleeds may occur. One gram of calcium gluconate is added to control acidity
and to replace the calcium ion loss
Sodium ascorbate is less painful.
Some of us will put procaine, 2%, with the Vitamin C when injected into
the muscle. Vitamin C can also be taken orally once the patient is
recovering.
This dose is repeated every hour for
6 to 12 times and then every 2-4 hours until recovery.
If using under 400 mg per kg body
weight, it can be given with the sodium salt. Doses over 400 mg per kg of body
weight must be diluted to at least one gram to 18 cc of solution.
He suggests the following for each
bottle: 60 grams of C, 500 mg thiamin HCl, 300 mg pyridoxine, 400 mg calcium
pantothenate, 100 mg riboflavin, 300 mg niacinamide. It is to be given once or
twice daily.
He used a 23 gauge needle
intravenously and a 22 gauge needle for intramuscular use—one inch long for
children and one and a half inch for adults.
The idea of these big doses is to
saturate the tissues; the white blood cells will be able to destroy pathogens.
“I have seen diphtheria, hemolytic streptococcus infections clear within hours
following an injection of ascorbic acid in a dose ranging from 500-700 mg per
kilogram of body weight given intravenously as fast as the patient’s
cardiovascular system will allow.”
He got to know the vulnerability of
viruses so well, he played games with them. “When proper amounts are used it
will destroy all virus organisms.” He could give one gram of ascorbic acid
every four hours and modify the disease symptoms, but if he gave one gram every
two hours by mouth for four days, he had stopped the disease, apparently by
killing the virus. If he gave this dose for only two days, the symptoms
returned. (He kept measles simmering in his own children for a month by giving
this dose for two days, then off for two then on, etc.)
With 350 mg per kilogram of body
weight every two hours, he could stop measles and dry up chicken pox. If he
could get in the vein, 400 mg per kilogram two to three times in 24 hours was
all that was required (he published this way back in 1951, in the Southern
Medical Surgical Journal).
He used protamide and it seemed to
shorten the course of the course of the disease (it is a colloidal solution of
denatured proteolytic enzyme). It was especially valuable in herpes simplex and
herpes zoster. Dr. Klenner felt that Vitamin C is related to this
enzyme, as it possesses the same anti-neuritic properties. If used together,
the results are more dramatic than either one used alone (the C was used as
usual and the protamide was limited to one ampoule per day). Influenza and
poliomyelitis also responded rapidly to this dual approach. He found calcium
made a big difference as it duplicated the results of the C. He used 10 cc of
calcium gluconate (one gram of calcium) along with the C daily. It can also be
injected deep into the gluteus muscle.
Tests for C
He noted a monitoring method: “In
all virus infections the Benedict urine reaction for sugar will run from two to
four plus. After Vitamin C, this reaction will clear in 18 to 36 hours.”
We all know that Vitamin C is related to glucose and Vitamin C in the
urine will show a reducing reaction, just as glucose does. If a healthy
individual is given one or two grams of C by injection, the urine will show a
positive Benedict sugar reaction for hours.” This paradox, Dr. Klenner
explains, indicates that Vitamin C and the virus bodies do form a new
compound, and not a reducing chemical, otherwise with all this Vitamin C
injected, there would be an increase in the response to the Benedict test.
When the urine starts to show a
positive test to Benedict’s test, it is a sign that the virus is under control
and the person is close to normal again. The Benedict’s urine test is a guide
to treatment with C.
More than 30 years ago,
Dr. Klenner developed the silver nitrate urine test. When treating severe
pathological conditions, the test done every four hours will reveal the level
of Vitamin C saturation. If the urine test is positive for Vitamin C,
it means the tissues are saturated and the patient is on the right dose. It is
not a waste; some spillage indicates saturation.
Insidious Virus
In June, 1957, he wrote in the
Tri-State Medical Journal, on the ‘Insidious’ virus. He recalled a 19 month-old
baby, who had a minor cold for two weeks. Then suddenly, instead of getting
well, he developed a high fever and seizures of his right arm and leg. He was
stiff, undernourished, cold to the touch and semi-comatose. Two grams of C were
injected on admission to the hospital and another gram within the hour. Then it
was one gram orally every four hours. Mustard plasters and croup tent were
provided. A cup of orange juice was drunk from a bottle two hours after the
first shot. The baby began to respond to pain. Temperature was still high,
103.8°. The arm and leg were completely paralyzed, but in eight hours, he began
moving the right leg and could hold the juice bottle with both hands.
Penicillin “was given on the second and third days to discourage secondary
invaders”. He was home on the 5th day.
Dr. Klenner recalls six
additional similar cases, all under four years of age. Four of the children
were seen by a physician who noted no fever and was “not impressed with the
illness of the child.” All of these children died within 30 minutes to two
hours after that physician’s examination. No treatment was begun because there
was no diagnosis. A virus infection was found at the autopsy. “An insidious
virus involvement of the brain.”
He takes us through the examination
and treatment of a near miss. An eighteen month-old girl had a cold for a week;
then choked on supper. Her temperature was normal, but she was very restless
and whining. On a hunch, Dr. Klenner sent her to the hospital. She was
comatose on arrival, responding only to pain. Temperature still normal, but pulse
was 152 and respirations 32 per minute. He felt she had the “Insidious Virus”
and started Vitamin C. Two and one half grams initially intramuscularly;
in 30 minutes she got another two grams. Then every two hours for five doses
and then every four hours. After 36 hours, it was injected every six hours. (30
grams altogether). Croup tent and penicillin were used.
Shortly after admission, some water
by mouth was tried and she immediately choked, and the water came out of her
nose—like bulbar polio. The normal temperature at admission slowly rose to
102.4°. Six hours after admission, she was able to swallow. By the 11th hour
the temperature was normal and she was alert and swallowing. In 24 hours from
the first dose of C she was drinking freely from a bottle. She went home on the
fifth day.
Dr. Klenner feels if she had
been put to bed after supper that night, she would have died in her sleep, like
a case of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. He calls it brain pathology caused by
an insidious virus.
Dr. Klenner was reminded of the
case of a 15-year old girl who had had a lingering cold for several weeks. She
complained of extreme fatigue at a dance party, but other than that and her
cold symptoms, she went to bed apparently well. The next morning she was found
dead. The autopsy was virus pneumonia. Dr Klenner believed that the lung
pathology was not enough to kill her, it was the insidious virus that invaded
her brain. He feels that the motor nuclei have the shortest nerves, therefore
the virus would reach them first. It could lead to spasm of the diaphragm
muscle and cessation of breathing.
He felt that ascorbic acid could not
reverse the virus once the pathology had progressed to a certain unknown point.
He feels this maxim should guide all treating doctors: large doses of
Vitamin C should be given in all pathological states, “It should be given
by all physicians while they await the diagnosis.”
These large doses should be reduced
once the temperature approaches normal; false temperature rise may result. If
the C is taken from the ampoules and swallowed in some juice, it will have
about the same results as if it had been injected.
In another similar paper published
the next year, 1958, in the Tri-State Medical Journal, he outlines two
important stages:
Stage (A): 1) a history of having
had the flu for two or three days complicated by physical or mental stress, or
2) a mild cold with a runny nose for several weeks. Then the sudden onset of
Stage (B) with either 1) convulsions, 2) extreme excitability or dancing eyeballs,
3) severe chill, 4) strangling during normal swallowing, 5) Collapse or stupor.
Stage (B) is usually associated with
the following:
- rapid pulse,
- normal or moderately elevated temperature,
- respirations twice the normal rate and sometimes an air
hunger (which is reminiscent of that seen in acidosis or aspirin
poisoning),
- dilated, unequal pupils,
- normal urinalysis,
- elevated white blood count (which elevation is usually
associated with a bacterial infection),
- normal bowel action,
- loss of bladder control when convulsions or coma
occurred.
He felt that the rapid spread of the
virus to the brain tissue was similar to the speed of the onset of the symptoms
after a severe head injury: “... a margin of safety is so narrow that life and
death are separated only by minutes.” There is no time to wait for the
laboratory results.
Case I: A 64-year old woman had a
slight cold for a week, but no other symptoms. She suddenly developed 104°
(axillary) and slipped into a coma (pulse 120). In the hospital she received
achromycin and ascorbic acid. Dr. Klenner put 26 grams of C into 375 cc of
5% dextrose in water, and let it drip intravenously, 75 drops per minute. An
oxygen mask was applied. The white blood count was 18,000.
She became conscious an hour after
this was begun but could not swallow and was incontinent. The fever dropped to
102°, but by the ninth hour it was again at 104°. Another I.V. was given (the
same as above) with the antibiotic, and the 26 grams of C was begun—R=36 per
minute.
In another hour (24 hours after
admission) her temperature was 100°, pulse 84, and respiration 28. By noon the
next day (36 hours) she was suddenly able to swallow again. She continued the
achromycin daily and four grams of Vitamin C orally every four hours.
Case II: A five-year old boy with no
special symptoms suddenly developed a convulsion and 104° (rectally), pulse 130
and respiration 18. He was extremely restless. His throat was red and white
count 9,000. He had another convulsion in Dr. Klenner’s office.
Dr. Klenner gave him four grams of C intravenously and sent him into the
hospital where he got three grams of C intramuscularly. His dose was then four
grams of C in orange juice every four hours, plus an antibiotic (chloromycetin,
rarely used now). Temperature was normal in 12 hours. He continued treatment at
home for three days.
Case III: A 16 month old boy who had
had a mild cold for two weeks suddenly collapsed into unconsciousness. The
pulse was over 200, and respiration 40 per minute and temperature 100°
rectally. Oxygen was started and two grams of C was given intramuscularly. He
roused in ten minutes. Two grams of C was given every two hours for five times,
then every four hours for twelve more doses. The examination and white blood
count (10,000) indicated bilateral pneumonitis so achromycin was added (50 mg
every four hours). The temperature was normal by the third day. And he was home
in a week.
Case IV: A two-and-a-half-year old
boy had a lingering cold for ten days. Temperature was 101° with red swollen
tonsils. Ears and chest clear, but the pulse was 130 and respirations were
rapid and labored. He was sent home to have some prescriptions filled but had a
convulsion at the pharmacy and was brought back. Temperature then was 103°. He
received three grams of C intramuscularly plus oxygen. At the hospital he was
given another two grams of C. It was repeated in one hour and then every two
hours x 4. Penicillin was administered along with terramycin. His temperature
was normal in eight hours after admission and remained so; he was taking and
retaining fluids. He was home on the second hospital day.
Case V: Demonstrates the usual quick
response to therapy, but also the recurrence rate if the C is discontinued
prematurely. The patient, a 73 year-old male, was admitted three times in 24
days with the same disease. He had a slight cold for a few days. Then abruptly,
a severe headache was followed by a chill and coma. T=103, p=138, resp.=36,
BP=150/90, white blood count was 10,000. Moisture was detected in his lungs.
Muscle jerks appeared. Nasal oxygen begun. Intravenous achromycin and
Vitamin C were begun; 20 grams of C was added to 378 cc of 5% dextrose in
water. It was repeated in eight hours. He became conscious in 18 hours. He went
home on the third day but returned in two weeks with the same findings and
received the same treatment and sent home. In seven days he was back with the
same symptoms. He was given 24 grams of C and sent home on achromycin and ten
grams of C daily indefinitely.
As these cases show Dr. Klenner
was confident that the C would handle the virus, but he needed the antibiotics
to control the bacterial secondary invaders.
The initial dose administered by
needle is no less than 250 mg per kilogram of body weight. For children the
dose would be two to three grams intramuscularly using a concentration of 500
mg per cc. Ice on the muscle after injection will usually control pain.
“Massive use of C is compatible with any other drug and in most instances it
will enhance the value of these other remedies.”
He felt that the virus (or their
toxins) act on the brain and can culminate in diaphragmatic spasm with
resultant dyspnea and even asphyxia.
He believed that the lingering
“cold” had depleted the stores of Vitamin C. The capillary beds in lungs
and brain are damaged and the virus can invade these tissues. The microscopic
pathology in the brain shows thrombosis of vessels, hemorrhages and
proliferation of leucocytes. These are signs of ascorbic acid deficiency. If
the patients are not given massive doses of C at this critical time, they will
experience permanent nerve injury or may succumb. Pregnant women are thus more
susceptible to polio because of their relatively low stores of C. “With the use
of massive doses of Vitamin C, I have yet to see a patient not fully recovered.”
It will also shorten the illness by at least one-half the usual sickness days,
and the patients can be easily handled at home. Indeed, he treated many of
these patients with two and three visits a day in the office for the
Vitamin C shots. He did not exclude the use of antibiotics.
In 1960 he reemphasized the need for
families and physicians to be vigilant for the potentially fatal viral
encephalitis. As published in The Tri-State Medical Journal, February, 1960, he
warned that “every cold must be considered as a probable source of brain
pathology.” Most doctors are not impressed with the seriousness of the runny
nose, the sore windpipe and the dry cough until this smoldering virus bursts
through the defenses and attacks the brain.
The point he is emphasizing is that
the smoldering virus is depleting the circulating Vitamin C, and when it
gets low enough, the intercellular cement is weakened; the virus can easily
burst through to the susceptible brain. It is like a metastasis of the
pulmonary pathology to the brain (just like cancer cells seeding into the
brain).
The brain is the logical target of
any virus floating about in the blood, as the vascular system supplying the
brain is the most extensive of all the capillary beds in the body. Interference
with the blood supply of the nervous system can be disastrous, since the brain
cannot accumulate an oxygen debt.
Biochemical techniques will some day
indicate what is happening at the cellular level. The proof lies in the
results. Dr. Klenner recites some classics way back in 1953. A patient
with virus pneumonia and a fever of 106° received 140 grams of C over a period
of 72 hours. On the third day she was alert, sitting in bed and swallowing
fluids by mouth. Dr. Klenner believed that a similar respiratory virus in
a baby with a truncated immune system might spread all over the body in minutes
winding up in the brain as encephalitis, pneumonia and diaphragmatic spasm.
(The Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (S.I.D.S.) that takes 8,000 babies in the
U.S. between ages two and ten months of age.)
It is not just the lung pathology
that takes these people; it is the brain invasion. (It sounds a little like
Reye’s syndrome—an innocent flu turns into a fatal encephalitis.) “It is
necessary for everyone to take adequate supplemental Vitamin C to guard
against such disasters.”
He had searched the literature and
found studies reported in 1905 and 1907 that confirmed the virus lung-to-brain
encephalitis pattern. All of Dr. Klenner’s patients recovered. How do we
get doctors to inject massive doses of C into their collapsed patients while
they are “pondering the diagnosis?”
He felt there were many pathways
into the brain: nose, stomach, ears but the basic fault might be the breakdown
of the intercellular cement of the capillary wall in regulating the
permeability of the blood vessels of the C.N.S. Vitamin C is essential to
the integrity of those capillary walls. It makes sense to believe that the
chronicity of the virus infection—mild though it may have been—could have finally
depleted the body of an optimum supply of C for maintenance of tissue repair.
Capillaries break down, blood and viruses are free to attack the brain. The
theory and practice seem to fit. Vitamin C helps control virus infections,
and if there is a failure, usually it is because not enough C was being used.
In another case, a seven year-old
boy was treated for influenza off and on for six weeks. He got sulfa, a form of
penicillin and five to ten grams of C orally. When he had the fourth
recurrence, the antibiotics and C had no effect. On the third day he suddenly
became lethargic and then dropped into a stupor. Temperature was 102.6°.
Dr. Klenner quickly injected him with six grams of ascorbic acid
intravenously. In five minutes he was awake, asking, “what happened?” Another
six grams in four hours and two more at six hour intervals. Recovery complete
in 24 hours without a trace of recurrence. The patient was administered five
grams of C in juice every eight hours for a week. The patient was
Dr. Klenner’s son.
Viral encephalitis can be associated
with cold sores; one third of patients die and 85% of survivors have brain
damage. All of us are infected by the age of five years but only 1% experience
symptoms. The virus is harbored in a dormant form until a physical or emotional
hurt provokes the virus to reproduce and manifest itself with the canker sore.
Virus Pneumonia
He wrote an article about virus
pneumonia (Southern Medicine and Surgery, Feb. 1948), a persistent debilitating
illness that responds poorly to antibiotics. In his series of 42 cases he
achieved excellent results with, surprisingly, Vitamin C. Some doctors
were using X-rays as therapy!
His routine: 1000 mg of
Vitamin C intravenously every six to twelve hours for a mild case. In
children, 500 mg of C intramuscularly every six to twelve hours was about
right. Three to seven injections were all that was required for complete
clinical and X-ray resolution. Most patients felt better in just one hour and
definite improvement after two hours. Nausea and headache disappeared after the
first shot. Fever fell at least two degrees Fahrenheit in several hours after
the first injection.
He gave alkaline drinks as this
impedes the excretion of the C through the kidneys. Mustard plasters were used
to relieve chest pain and constricted breathing. In some patients cyanosis
(blueness due to lack of oxygen in tissues) was immediately relieved by an
additional injection of 500 mg of C.
He then reports the case of virus
pneumonia which he treated in the early 1940’s. The man became blue but refused
to be hospitalized; Dr. Klenner wanted to test the catalytic action of
Vitamin C to serve as a gas transport (O2) aiding cellular
respiration. He gave him two grams of Vitamin C intramuscularly and the
cyanosis began to clear up in 30 minutes. Six hours later that patient was
sitting up eating dinner; his fever had fallen three degrees. Dr. Klenner
suspected that the C had done more than act as a respiratory catalyst. He was
given a gram every six hours for three days. He was well by this time. Here is
“evidence to prove unequivocally that Vitamin C is the antibiotic of
choice in the handling of all types of virus diseases. Furthermore, it is a
major adjuvant in the treatment of all other infectious diseases.”
Virus Pneumonia: female, 28 years,
temperature = 106°, chest and head cold two weeks, severe headache, stuporous,
dehydration. Antibiotics were of no help.
Treatment: 1000 cc of 5% dextrose in
a saline solution and four grams of C. Temperature to 100° in eleven hours.
Then every two to three hours—two to four grams of C was given intravenously.
At 72 hours the patient was alert, sitting up and swallowing fluids.
Vitamin C treatment was maintained for another two weeks: two grams every
twelve hours. Thiamin was given for deafness (due to previous antibiotics and
encephalitis); hearing normal in ten days. X-ray did not clear up for another
two to three months.
In a 58 year-old man with a severe
viral pneumonia only one-half the recommended dose was used (two grams every
four hours). He slowly improved (three grams in six hours). His dose should
have been four grams every four hours or two grams in two hours. “The course
emphasized the necessity of administering massive doses of C at frequent
regular intervals so as to maintain the proper level of this ‘antibiotic’ in
the tissues.”
Dr. Klenner points out, as all
doctors know, a secondary infection frequently gets in “on top” of the original
virus infection. Virus pneumonia very commonly allows a germ to produce a
bronchitis, requiring an antibiotic.
Poliomyelitis
In polio, Vitamin C destroys
the virus, acts as a diuretic removing the edema of the brain and prevents
crowding of the cells lining the nervous system (see p. 2). The swollen,
infected tissue creates a pressure in the unyielding bony vault and cuts off
the blood supply to the motor cells, thus paralysis follows.
Dr. Klenner reports the
findings of a Dr. McCormick who attended 50 cases of polio in Toronto, Canada
(1949). The polio victims who were white bread eaters developed paralysis, but
the brown bread eaters were protected from paralysis. B vitamins seem to give
anti-paralysis protection. The Vitamin C relieves the pressure on the
vessels so the nutrient—including B1—can nourish the cells properly.
He reports the case of a five
year-old girl with paralysis of both legs accompanied by knee and back pain.
Massage was given along with Vitamin C by injection. Within four days she
was able to move both legs. She was sent home to continue the Vitamin C
orally at 1000 mg every two hours. She walked by the eleventh day; the vitamin
was stopped and B1 begun, only ten milligrams four times each day.
She was completely well by the 19th day after treatment had been started.
Another polio case with 104.4°
temperature (measured in the armpit) severe headache, red eyes, vomiting and
tightness in the hamstrings. Two grams of Vitamin C was given
intravenously immediately and again in two hours; then every four hours for 48
hours. In six hours after the first intravenous dose, his temperature had
fallen to 100°, his eyes cleared up, he was jovial, sitting and drinking
fluids. He would have them on 1500 mg of C by mouth every two hours for a week.
The C was discontinued, and he took 25 mg of B1 four times a day.
Dr. Klenner felt B1 should be continued for a period of at
least three months because nerve tissue is slow to recover.
In another article about viruses in
1949 (Southern Medicine and Surgery, vol. 111, #7, July) he states his
frustration at the lack of ability of standard researchers to recognize their
failure in treating viral diseases; they did not give big enough doses
frequently enough. He found an unbelievable record of these failed studies in
the ten years before he wrote this article.
He concentrated on the response of
poliomyelitis to Vitamin C in this article. He knew that the virus was
floating about in the blood stream and that large doses of Vitamin C would
destroy the virus before it got to the nervous system. Dr. Klenner
reviewed the literature in 1948 because he was having consistent, positive
responses with Vitamin C; he was encouraged when he read that some
investigators had discovered low levels of C in the urine of humans and animals
when infected with the polio virus. He felt there was a “relationship between
the degree of Vitamin C saturation and the infectious and noninfectious
state.” An Australian, Heaslip, showed a “correlation between the severity of
the attack and the level of urinary excretion of the vitamin.” A “deficiency of
Vitamin C in the diet predisposed to infection and to the severity of the
attack.”
One report he cited was published by
Jungeblut in 1937. If Vitamin C was given during the incubation stage in
monkeys, the subsequent disease was much less severe. But if the disease was in
its fifth day, much larger doses of C were required. Even when but 100 mg of C
were given in 24 hours to these experimental monkeys, there were six times the
number of non-paralytic survivors as in the control group.
Dr. Sabin attempted to discredit the
use of Vitamin C in controlling polio in monkeys but did not give enough
(100mg), and the monkeys had unmodified poliomyelitis. Scurvy is surely an
invitation to infection, but the absence of scurvy does not assure an adequate
immune system—especially when an infection invades. Malnutrition plays a
definite role in susceptibility to virus infections. “Thousands of children owe
their paralyzed limbs to this unfortunate blunder of Sabin.”
He arbitrarily adopted the following
routine injection schedule: 1000 to 2000 mg initially depending upon age. The
intramuscular route was used for children under age four years. If the fever
dropped in two hours, two more hours was allowed before the second dose. After
24 hours, if the fever remained down, this same dose was given every six hours
for the next 48 hours. All sixty cases were well in 72 hours. Three however,
had a relapse, so the C was continued in all 60 cases for another two days
every eight to twelve hours.
Home treatment was 2000 mg injected
every six hours plus 1000 to 2000 mg orally every two hours.
Two of the 60 patients had throat
muscle paralysis and needed oxygen and drainage but were recovering in 36
hours.
In a follow up article on “The
Vitamin and Massage Treatment for Acute Poliomyelitis” (Southern Medicine and
Surgery, vol. 114, #8, August, 1952) he summarized his years of treatment of
this scourge that hit every summer. He felt much of the fear about the disease
was due to reckless propaganda. It is a dramatic disease mainly affecting
children. At that time the standard treatment was the splinting of the affected
muscles for two to eight weeks to prevent any kind of motion. Surgery was then
used to correct contractions and stabilize joints. At about that same time
Sister Kenny was urging the use of hot moist packs and early passive motion to
relieve spasm. Dr. Klenner used pillows to rest the affected muscles,
immediate and continuous massage and passive motion, and, of course,
Vitamin C to kill the virus, reduce the swelling in the brain, support the
exhausted adrenals and rehabilitate damaged nerve tissue.
Reducing spinal fluid pressure is
important to allow nutrients to reach the shocked nerve cells. The edema fluid
“pressure in the central nervous system is the end result of the inflammatory
reaction caused by the virus.” it is probably augmented by a deficiency of
Vitamin B1. Early researchers tried to relieve this pressure by the
use of hypertonic sugar (10% dextrose) solutions designed to pull the fluid
from the brain, relieving the headache and allowing the circulation to open up
sufficiently to permit nutriments into the dying cells. It is known that virus
infections deplete the Vitamin C content of the adrenals. Chemical
reactions follow resulting in high blood sugar; “apparently the adrenal medulla
is released from its inhibiting mechanism allowing a concentration of free
adrenaline in the blood high enough to cause vasoconstriction.” Glucose would
only serve to aggravate this artificial diabetes (Maybe this is why some
children develop diabetes after a virus infection, notably mumps).
Vitamin C works as a destroyer
of the virus but also as a safe and potent dehydrator and diuretic. (Most
patients complain of thirst after an I.V. of ascorbic acid.) “Given in massive
doses it will relieve the edema pressure of the cord and brain, thus allowing
normal amounts of B1 to reach chemically shocked nerve cells.” He
occasionally used hypertonic sodium lactate as a dehydrator.
Vitamin C is proven to be low
in the blood and tissues of virus victims. In a loading test, Heaslip found the
urine of virus infected patients only revealed 20% of the ingested dose
compared to healthy controls who excreted 44% of the swallowed C.
Jungeblut, a Vitamin C
researcher, observed:
- If a paralytic dose of polio virus were injected into
the brains of monkeys, they all developed paralytic polio. If, however,
Vitamin C was injected along with the virus, the animals remained
free of the disease.
- If monkeys were infected with a high dose of the virus,
Vitamin C by injection failed to modify the disease course.
- If less virus were given and the Vitamin C was
kept at 100 mg per day, the results were variable. Dr. Klenner felt
that the virus dose was not standard, and the Vitamin C was too small
and too infrequently given.
Dr. Klenner felt the best time to
treat the virus was during the viremia stage; that is, when it was floating
about in the blood stream and had not invaded the tissues. He repeats: “For
optimum results the vitamin must be given in massive doses, every two to four
hours, around the clock.” Intestinal absorption is inconsistent; it must be
given by needle.
Dr. Klenner wondered if some of
the manifestation of polio might be due to mild scurvy. Fever, vomiting,
diarrhea, aches are all seen with scurvy and with polio. Certainly when
Vitamin C is given all these symptoms and signs disappear. Was it scurvy
or polio?
He points out the similarities in
pathology in the nerve cells of polio and beri-beri (B1 deficiency).
He believed this sequence: the virus causes a Vitamin C deficiency which
stresses the medulla of the adrenal gland. Adrenaline is released, which causes
not only vascular constriction but affects carbohydrate metabolism, that is, it
causes the blood sugar to rise. B1, thiamin, is absolutely necessary
for sugar metabolism, and most diets are low in B1. In addition, absorption of
vitamins and foods are decreased when a disease is active. The
Adrenaline-induced constriction of the blood vessels about the intestines cuts
some of the blood supply to the intestinal enzymes. Pyruvic acid accumulates at
the neuromuscular junction. To metabolize pyruvates, an enzyme, cocarboxylase,
is required. This enzyme has two B1 molecules combined with
phosphate; no B1, no action. When pyruvates accumulate at this area,
fatigue is the result. The flaccid paralysis of polio is related. B1
therapy is indicated for polio and most cases of fatigue. “Nerve and muscle
cells in a flaccid extremity may be only tired, but it is reasonable to believe
that unless they are relieved promptly, they may die.” Massage would improve
the circulation and help remove toxic agents during this emergency.
In 1956 Dr. Klenner published,
“Poliomyelitis—Case Histories” (Tri-State Medical Journal, Sept). He had a
continuing supply of zingers he would throw at doctors who insisted on disregarding
his logic. He quotes Ratner, “There are two ways of practicing the medical art:
the first is to employ art; the second is to employ fancy.” If one has used
speculation, preconceived opinions and prejudice, then he is proceeding by
emotions, faith and dreams. We must proceed by REASON. Husky put it, “Science
commits suicide when it adopts a creed.”
He was disturbed by the enthusiasm
preached by the vaccine enthusiasts. They claim that the dead Salk vaccine was
safe and that it makes antibodies. He was convinced that was not true. He
argued for a live virus, which would be more likely to give the recipients
protective antibodies. 98% of all adults possess these antibodies. He seems to
be arguing for all of us to acquire a natural immunity to all viral infections
by taking enough Vitamin C to attenuate the disease no matter when it
strikes.
He suggests for poliomyelitis:
- Gentle massage for paralysis, continuous in the first
few hours.
- Ascorbic acid, best intravenously, at 300 to 500 mg per
kg of weight. In small children: two to three grams intramuscularly every
two to four hours. Ice on the injected muscle will assuage the pain.
- He suggests penicillin and sulfa drugs would be
worthwhile, (I would disagree).
- Desoxycortisone acetate is suggested daily x 3.
- Thiamin, 100 to 250 mg a day for three months will help
rehabilitate the nerves.
- And make the patient EAT.
He reports some severely ill adults
with polio. They had a high fever, 4+ headaches on a scale of one to four, deep
eye pain, stilt neck, muscle pain and spasm in the hamstring muscles. Blood
tests were negative for bacterial infection.
Injections of twelve to twenty-two
grams of Vitamin C were given every twelve hours for six to eight times.
The headaches and fever were improved in 48 hours, and most were well in six to
ten days at which time oral C was substituted: 1,500 mg or so at three to four
hour intervals. Then the B1 for three months to heal the nerves.
Hepatitis
Vitamin C will cure viral
hepatitis in two to four days and allow the patient to resume his usual
activities. (500-700 mg/kg body weight taken orally; approximately 30 grams/24
hours in orange juice). Dr. Klenner reports that Dr. Bauer at the
University Clinic at Basel, Switzerland used just ten grams daily intravenously.
It proved to be the best treatment available. He indicated that hepatitis
(infectious and serum) can be reversed in a few days using intravenous
Vitamin C. Heavy exercise had no effect on the outcome. [Freebern]
1) A 27 year old male with 103°
temperature, nausea and jaundice of three days. 60 grams of sodium ascorbate in
600 cc of normal saline was given intravenously at 120 drops/minute. Five grams
of Vitamin C was given orally every four hours around the clock. Fifteen
grams of C was again given three hours after the first I.V. Another 60 grams of
C was given intravenously twelve hours after the initial one (he used 5%
glucose in water this time). That one took 75 minutes to accomplish. Then
another fifteen grams of C intravenously after two more hours.
For the 30 hours of treatment he
received 270 grams intravenously and 45 grams orally—no diarrhea. Temperature
was normal at this time and urine clear of bile. Discharged from the hospital,
he was back to work. C sets in as a flash oxidizer and helps the body manufacture
interferon, a natural antiviral agent.
2) A 22 year old male with chills
and fever and a diagnosis of viral hepatitis. His roommate had been admitted
the day before. Fifteen grams of sodium ascorbate was given intravenously every
twelve hours for three days, then once daily for six days. Sodium ascorbate was
swallowed at five grams every four hours (135 grams intravenously, and 180
grams orally). No diarrhea appeared with these doses. He was sent home on the
sixth day with no fever and no bile in the urine. Soon he was back to work. His
roommate with just bed rest was in the hospital for 26 days!
3) Another male contracted hepatitis
in Central America. There, he got lemon juice orally and rectally. Hot mud
packs were placed over his liver. He had 104° degree temperature and was sent
home. He was told to try bed rest and a protein diet. When Dr. Klenner saw
him, he was jaundiced, temperature = 101° and had a very large tender liver.
His I.V. was 30 grams sodium ascorbate and one gram calcium gluconate. Oral C:
five grams every four hours around the clock for three days. 400 mg adenosine
IM. 100,000 units of palmitate Vitamin A given daily. On the fourth day he got
70 grams ascorbate intravenously and one gram calcium. On the sixth day, he got
another 70 grams intravenously, and on the seventh day the bilirubin in the
serum was down to 1.9 compared to 98 on the first day; SGOT had fallen from 450
to 45. At home he took fifteen grams of C orally, 1,400 mg of choline three
times a day plus a high protein and carbohydrate diet—no sequelae.
4) A 42-year-old male suffering from
chronic hepatitis had been unsuccessfully treated with steroids for seven
months. He was given B complex and Vitamin C: 45 grams of sodium ascorbate
plus one gram of calcium gluconate in 500 cc of water with 5% glucose was given
intravenously three times a week. He took five grams of C orally every four
hours. He was free of the disease in five months. Dr. Klenner felt if he
had more massive and continuous doses in the hospital he would have been well
in a few weeks, but his peers on the staff would have denied the patient this
safe treatment.
Dr. Klenner reemphasized the
point, “Sodium ascorbate in amounts ranging up to 900 mg per kilogram body
weight every eight to twelve hours will effect cures in two to four days.”
Adenosine, 400 to 1,200 mg. intramuscularly, daily.
He felt that the risk of serum
hepatitis from dialysis machines could be eliminated by flushing the machines
with 50 grams of sodium ascorbate. When he needed to give a patient a blood
transfusion he always added ten grams of sodium ascorbate to each pint. The
Japanese, he said, have added but five grams of C to each unit of blood;
result, no hepatitis and in thousands of cases.
Herpes Simplex & Zoster
Adenosine, 400 mg is given
intramuscularly upon diagnosis. Fifteen grams of sodium ascorbate intravenously
is next using a six-cc syringe intravenously. Then a second dose of adenosine,
400 mg, 30 minutes after the C. Paint the lesion with tincture of benzoin. Then
apply calomine lotion with 5% phenol. Continue to paint only the raw areas, but
apply the calomine and phenol to entire area. Continue the injections every
twelve hours for three days then daily for several days. A B complex capsule
with 100 mg of each of the B’s along with “massive” amounts of Vitamin A orally
are taken daily.
To control pain after the lesions
heal, a daily I.V. is used containing thiamin, 1000 mg; pyridoxine, 300 mg;
niacinamide, 600 mg, diluted to twenty cc with saline, daily for five days. He uses
twenty-three gauge, one inch needle.
Herpes simplex must he treated as
above for 72 hours as recurrences are common if treatment is shortened.
Fever blisters: three percent
ointment of Vitamin C applied to the lips ten to fifteen times a day in a water
soluble base speeds up the cure. A three-percent solution of ascorbic acid used
as a douche will heal a cervical erosion; direct application of this solution
by the physician would be prudent. Twenty grams of C orally each day would
“erase this form of malignancy.” Dr. Klenner points out that the cancer
seems to hit those with a hereditary tendency; a virus grows more eagerly in
the susceptible. If there is a family tendency, oral C in large doses as a
preventative makes sense.
Chicken Pox
Vitamin C orally is less
reliable. Dr. Klenner noted his own daughter struggling with chicken pox.
She was getting 24 grams a day, but papules spread and the itch was intense.
After one gram of C intravenously, the itch stopped and she slept well for
eight hours. A new I.V. was then given and no new rash appeared. (Untreated
chicken pox victims break out for five full days). He noted this ability of C
to terminate the usual progress of virus diseases.
One to three injections of 400 mg
per kg every eight hours will dry up chicken pox in 24 hours. Controls nausea
with one gram of C per five cc of fluid. Thirst is precluded if a glass of
juice is drunk just before the I.V.
Hard Measles
He reports some cases:
1. A ten month old baby had the high
fever, watery nose, dry cough, the red eyes, and the Koplik spots that gave the
disease away: hard measles. He gave 1000 mg of C every four hours. After twelve
hours the temperature had fallen to 97.5°; the cough had stopped and the
redness of the membranes had cleared. Just to see if this improvement happened
to be the natural course of the disease, he stopped the C for just eight hours.
The fever rose to 103.4°. The C injections were resumed and the fever dropped
in a few hours to 99°. 1000 mg was given every four hours; no rash developed.
II. An eight-year-old developed
measles and mumps closely followed by encephalitis (T-104°). He could not eat,
was stuporous and responded only to pain. Two hours after one injection of 2000
mg of Vitamin C, he sat up, ate a hearty meal and then played. In six
hours he started to revert to his previous stupor, and the fever returned.
Twelve hours after a second injection of two grams, and 1000 mg every two hours
by mouth, he recovered. Dr. Klenner said, “The rude irritability shown
prior to the first injection of Vitamin C was strikingly absent.” I think
what he wants the reader to grasp is that the symptoms of these devastating
virus diseases are similar to the clues seen in scorbutic patients.
The bloody nose is common in
measles, but can be relieved with one or two injections of Vitamin C (one
to four grams depending on individual differences). Bleeding tendencies are
common with scurvy. Did the disease allow the scurvy to become manifest? These
symptoms are due to acute Vitamin C loss and are nature’s way to ask for
help.
Mumps
He reports cases of influenza,
encephalitis, and measles easily cured with Vitamin C injections and oral
doses. A 23-year-old male developed mumps plus bilateral orchitis; his fever
was 105°, and he was in overwhelming pain with “testicles the size of tennis
balls.” After one 1000-mg injection of Vitamin C intravenously the pain
began to subside and after six more shots spaced every two hours the pain was
gone. The fever was normal in 36 hours. He was up, about and well in 60 hours.
Total dose 25,000 mg.
Mononucleosis
Dr. Klenner felt mono is
related to cancer because the same virus (Epstein-Barr) is found in Burkett’s
lymphoma. The disease, mono, can be eliminated with an I.V. of C in just a few
days, “The actual time being directly proportional to the amount of the vitamin
employed in relation to the severity of the infection.” (Most of us use Dr.
Cathcart’s formula for the amount of C to be given: “I think this is a 50 gram
disease: some fever, generalized aches, but ambulatory.”) In one patient who
was given the last rites by her church, the girl’s mother took things into her
own hands when the attending physician refused to give ascorbic acid. In each
bottle of I.V. fluid she would secretly and quickly “tap in” 20 -30 grams of
Vitamin C. The patient made an uneventful recovery. Her mother has her BS
in nursing and has been a long time advocate of massive “C” therapy. (100 gram
disease: 102-103°, holding down fluids but needs to stay in bed, miserable. 200
gram disease: 104 degree temperature, semi-comatose, somewhat dehydrated;
hospitalization a good idea.)
The theory behind the use of
adenosine: ascorbic acid stimulates an enzyme which breaks down the nucleic
acid in the virus. Some individuals cannot manufacture enough adenosine to aid
this enzyme activity. Purines are catabolized and are thus unavailable for the
production of new viral nucleic acid.
Other Diseases
Dr. Klenner tells the reader
about curing diphtheria with Vitamin C intravenously or
intramuscularly. Bacillary dysentery is stopped in 48 hours with injections of
C.
Pancreatitis. He treated but one case of this. He put 60 grams of sodium
ascorbate in 1000 cc of 5% dextrose in water and let it drip in rapidly and the
patient was able to go home in twelve hours.
Cardiovascular diseases,
hypermenorrhea, peptic and duodenal ulcers, postoperative and radiation
sickness, rheumatic fever, scarlet fever, poliomyelitis, acute and chronic
pancreatitis, tularemia, whooping cough, and tuberculosis.
In one case of scarlet fever,
antibiotics had no effect, but the fever responded dramatically when 50 grams
of C was given intravenously.
Others - Massive doses for rheumatic
fever. C will cure TB by removal of the organism’s coat. Also pneumonia—(so
it does not matter if one has a viral or bacterial pneumonia, it works).
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. Dr. Klenner was an authority in the treatment of this
rather debilitating, serious disease because his practice was right in the
middle of a constant locus of infection for tick bite fever.
Dr. Klenner had been taught in
his training that there was no cure for it, only supportive. So when he was
confronted with an obvious case—104.4° degree temperature, spots over body, coma,
and positive blood test—he quickly gave 30 grams of C intravenously every six
hours. The patient was given para-aminobenzoic acid orally, six grams, every
two hours x3, then 4 grams every two hours for 24 hours, then 4 grams every 4
hours until his fever was gone for 24 hours. At about the sixth hour of
treatment he became conscious and rational. He was sent home on the sixth day,
fully recovered.
He reported the story of a
twelve-year-old female with spots and 105° temperature. She was given chloroamphenicol
and PABA but with only a poor response on the third day, so she was given an
I.V. with 30 grams of C. In two hours she was almost well, cheerful and
responsive. She was given 30 grams every eight hours and was well and home in
seven days.
He wrote of his son, sick with
R.M.S.F. who almost died. He needed Vitamin C, vibramycin (an antibiotic),
PABA. Thiamin 1000 mg, B2 300 mg, and B3 500 mg were added to the I.V.’s daily.
On the third day his temperature was still up (105 degrees); he was losing interest,
and candida was developing. He finally got well on the fourth day.
What Dr. Klenner shows and
tells us that with a devastating disease like R.M.S.F.; everything known to be
helpful should be used. It seems obvious that antibiotics have a place, but Vitamin C
is extremely useful. He pointed out one medical center used the large doses of
PABA, and had no fatalities, except a six year old who was given only one half
the calculated dose.
The C is given around the clock and
at the 500-900 mg per kg body weight level. The disease “can always be
reversed.”
Dr. Klenner even treated trichinosis.
In the Tri-State Medical Journal for April, 1954, an article entitled, “The
Treatment with Massive Doses of Vitamin C and Para-Amino-Benzoic Acid”
Dr. Klenner pointed out that sixteen percent of humans in the U.S. have
these worms. An acute case will have puffy eyelids, high eosinophil count in
the blood stream, pain and swelling of the muscles, fever, profuse sweating,
cough and profound weakness. The eosinophil count is high with some allergies
also. He found that the lymphocytes stimulate anti-body formation and that the
lymphocytes rise with the patient’s recovery.
He reported the case of a man who
had eaten sausage. He came down with a fever (104°), very puffy skin of the
eyelids, hacking cough. Tests were positive for trichinosis and the eosinophil
count was fifteen percent (normal less than four percent).
He was given large doses of C by
needle because it would aid antibody formation and to detoxify him. Calcium gluconate,
one gram every day for several days. Antibiotics were worthless.
Fever rose to 106°, and he lapsed
into a semi-coma. As it reminded Dr. Klenner of tick bite fever, he forced
para-aminobenzoic acid down his throat. Four grams initially, then 3 grams
every 2 hours. Eight hours after this was started he ate a full breakfast—the
first in several days. His profuse sweating stopped. His temperature returned
to normal. The PABA was stopped after two days to see the effect; in 36 hours
the fever was back up to 101°. The sweating recurred.
The PABA was restarted at three
grams every 2 hours during the day and every three hours at night. After 9 days
he was well, the PABA was stopped and there was no recurrence.
Another patient, a woman, age 33,
had a fever (103.4°), swollen lids, eosinophils 30%, cough. She took 6 grams of
PABA and then 3 grams every three hours for 37 hours then that amount every 4
hours. Fruit juice also. Twelve grams of C was given every twelve hours. Ten
grams of C orally daily. She returned to work in eight days.
Dr Klenner had no explanation as to
why PABA was a curative for trichinosis.
Tetanus (Lockjaw). In two articles in the Tri-State Medical Journal
for June and July of 1954, he again scored some points for Vitamin C in
“The History of Lockjaw”, and “Recent Discoveries in the Treatment of Lockjaw.”
He stated that lockjaw is not
difficult to cure. He believed that doctors rely on antitoxin as the sole
therapy because some “authority” recommends it. Many patients are sedated “to
the point of narcosis.”
He felt that the practice of
injecting the tetanus antitoxin into the tissues near the wound was for
medico-legal reasons as it had no benefit and might even be harmful. The
antitoxin “cannot travel from the circulation into the nervous system and
unless it be injected into the nervous tissue, it is relatively valueless.”
Dr. Klenner reports on other
research: Vitamin C inactivates the toxin of tetanus.
He recounted the history of a
six-year-old boy who had never had any immunizations and developed tetanus
after falling off his pony into some brush. Over a period of three weeks the
boy developed increasing muscle tightness, abdominal cramps, inability to smile
or open his mouth. Liquids were all he could manage. If stimulated his back would
arch so his body was as a bridge resting on heels and back of head.
Dr. Klenner used Tolserol to
control the convulsive spasm without sedating the senses unduly (the FDA has
taken it off the market; Methocarbamol can be used intravenously with
comparable results). The boy was treated with Vitamin C, penicillin,
tetanus antitoxin and Tolserol. He spent eighteen (18) days in the hospital,
but the use of tetanus antitoxin seemed to aggravate the seizures and required
more Vitamin C, sedatives and its use definitely prolonged the
hospitalization.
He received 2 to 4 grams of
Vitamin C every four to six hours depending upon the symptoms and within
one hour he would be calm and free of spasms. The idea was to help the body’s
natural detoxifying process. He also developed hives from the TAT or the
penicillin and needed Benadryl and Adrenaline for that.
He summarized the treatment of
tetanus:
- debride and clean any wound thoroughly. (He felt ether
was good because it kills most bacteria without destroying tissue.)
- 75,000 units antitoxin deep intramuscularly above the
wound,
- intravenous fluids,
- massive doses of Vitamin C intravenously around
the clock,
- intradermal tetanus toxoid, 0.1 cc for five consecutive
days,
- intravenous Tolserol—now Methocarbamol. He felt all states
should pass legislation requiring tetanus toxoid for all ages.
He felt that the number of
fatalities from the disease were equal to the number of those who die from the
treatment. He emphasized some principles of treatment 30 to 40 years ago that
many of us have forgotten: namely, do no harm, and the body has tremendous
restorative powers if the doctor will supply it with the raw materials to
promote recovery.
Urethritis: Dr. Klenner points to the study done by Rous in 1971.
Only three grams of Vitamin C per day stopped the pain and frequency of
urination in just four days. Apparently alkaline urine allows phosphate
crystals to form; Vitamin C acidified the urine and the crystals went back
into solution.
Chronic cystitis is usually
associated with alkaline urine. Germs grow more easily in this alkaline urine.
Vitamin C will discourage these bacteria and cut the chance of an
ascending infection which might devastate the kidneys (pyelitis). Ten grams of
C per day are suggested.
Other Conditions
Antabuse is a chemical used to discourage alcoholics from drinking.
Alcohol and Antabuse in the body form acetaldehyde; the person feels awful;
weak, headaches even coma as this case illustrates. Dr. Klenner felt he
may have been the first to recommend Vitamin C in the control of this
chemical reaction. The man was on Antabuse. At one Christmas holiday his
“friends” persuaded him to drink with them. Shortly thereafter he was brought
to the emergency room where Dr. Klenner happened to be. He was unconscious
with BP of 90/60. He suffered from shock (same clinical picture with
barbiturate poisoning.) His I.V. was 500 ml of 10% glucose in water with 50
grams of sodium ascorbate. After 30 grams had run in, he awakened, felt well
and wanted to go home. He got the whole 50 grams in three hours and was sent
home. He also received oxygen by nasal mask.
The company that manufactures
Antabuse suggests but one gram intravenously as an antidote calling it
“massive.” Dr. Klenner felt that amount was “without value.”
For acute alcoholism
Dr. Klenner has given 1000 mg of thiamin intramuscularly every two hours
until recovery. Pyridoxine, 500 mg is given every six hours. 40 grams of C
intravenously will detoxify the patient.
Arthritis: Vitamin C counteracts the damaging effects of aspirin.
C is the number one precursor for collagen formation. If serum levels of C are
high, synovial fluid is thinner allowing for easier joint movement. Those
taking 15 to 25 grams daily will experience commensurate benefit. Prevention
seems prudent. “A person who will take ten to twenty grams of ascorbic acid a
day along with other nutrients might very well never develop arthritis.”
Cancer: He cites Schlegel’s (Tulane University) use of ascorbic
acid (1.5 grams a day only) in preventing bladder cancer recurrence. “This is
the so called wasted Vitamin C.”
He “demonstrated that in the
presence of ascorbic acid, carcinogenic metabolites will not develop in the
urine. They suggested that spontaneous tumor formation is the result of faulty
tryptophan metabolism while urine is retained in the bladder.” Other
researchers report that the depletion of mast cells from guinea pig skin was
due to ascorbic acid deficiency. It suggests Vitamin C is necessary for
the formation and maintenance of mast cells.
Vitamin C will control
myelocytic leukemia with 25-30 grams orally daily. “How long must we wait for
someone to start continuous ascorbic acid drip for two to three months, giving
100 to 300 grams each day, for various malignant conditions?
Small basal cell epithelioma: 30%
Vitamin C ointment.
He cites a disturbing study:
particles resembling viruses were found in some breast milk samples of women
with breast cancer. Could this help to explain why some cancers seem to be
“inherited?” It makes sense that all members of cancer prone families should be
taking at least ten grams of C daily.
His protocol for treating cancer is
printed here in total, although I do not understand the rationale for some of
the ingredients. All of this is designed to kill the cancer cells by shoring up
the immune system. He even recognized the therapeutic value for a positive
attitude.
- Use radioactive cobalt when and where indicated.
- Give 45 grams of sodium ascorbate intravenously every
twelve hours for one month. Then use 60 to 65 grams in 500 cc of normal
saline or 5% dextrose in water for five days a week until a cure is
obtained. It usually takes five months.
- Each bottle is to contain one gram of calcium
gluconate, a cc of some B complex, plus 1,200 mg of thiamin, 300 mg of
pyridoxine, and 600 mg of niacinamide.
- Oral sodium ascorbate, 5, 10, 20, grams daily. The dose
depends upon the bowel tolerance.
- Vitamin A palmitate, 50,000 units, daily, orally.
- Pantothenic acid, (B5) one gram orally four times a
day.
- Amino acid protein powder with all the eighteen amino
acids. 60 tablets each day or, if a powder, several tablespoons daily.
This supports the immune system and the enzymes. Tyrosine should be taken
separately, if possible, as this one makes the others work better; 500 mg
tablets—six daily.
- In addition, a high protein diet using white chicken
meat, fresh fish, chicken livers, and brown-shelled eggs. Beef (but once a
week) should be as lean as possible: lean stew beef or sirloin tip are the
best but have the butcher grind it three times. Hamburgers? Only once a
week. No sugar and no starches. Fruit and fruit juices are permitted.
Almonds are excellent.
- 30 to 40 apricot almonds should be chewed every day in
divided doses until a continuous bitter almond taste develops. At this
point the patient cuts the dose in half. “This will form cyanide by way of
the stomach acid. Cyanide will kill cancer cells. Vitamin C will
protect one against the lethal effects of cyanide. It is the antidote. 500
mg tablets of vitamin B17 are available. One after each meal and
at bed time.” (Not everyone would agree with this part of the therapy.
Cancer victims are still getting amygdalin B17, as injections
from Mexico, but there is some doubt as to its efficacy. LHS)
- Vitamin E, d-alpha tocopheryl acetate, 400
International unit size, 3,200 units daily. Don’t take iron with it.
- One pint of grape juice daily.
- B complex tablets with 100 mg of each of the B’s and
100 mcg of B12. Six to eight tablets daily. Theragran-M or a
similar capsule with all the minerals to replace what is being pulled out
by the C.
- Maintain the hemoglobin at 13 grams.
- Keep a good attitude.
He reported a case of a man with
lymph glands all over his body. He got the above treatment and although the
glands increased in size for a while, his liver and spleen were back to normal
size in four months. Dr. Klenner noticed a ‘parachute-like’ substance in
the urine. Microscopic examination revealed they were clumps of cancer cells.
Another case was that of a woman who
had an adenocarcinoma of two years duration. She had had chemotherapy, two
surgeries and extensive radiation over her chest, especially the neck area
where the cancerous glands were. The cancer had spread to her lungs, her
abdomen and six glands in her neck. Dr. Klenner gave her the above
protocol. In three months the lesion in her lung had cleared and gone were the
glands in her neck. After six months of intravenous Vitamin C and the B
complex, the abdominal masses had disappeared, but she could not swallow food.
The radiation had scarred her esophagus beyond dilatation and she refused more
surgery. The cancer was gone; she died from starvation due to the radiation.
Dr Klenner summarized this paper
with this: “The results suggest that larger daily amounts could be given in a
hospital with faster results. I would suggest at least 100 grams in 1000 cc of
fluid and given every twelve to 24 hours. The vitamins and the calcium
gluconate also must be given.” He thought interferon could be assayed while the
patient is in the hospital. “How long will it take for the general population
to challenge the drug cartel?”
There is a relationship of
Vitamin C and cholesterol. Scorbutic guinea pigs have high
cholesterol levels. Way back in 1947 high intravenous doses of Vitamin C
were found effective in lowering cholesterol levels. One researcher [Spittle,
1971, Lancet] postulated that arteriosclerosis might be the end result of a
long term deficiency or negative balance of Vitamin C. [Hecker] He and
Dr. Klenner saw the cholesterol levels in the blood of subjects vary with
the amount of C used. In one patient the cholesterol was lowered 42 mg percent
in six weeks when his oral intake of Vitamin C was increased from 10 grams
a day to 20 grams a day.
This all makes sense as “the main
pathway of cholesterol catabolism is in conversion to bile salts.”
Vitamin C aids in the enzymatic conversion. Guinea pigs, who like humans
cannot manufacture their own Vitamin C, will use up dietary Vitamin C
if fed a high cholesterol diet. “Guinea Pigs fed a diet free of ascorbic acid
showed a 600% acceleration in cholesterol formation in the adrenal glands.” The
Soviets have published many articles demonstrating these effects. This might
explain why colds and virus flu are more common in the winter because fresh
fruits and vegetables are less available and fat in the diet in the winter
might use up Vitamin C faster. Gallstones can be made to develop in guinea
pigs when fed a diet rich in cholesterol and low in C.
(In Medical School we were given the
mnemonic to aid in the diagnosis of the gall stone victims: “Fair, fat, and
forty.” Susceptibility plus dietary factors; it makes a lot of sense.)
Dr. Klenner quotes the
literature as to the use of Vitamin C in coronary artery disease in
animals as well as humans. Arteriosclerosis develops in guinea pigs when fed a
high cholesterol diet but develops rapidly in scorbutic animals even without
exogenous cholesterol. Extra C was able to absorb the plaques. The diet is
important, but extra C seems to be critical especially in those with a family
tendency.
“We must protect our hearts from
stress. Adequate Vitamin C is one answer.” Where did Linus Pauling learn
about his need for large doses? Probably from Dr. Klenner. “Mortality rate
for middle-aged people dropped significantly with increased doses of Vitamin C”
[Dr. Klenner was quoting J. Stamler from Comprehensive Treatment of
Essential Hypertensive Diseases. Monograph on Hypertension, Merck, Sharp
and Dohme.] Pauling currently takes 18 grams a day. He seems to be doing well
at the age of 86 years (July, 1987). [Dr. Pauling lived to 93 years –ed.]
Cavities: A gram of Vitamin C every day for each year of life
(five grams a day for the five year old) will prevent cavities. Ten grams a day
from age ten years for a lifetime should maintain that advantage.
He quotes Shaw who felt that
deposits on the teeth represent a pre-scurvy condition and that those so
afflicted should be taking 2000 mg a day of C before some nasty virus strikes.
Disc, ruptured intervertebral: will be prevented with the ten-grams-a-day
dose. Adequate amounts seem necessary for disc metabolism and maintenance.
Corneal ulcers: healed with but 1.5 grams of C daily. The pain of a
corneal burn was relieved immediately with twelve grams of C intravenously. The
cornea was normal in 24 hours. [Boyd & Campbell]
Diabetes: He noted back in 1951 that the urine in his patients
showed a reducing substance; severe virus infections will allow sugar to spill
into the urine. Vitamin C acts as a reducing agent and it would appear
that diabetes has been induced.
He reported the story of a seven
year old diabetic, who developed measles, and his insulin requirements went
from 5 units to more than 90 units a day, but with one gram of Vitamin C
every four hours his infection and elevated blood sugar came under control. In
these diabetic cases, the Vitamin C can be cut back to reasonable levels
after the infection is under control. Large prolonged doses of “Vitamin C
might prove undesirable due to its dehydrating and diuretic powers.”
He feels that the pathological
condition in this case means that adrenaline was flooding the boy’s system. The
regulator of the adrenaline mechanism had been removed so the constant supply
caused a prolonged vascular constriction. This action on the blood vessels
creates asphyxia of the tissues leading to acidosis. This acidity leads to
adrenaline hyperglycemia. “Slight blood sugar elevation can be controlled with
sodium bicarbonate. This vascular constriction is operative in the pancreas and
could restrict the production of insulin and pancreatic enzymes.”
As a matter of fact Dr. Klenner
had been studying the effects of ten grams of C per day orally in patients with
diabetes mellitus; 60% were able to control the condition with diet and C. The
other 40% were able to reduce the insulin dose. Wounds healed more readily. The
C assists the liver in its function of carbohydrate metabolism.
Glaucoma: Dr. Klenner was disturbed that marijuana was being
used for the reduction of intraocular pressure. ”One would need to be a chain
smoker to maintain worthwhile levels.“ He quotes Bietti who used large C doses;
Virno’s patients use 35 grams of C (100 mg/kg after meals and bedtime) in
divided doses during the 24 hours and this osmotic dehydration of the eyeball
was safe and effective. “The size of the dose does make a difference—a real
difference.”
Dr. Klenner has found in his
investigation of over 300 pregnancies, that the stress of the condition
pushed the needs for C in women up to 15 grams a day. The human fetus is a
parasite draining available C from the mother. We are all different and our
needs for Vitamin C vary depending upon heredity, environment, stress—or
its perception. He reminds us of Roger Williams’ research in 1968 showing that
some guinea pigs needed twenty times more Vitamin C than others to
maintain their health. (The usual dose for pregnant humans: 4 grams daily in
the first trimester; 6 grams daily in the second trimester; 8 to 10 grams in
the third trimester). He obtained excellent results with these large doses of C
in women who had been habitual aborters. [Greenblatt] One woman had had five
miscarriages and then with the Vitamin C went on to have two normal
pregnancies. The German literature is full of cases of these good results.
Hemoglobin was easier to maintain, leg cramps were less (Vitamin C
enhances iron and calcium and magnesium absorption). Striae gravidarum (stretch
marks) were seldom encountered. Labor was shorter and less painful. No post
partum hemorrhage. The perineum was more elastic and if Vitamin C was
maintained, it continued to remain firm.
Infants are robust with this
Vitamin C. None required resuscitation. 50 mg of ascorbic acid was begun
on the infant’s second day and was gradually increased as time went on. A set
of quadruplets in this series were healthy and taking milk on the second day.
It is especially helpful for the rapidly growing connective tissue, teeth and
blood vessels. [King]
Schizophrenia: Dr. Klenner reminds us of Hoffer and Osmond’s work
with niacin and Vitamin C back in the early 1950’s. Six to 8 grams of C a
day made the niacin work. One schizophrenic took one gram every hour for 48
hours and was completely recovered for six months with no further treatment.
These megadoses halved the suicide rate. It has been demonstrated that
schizophrenics burn up C ten times faster than the normal population. Most
people show some spill of C in the urine at 4 grams per day; schizophrenics
have to take ten times this amount before it can be detected. Dr. Klenner
noticed this spillage in patients severely affected with a virus only after two
to three days of large doses of C and improvement had begun. (Could
schizophrenia be due to a virus?)
Burns: can be treated with Vitamin C. “30-100 grams of Vitamin
C is the proper amount to employ.” (500 mg per kg of body weight diluted to at
least 18 cc per gram of C using 5% dextrose or saline in water or Ringer’s
solution, repeated every eight hours for several days, then at twelve hour
intervals. Calcium gluconate is added.) “Vitamin C is given until healing
takes place.” It takes seven to thirty days depending upon the degree of the
burn. It may prevent the need for grafting as it keeps the tissues oxygenated
thus preventing the blood from sludging. [Kniseley] On the fourth to fifth day
the malodorous burn eschars will fall off leaving normal tissue. Vitamin C
also eliminates pain; opiates are less necessary. (It stimulates endorphin
production in the brain.)
In an article he published in the ICAN Journal
(there is no date, but it was probably published in 1973 or 74) he states that
Vitamin C is truly a miracle substance. He believed that large doses of
intravenous Vitamin C early in the post-burn phase would eliminate the
third degree burn with its infection and scarring. Blood sludging seems to be
the basic villain that leads to rigid masses of eschar. [Berkeley] Oxygen is
cut off. Tissue destruction is added to already burn-damaged skin.
Vitamin C levels in the blood and urine drop. [Lund & Levenson; Lam]
Vitamin C is necessary for granulation tissue and skin formation.
[Bergman] Three percent ascorbic acid solution is used as a spray every two to
four hours for five days. [Klasson]
Pseudomonas: (a nasty bacteria,
often seen in burn patients; very resistant to antibiotics): three percent
spray plus massive injections.
Heat stroke: 500 mg per kg of body weight will reverse it.
Sunburn: One gram taken every one to two hours during exposure will
prevent sunburn; an I.V. injection will quickly relieve the pain and erythema.
Even second-degree burns will be healed.
Prickly heat, heat stroke, heat
collapse can all be treated; the latter
needs twelve to forty grams intravenously. Electric shock patients must be
given Vitamin C immediately after the accident—including lightning
victims.
Vitamin C will control the side
effects of radiation including radiation burns. “Who can say what 100 to
300 grams given intravenously daily for several months might accomplish in
cancer? The potential is so great and the employment so elementary that only
the illiterate will continue to deny its use.”
Vitamin C inhibits the
deaminizing enzymes from the damaged cells (due to burns, injury, infections).
Histamine is produced by these enzymes. The shock is controlled. [Chambers
& Pollock; Clark & Rossiter]
Surgery: Way back in 1960 and again in 1966, Dr. Klenner
delivered papers before the Tri-State Medical Society calling attention to the
“scurvy levels” of C in post-operative patients. The levels began to fall six
hours after surgery and by 24 hours the levels were 3/4 lower than pre-op.
Tensile strength of healing wounds is lowered if the plasma drops to scurvy
levels. The lower the C levels the poorer the wound heals. [Bartlett, Lanman)
Even as little a dose as 500 mg of C orally “was remarkable successful in
preventing shock and weakness,” following dental extraction, he quotes
Schumacher.
He remembers a surgery case in 1949
when he assisted a surgeon in a potentially hopeless case. Extensive adhesions
of the viscera defied separation. The surgeon repaired twenty tears and closed
the abdomen. She should not have survived. The patient was given two grams of C
every two hours intravenously for 48 hours and then four grams per day. In a
day and a half she was up walking and in a week discharged home with normal
bowels and no pain.
30 grams should be given
intravenously daily—post-operatively, until food and pills are tolerated
orally.
Dr. Klenner used 10 grams
preoperatively intravenously and ten grams in each post-operative bottle and
then ten grams orally when eating was resumed. Surgical wounds rarely separated
with this method. Fractures healed faster. (Some surgeons will give ten grams
of Vitamin C at the end of the operation, and the patient is awake and
alert in 60 seconds. No need for the nausea and vomiting in the recovery room.)
Toxins & Heavy Metals
Heavy Metal Poisonings: Especially lead and mercury—are controlled with
Vitamin C injections and oral intake. An intake of Vitamin C daily
will protect animals—and by extrapolation, humans—from fatal doses of mercury.
If a guinea pig needed 200 mg one day to protect it from an otherwise fatal
dose of mercury, the human would need 14 grams daily. Smaller doses would be
able to protect the body from smaller amounts of the toxin.
Lead poisoning: 350 mg of Vitamin C per one kg of body weight taken
intramuscularly every two to four hours; recovery in less than 72 hours.
Dr. Klenner found that the
amount of C used “in any case is the all important factor. In 28 years of
research we have observed that 30 grams each day is critical in terms of
response” regardless of age and weight. (Barbiturate intoxication, snake bite
and viral encephalitis may require larger doses in some individuals.)
Carbon monoxide (CO): poisoning is on the rise due to smoking and city
living. CO interferes with oxygenation of tissues as it ties up hemoglobin.
(The affinity of CO for hemoglobin is 300 times that of oxygen.) It would be
especially dangerous in hearts already compromised by diseased coronary
vessels; those vessels cannot dilate in times of extra need, e.g., CO
poisoning. Smokers, and by inference, anyone exposed to CO or pollution should
be taking extra Vitamin C. He points to the report [Pelletier] that shows
when smokers quit, their “ascorbic level approaches that of the non-smoker.” In
acute CO poisoning: if 12 to 50 grams of Vitamin C is injected rapidly
into the blood stream, it acts as an oxidizer and will “pull CO from hemoglobin
to form carbon dioxide” which is easily exhaled. A burn victim should
immediately receive a dose of 500 mg of C per kg of body weight intravenously.
It will “neutralize the CO or smoke poisoning while at the same time it will
prevent blood sludging which in the major factor in the development of third
degree burns.”
An accidental carbon monoxide
poisoning was reversed in ten minutes with 12 grams of ascorbic acid in a 50 cc
syringe using a twenty gauge needle. (”We employ a twenty-gauge needle when
using a 50 cc syringe; a twenty-one gauge for a thirty-cc syringe, a twenty-two
gauge for a twenty cc syringe and a twenty-three gauge needle for a ten cc
syringe“).
Two boys were sprayed with pesticide,
one received Vitamin C (10 grams) every eight hours and went home on the
second day. The other boy only fluids; his skin showed a bad chemical burn; he
died on the fifth day.
Vitamin C will reverse the shock
and low blood pressure from barbiturates, muscarine, and formic acid. One
suicidal patient ingested 2640 mg of barbiturate. Twelve grams was administered
using a 50 cc syringe. In ten minutes the blood pressure rose from 60/0 to
100/60. 100 grams was given in the vein for three hours at which time the
patient was awake. The use of large doses of C should be routine in these cases
of chemical shock. “The needle used to give a syringeful of C was attached to a
bottle of 5% dextrose in water with 50 grams of ascorbic acid. She received 125
grams of C. C not only assists with hepatic metabolism but also as a major
diuretic, flushing these compounds out by way of the kidneys. Oxygen by nasal
tube ran constantly.”
Another patient had taken 2400 mg of
Seconal plus para-aldehyde. She was awake after 42 grams of C was administered.
The C was injected as fast as a twenty-gauge needle could carry the flow. Consequent
doses of 75 grams intravenously and thirty grams of C taken orally over a
period of 24 hours saved her life.
Bites, Toxins, Allergies
In another Tri-State Medical Journal
of December, 1957, he outlined the physiology and treatment of Black Widow
Spider poisoning in a case history. Some of those bitten are not affected
at all because the spider was out of poison, but some can be devastated and may
die, partly because of poor resistance but also due to the quantity injected.
It can be confused with
pancreatitis, renal colic, food poisoning, tetanus, angina, bowel obstruction,
pneumonia, perforated ulcer. The abdominal wall muscles become rigid, the
victims have cold sweat, their temperature and blood pressure shoot up, they
vomit, have muscle twitches and spasms, cyanosis, chills, convulsions and
delirium. The painful muscle spasms occur within minutes of the original bite.
The cramps occur in all the large muscles of the body; the victims roll and
toss and moan in agony.
Until someone used calcium
gluconate, there were 90 ineffective treatments. An anti-venom is on the
market, but severe reactions and even death have been attributed to its use.
The treatment Dr. Klenner
suggests is his friend, Vitamin C, 350 mg per kg of body weight
intravenously along with calcium gluconate.
His three and a half year old
patient had been getting worse for 24 hours with abdominal cramps which the
parents assumed were due to food poisoning. She became quieter, feverish,
constipated and her abdomen was exquisitely tender. She was becoming stuporous.
Dr Klenner noted the red, swollen
area around her naval, and two tiny spots about one eighth of an inch apart
were noted in the middle: the fang marks of a Black Widow Spider. He gave one
gram of calcium gluconate and 4 grams of Vitamin C intravenously. In 6
hours she was more responsive, and her temperature had dropped from 103 degrees
to 101 degrees and she was given another four grams I.V.
In another six hours, her
temperature was but 100 degrees, and she could swallow fluids. The next day she
was active, and 50% of the discoloration had disappeared. She received another
4 grams of C intravenously and 3 grams intramuscularly. At home she swallowed
one gram of C every three to four hours. An enema produced a bloody return. When
she recovered, she remembered brushing “a big black bug off her stomach,”
before she took ill.
Dr. Klenner had treated eight
cases of Black Widow Spider bites. “It is criminal to give these patients an
opiate to relieve their pain, for in so doing you might add to their distress
and actually precipitate a fatality.”
“Some ascorbic acid behaves much
like calcium in the body, and also acts synergistically with it, we elected to
observe its action.” The child was destined to die. “Some physicians would stand
by and see their patient die rather than use ascorbic acid because in their
finite minds it exists only as a vitamin.”
Dr. Klenner was very confident
about the benefits of intravenous Vitamin C to treat the poisonous effects
of insects and reptiles,. He felt all emergency rooms should be adequately
stocked. He used sodium ascorbate, 7.5 grams in 30 ml. The syringes are 5 to 60
cc. The needles are 20 gauge (big), one inch long to 31 gauge (I have trouble
believing this) one inch long. I get “miracle like responses.”
Case 1: An eighteen-year-old female
was treated just twenty minutes after a hornet bite. She was covered with hives
and had shortness of breath and difficulty swallowing. In minutes after twelve
grams of sodium ascorbate intravenously were pushed in with a 50 cc syringe her
allergic symptoms were gone.
Dr. Klenner took ten grams of C
dissolved in water orally and again in fifteen minutes to counteract the stings
of fifteen yellow jackets. No symptoms.
Snakebite: He reported on a
four-year-old girl bitten by a Highland Moccasin. She had severe pain in her
leg and was vomiting within twenty minutes after the bite. Dr. Klenner
gave four grams of C intravenously and within half an hour she had stopped
crying and could now drink orangeade and began to laugh. “I’m all right now.”
She slept well all night, but because of a slight fever and tenderness,
Dr. Klenner gave her another four grams intravenously and again that late
afternoon. No antibiotics and no anti-serum were necessary.
Dr. Klenner had worked the
schedule out on dogs and published it in hunting and fishing magazines. He has
had many testimonials from satisfied doctors.
“All the venom that will be
encountered exists as you see the patient. It is important to give sufficient
sodium ascorbate to neutralize the bite. The more you give; the faster will be
the cure. We now routinely give 10 to 15 grams sodium ascorbate depending on
the weight of the victim. Then as much of the drug as can be tolerated by mouth
is given, usually 5 grams, every four hours.”
Usually without the use of
Vitamin C patients are stuck in the hospital requiring hot packs,
antibiotics, anti-serum and nursing care. Many end up with much scarring.
He recited the case of a man who was
treated at another emergency room. The doctor tried to cut out the local bite
area.
When Dr. Klenner saw him it was
badly infected and the temperature was 104°. Fifteen grams of C intravenously
twice daily, 5 grams of C orally every four hours. Penicillin injected for the
infection. He was back to work in seven days.
“Sodium ascorbate will cure any type
of snake bite.” The amounts and the speed of injection are critical.
Forty to 60 grams intravenously as a starter. Klenner cites the 6500 deaths a
year from snake bites, but many more from insects, bees, spider, plants and
some caterpillars. They produce formic acid, histamine and specific toxin
albumins. Some are neurotoxins; some cause capillary damage and hemorrhage.
When cells are damaged proteins are deaminized, producing histamine and other toxic
products; shock may occur. These deaminizing enzymes from the damaged cells are
inhibited by Vitamin C. The pH of cells changes when cells are damaged;
enzymes become destructive instead of constructive. C reverses this.
Vitamin C is reduced in the serum of those in shock. 350-700 mg per kg
body weight is the saving intravenous dose. In children up to two grams can be
given in each of several areas (a twenty kg five year old could get two grams
in each of four sites. Ice before and after the injection would control the
pain).
He reports a case of a bite by a Puss
caterpillar. The patient was going into shock with asphyxia and cyanosis.
Dr Klenner whipped out his trusty syringe, filled it with 12 grams of C,
squirted it into the man’s veins and before he was done, the patient was
improved enough to exclaim, “Thank God.” And thank Dr. Klenner for
figuring out what to do; the man would have died from shock if it had not been
for the rapid infusion of C. Again, Dr. Klenner’s maxim adds weight: Give
the C while pondering the diagnosis.
Mosquito bites: eleven grams of C per day and 200 to 400 mg of B complex
daily, both by mouth.
Poison Oak or Ivy: oral Vitamin C plus a paste of C powder will control
the contact allergy in 24 hours.
Multiple Sclerosis & Myasthenia Gravis
Dr. Klenner also turned his
attention to other nervous system diseases. In a paper entitled, “Response of
Peripheral and Central Nerve Pathology to Mega-doses of the Vitamin B complex
and other Metabolites,” he focuses on Multiple Sclerosis and Myasthenia Gravis.
(Journal of Applied Nutrition, Vol. 25, #304, 1973).
He felt fatigue was the key to the
understanding of the nervous system and its physiology. Substances are consumed
for the production of energy in the muscles. Products of this process
accumulate in the tissue. Some diseases will prevent this use of available
energy. The junction between neuron and neuron and the connection between motor
nerves and the fibers of skeletal muscle are the two locations for normal
fatigue.
Plants will wilt if fatigued;
improper atmosphere and inadequate soil are responsible. Animals and humans
need food, oxygen and faith to stay alive and healthy. He felt a sharecropper
working in fresh open air would be less fatigued than a factory worker. Oxygen
supply has much to do with fatigue.
If a muscle is repeatedly
stimulated, it will become so exhausted it will fail to respond. Either the
glycogen is used up, or the lactic acid has accumulated to a poisonous level.
(At this point he describes the
aerobic and anaerobic metabolism of muscles. Phospho-creatine, adenosine
triphosphate, calcium, magnesium and stored glycogen are all necessary for
muscle function. Oxygen and small amounts of protein play a part in muscle
contraction. Acetylcholine and its esterase are essential; too much or too
little of any of these substances may prevent or slow down muscle action.)
Myasthenia Gravis is a disease in
which too much pyruvic acid, due to faulty metabolism, affects the interaction
of acetylcholine at the junction of the nerve and the muscle. He felt at that
time that Multiple Sclerosis was due to “sluggish and bizarre muscle activity
due to the inability to utilize essential factors because of mechanical and
chemical road blocks.”
He felt chemical fatigue was common.
Body lassitude is the result of ingestion of sedatives, hypnotics,
tranquilizers and even sodium bicarbonate. The latter can displace oxygen from
hemoglobin, cutting down oxygenation of tissues. But Vitamin C will
prevent this type of energy loss. Smoking aggravates this fatigue.
A person’s muscle exhaustion point
is determined by his oxygen absorbing and carbon dioxide discharging ability.
At rest we use 200 to 300 cc of oxygen per minute. With sudden exertion this
will rise to 2000 to 4000 cc. The more oxygen absorbed, the more lactic acid
will be removed. Efficient use of oxygen is the key to adequate energy
production and removal of wastes.
He described mental fatigue, active
and passive. Passive is neurasthenia or brain fog: sensations of pressure in
the head, poor memory, loss of ability to concentrate, irritability of temper,
insomnia, anorexia and a variety of aches and pains.
Active mental fatigue is caused by
continuous work, and this change is due to the sensory-motor exhaustion and not
the mental work per se. The primary area of fatigue is at the synapses which
beg only diversion of interest and activity.
Adequate oxygen is assured if the
lungs and hemoglobin are normal, but also by taking 10 to 30 grams of ascorbic
acid by mouth every 24 hours. Oxygen is released for tissue use when ascorbic
acid becomes dehydroascorbic acid. Enzymes are necessary to make all these
reactions possible. Genetic faults manifest themselves through enzymatic
deficiencies.
He outlines the nineteen stops from
glucose to pyruvic acid which provides energy. This energy release depends upon
oxygen and, Dr. Klenner emphasized, it is important to maintain good
ventilation capacity, and, of course, a substantial intake of Vitamin C.
He felt pyruvic acid metabolism was
important for the understanding of Myasthenia Gravis. Coenzyme A (COA, the
active form of pantothenic acid) is in limited supply in M.G. It, COA,
intercepts pyruvic acid at the end point of glucose metabolism. Another enzyme,
cocarboxylase, splits the carboxyl group (COOH) away from pyruvic acid to form
CO2 and free hydrogen. The remaining two carbon fragment (acetate)
join with coenzyme A to form acetyl coenzyme A. A high energy package named
NADH2 is formed from the carboxyl group from pyruvic acid and a sulfur group
from coenzyme A.
Thiamin is important in all this
energy production as two molecules of thiamin combined with two molecules of
phosphoric acid become cocarboxylase. This enzyme must be present for the
continuance of the metabolic cycle. When thiamin is deficient, pyruvates and
lactate accumulate, and at the neuromuscular junction the nerve end plate
becomes swollen and poorly operative. That same enzyme is necessary for the
syntheses of acetylcholine, the neurotransmitter that initiates muscle
contraction. “Thiamin deficiency inhibits lactic acid metabolism.” A thiamin
deficiency means a cocarboxylase deficiency. Liver enzymes are mainly
responsible for the phosphorylation of thiamin to cocarboxylase. Liver disease
would obviously reduce this synthesis. “The activity of choline esterase
(breaks down acetylcholine) is inhibited by this same double thiamin unit.”
(See also p. 20.)
In the conversion of fatty acids to
energy some of the same enzymes are necessary: coenzyme A, hydrogen carriers
(niacin-adenosine-dinucleotide) and Vitamin C. The latter acts as a
hydrogen transport.
He puts Myasthenia Gravis and
Multiple Sclerosis in the same therapeutic group as he found thiamin was the
key to the therapy. M.G. is a genetically transmitted disease and M.S. is
triggered by a virus and mimics poliomyelitis. Nerve damage in M.S. is due to
microscopic hemorrhages in the nervous system. During healing, scar tissue
contracts clamping off capillary flow and nutrition. This wasting results in
loss of the myelin sheath protection.
He felt that remyelinating these
damaged nerves was every bit as hopeful as the myelination that occurs normally
in infancy with nothing more spectacular than breast milk. It requires two
years of treatment to repair the damage caused by one year of the disease.
He cites works in the late 1930s by
Stern at Columbia University who used thiamin intraspinally for the treatment
of Multiple Sclerosis with astonishing results. After 30 mg of thiamin was
injected into the spinal canal of paralyzed MS. victims, they had a temporary
remission. They could walk for a while. And Stern felt it was a B1
avitaminosis. It was known at that time that polyneuritis can cause
degeneration of myelin sheaths.
Dr. Klenner felt that both M.G.
and M.S. were basically a disturbance of supply and demand and not a functional
defect nor impaired diffusion. He followed the belief of Dr. Leon Rosenberg
(Yale) who distinguishes between vitamin deficiency diseases and vitamin
dependency diseases. Some diseases would require 1000 times the calculated
minimal daily requirement. Another investigator [Moore] used high intravenous
doses of nicotinic acid (B3) in the control of M.S.
Dr. Klenner’s protocol for M.G.
and M.S. in the 1950’s:
- Thiamin, (B1), orally: 300 to 500 mg 30
minutes before meals and at bedtime. Intramuscularly: 400 mg daily.
Intravenously: 1000 mg (or 20 mg per kg body weight) two to three times a
week. A 20 cc to 30 cc syringe with a one inch 22 gauge (or smaller)
needle is used. The patient is to be supine and the pulse counted as the
solution is injected. If the pulse rises, the solution is being injected
too rapidly. Thiamin can be toxic but as soon as it is phosphorylated (in
seconds) it becomes cocarboxylase, a necessary enzyme. Benadryl®
intramuscularly stops any allergic reaction. Dr. Klenner reassures us
that if injected slowly, no problem is encountered. The preservatives are
more likely to cause reactions than the thiamin.
- Niacin or nicotinic acid, (B3), orally: 100
mg to 3000 mg thirty minutes before meals and at bedtime. The dose should
be enough to produce a strong body flush. As it dilates the blood
vessels—“even those that have been compressed by scar tissue”—a greater
amount of the nutrients reach the muscle and nerve cells. Dr. Klenner
felt it would be better to have a constant flush.
- Pyridoxine, (B6), orally: 100 to 200 mg
before meals and at bedtime. Intramuscularly: 100 mg daily. Lack of B6
causes anemia and neurological lesions. Intravenously: 300 mg. It is
necessary for the metabolism of fatty and amino acids.
- Cobalamin, (B12), intramuscularly: 1000 mcg
three times a week. B12 is a factor in the synthesis of myelin.
In the treatment of neurological diseases, B12 reduces the
requirement of choline.
- Ascorbic acid, orally: 10 to 20 grams are to be taken
daily in divided doses. Vitamin C will prevent a superimposed
infection and aids in metabolism.
- Riboflavin, (B2), orally: 25 mg before meals
and at bedtime. Intramuscularly: 40 to 80 mg daily. It is essential for
metabolism of carbohydrates and in the regulatory function of the hormones
involved in carbohydrate metabolism.
- d-alpha tocopherol acetate, (Vitamin E), orally: 800
Units before meals and at bedtime. A deficiency results in demyelinization
and distortion of the spinal cord nerves.
- Crude Liver, daily injections. It contains factors
still unknown but essential in metabolism. (Not manufactured now.)
- Adenosine-5-monophosphoric acid. By adding this, all
the chemistry dealing with cell metabolism is enhanced. It is essential to
muscle function and, thus, energy.
- Choline, orally: 700 to 1400 mg after each meal and at
bedtime. It is in fat and nerve tissue. Acetylcholine plays an important
role in humoral transmission of nerve impulses to effector organs like
muscles.
- Lecithin, orally: 1200 mg of soybean lecithin after
each meal. Lecithin contains choline. It plays an important part in the
structure of cell membranes. It is the lipid used in nerve tissue.
- Magnesium, orally: 300 mg after each meal. Muscle
activity requires magnesium. It also serves as an enzyme activator.
- Calcium gluconate, orally: ten-grain tablets. Two
tablets after each meal and bedtime. Intravenously: one gram twice weekly.
Helps muscle activity.
- Calcium pantothenate, orally: 500 mg after each meal
and at bedtime. This is a coenzyme A. It participates in the acetylation
of amines and metabolism of carbohydrates and fatty acids.
- Aminoacetic acid, (Glycine), orally: one heaping
tablespoon of the powder in a glass of milk four times a day. It is
concerned with the syntheses of glutathione which is involved with
intracellular oxidation and reduction. It stimulates the combustion of
other tissue constituents. It has an adaptability in the detoxification
process.
- The hemoglobin should be kept to at least thirteen
grams.
- The diet is to be high protein, including two to three
eggs for breakfast.
- One Theragran-M capsule daily for trace minerals.
- Dantrium to relieve tremors. Sysmmetrol to relieve
stiffness.
- Zinc gluconate, orally: 20 mg three times a day helps
Myasthenia Gravis.
This treatment works dramatically in
M.G. An abbreviated schedule can be effective. One gram thiamin four times a
day, niacin, enough to produce a flush four times a day, 200 mg calcium
pantothenate four times a day, 100 mg pyridoxine four times a day, 10 grams of
C in divided doses, glycine one tablet four times a day. This treatment is
effective, but the full therapy will afford more dramatic response.
Dr. Klenner felt that most
cases (80%) of Multiple Sclerosis had their origin in an illness—probably a
coxsackie virus—compatible with a summer “flu”. He mentioned other theories of
the etiology of M.S., but was convinced that the scar tissue that forms around
the nerves and produces the symptoms “is the end result of microscopic
hemorrhages following virus invasion.”
He believed that in M.G. the thymus
gland was hyperplastic in many cases, and that muscle antibodies might account
for others, but the importance of the excessive pyruvates at the neuromuscular
junction has to be recognized as the basic cause of the hypotonia.
Here followed a number of a case
histories of neurological diseases. One case of M.S. was of a male confined to
a wheel chair in the hospital for two years. After a month of the treatment
listed above his physician realized the improvement and sent him home. In three
years he was free from the disease and remained so as he continued in a
modified treatment.
One M.G. case was of a male
receiving prostigmine to which he was becoming unresponsive; thiamin was given
intramuscularly along with other B vitamins three times a day. He was off the
prostigmine in a year. He lived a normal life for eighteen years. He died of an
unrelated cerebral accident.
A woman with polyneuritis began her
illness with pain, burning and jerking of her legs accompanied by a high fever
for ten days. Paralysis on left side plus weakness of the hands. She received
oral and intramuscular injections. In several months intravenous vitamins were
begun. In sixteen months she began to move her right leg. In five years from
the beginning of the illness she began to get around with knee braces and a
walker. In one more year she was able to move about without a back brace.
Dr. Klenner felt if she had had 200 grams of ascorbic acid early, she
would not have had the paralysis. She was also given 300 mg ribonucleic acid
four times a week.
Another woman developed weakness in
her extremities and was diagnosed as M.S. superimposed by a viral encephalitis.
She was sent home with a wheelchair and was expected to die. She fully
recovered on Dr. Klenner’s protocol and continued to take her supplements.
A male, aged 28, developed numbness
and loss of muscle control from the waist down about two years before he came
to Dr. Klenner’s treatment. He also had loss of bladder control.
Dr. Klenner felt he had M.S. and put him on the above treatment. He was so
much better in five weeks that he stopped treatment but the symptoms returned
in three weeks, so he went back on the full treatment. Within a year he was
back to full employment and able to follow his hobby as a crack pistol shooter.
A white 57 year old female began to
be fatigued seven years before coming to Dr. Klenner. She had normal
function after a night’s sleep but had drooping eyelids and could not chew food
after a few bites. Some doctors had called it psychosomatic. But it was quite
obvious to Dr. Klenner that she had M.G. After 1000 mg of thiamin and 300
mg of pyridoxine administered intravenously in ten minute intervals, she was
able to chew and make facial movements for the first time in three years. She
has no symptoms as long as she continues the Klenner program.
He was quite definite: “Any victim
of Multiple Sclerosis who will dramatically flush with the use of nicotinic
acid and has not yet progressed to the stage of myelin degeneration, as
witnessed by sustained ankle clonus, can be cured with the adequate
employment of thiamin, B complex proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and injectable
crude liver.” “We had patients in wheel chairs who returned to normal
activities after five to eight years of treatment.” He also noted that if M.S.
patients had a course of ACTH or cortisone, it extended the recovery period.
He noted the peripheral neuritis
that is due to thiamin deficiency is common in chronic alcoholism.
“The treatment of M.G. is that of
any pathology dealing with the interruption of the normal physiology of nerve
cells.” He had found that after successfully treating poliomyelitis victims
with Vitamin C, he had to follow up with B vitamins for the nerve repair.
He found the same results when treating damage to the spinal cord, whether
trauma or viral infection. B1 restores the ability of the nervous
system to handle pyruvic acid and dextrose properly. Cocarboxylase may be the
“food required for nerve life.”
Since M.G. does not suffer the loss
of myelin sheaths in vital areas, it does not have to be treated as rigorously
as M.S. But the chemistry is more complex because muscles are involved. 900
different enzymes have been identified, therefore vitamin therapy must be
intense. Of course, good liver function is necessary for good results.
Dr. Klenner stumbled on a liver test: a test tube is filled with a morning
urine specimen. In 24 hours there is usually a gelatinous mass accumulation at
the bottom; the more the amount, the more the stress to the liver. Choline will
prevent this from appearing. These are phosphates.
In an article, “Fatigue—Normal and
Pathological”, [Southern Medicine and Surgery, Volume III, #9, Sept. 1949], he
had already had success with the vitamin treatment of MS. and M.G.
Dr. Klenner felt that fatigue is a warning signpost along the road of
infectious disease. Heavy muscular exercise throws a great burden on the
defensive mechanisms. The tissue of the adrenal cortex of rats is increased in
weight after repeated periods of exercise.
He pointed out the importance of
oxygen in the etiology of fatigue. If the air that is inhaled has but 0.1
percent of carbon monoxide, half the hemoglobin will be bound to the CO and
unavailable for carrying oxygen to the tissues.
Poorly oxygenated blood can come
from drugs, analgesics, and even sodium bicarbonate. A deficiency of B1
will reduce tissue (which breaks down acetylcholine needed at the nerve ending
to activate the muscle). Shots of it are to be given daily from one to three
weeks and then a 15 mg tablet orally every six hours.
B1, 100 mg
intramuscularly three times a day are given along with oral glycine. The other
members of the B complex were added.
“Avitaminotic nerve fibers have a
hunger for this vitamin (B1), and it is easy to know when the
optimum return of function is obtained. When the nerve structure has been
repaired, the patient will become irritable, the appetite will be lost and he
or she will experience a sensation of heaviness and stiffness of the muscles of
the extremities. Sufficient Vitamin C is then given by mouth to maintain
optimum therapeutics.”
As to M.S. the diagnosis is
determined by the “evidence of lesions affecting chiefly the white matter,
scattered in time and space: palsy of one of the oculomotor nerves, nystagmus,
slight ataxia of arms, absence of abdominal reflexes and other scattered
neurological anomalies (such as poor bladder control and patchy sensory
changes).
Subtle forms of encephalitis might
cause changes in the nervous system preventing a normal supply of Vitamin B1
from reaching distal parts of the nervous system. He noted the increased
incidence of M.S. after the encephalitis epidemic of 1920-26 and in 1934. Also
unrecognized cases of poliomyelitis may be an important factor in the cause of
avitaminotic symptoms in the central nervous system. This could happen in these
disease conditions even with sufficient B1 in the diet; the vitamin
is not diffused properly. Initially it is the virus and when that dies down, it
is scar tissue blocking the circulation. The capillaries must be opened and
extra B1 must be supplied with the protocol cited above.
In a letter to the editor of the
Tri-State Medical Journal, Oct. 1954, he boldly stated that he was curing
Myasthenia Gravis. He seemed more definite about the biochemistry: pyruvic
acid, if allowed to accumulate, will produce a cloudy swelling of the distal
portion of nerves, and that the primary biochemical fault in B1
deficiency is the failure of the organism to metabolize pyruvic acid. Also he
realized that creatine (needed for normal muscle function) is formed by the
body when choline and urea combine. Choline is in short supply in M.G. unless
supplemented orally. He felt glycine should be supplemented in the diet because
it yields urea. Protein is needed in the diet to sustain muscle wear and tear.
Tyrosine is needed to help turn ingested protein into usable amino acids and
Vitamin C is essential in this reaction.
This leads us to paper he put
together in 1980. It was not published: “Multiple Sclerosis Diagnosis and
Treatment Suggestions.”
He again stated the origin was due
to a childhood virus of the coxsackie group mimicking red measles. The initial
illness was a severe lung infection, or an encephalitis which subsided only to
recur as M.S. twenty to thirty year later. 70% of cases have the onset of their
M.S. symptoms from the age of 20-40 years.
40% will have optic neuritis as the
initial symptom, then optic atrophy may follow. Most will notice double vision
early. Weakness, loss of reflexes, numbness in fingers, dizziness, loss of
position sense, feeling heat over spine, rheumatoid arthritis may occur
concurrently (shortage of B vitamins), intention tremor, poor bladder control,
and spastic paraplegia.
His treatment suggestion for M.S. at
this time (1980) consisted of:
- Thiamin HCl (Vitamin B1) one gram (1000 mg)
taken thirty minutes before meals and at bedtime.
- Nicotinic Acid (Niacin; Vitamin B3) 50 mg to
300 mg, depending on flushing of skin, thirty minutes before meals and bed
time.
- Riboflavin (Vitamin B2) 250 mg after meals
and bed time.
- Pyridoxine (Vitamin B6) 100 mg after meals
and bed time.
- Calcium pantothenate (pantothenate acid/Vitamin B5)
one gram after meals and bed time.
- Lecithin. 1200 mg (19 grains) one capsule after meals
and at bed time with two percent milk.
- Vitamin A (palmitate) one 50,000 unit capsule after
breakfast and supper.
- Vitamin E (d-alpha tocopheryl acetate) 400 I. units.
Four capsules at bedtime.
- Niacinamide (Vitamin B3 amide) 500 mg.
tablets. One after meals.
- Magnesium oxide 300 mg tablet. One tablet after meals
and before bed time.
- Trinsicon or Feosol. One capsule twice daily or
sufficient to maintain a hemoglobin of at least thirteen grams.
- Folic acid. Two milligrams after each meal. Only
recommended when the hemoglobin will not respond to iron treatment.
- Sunflower seed oil capsules. One capsule after meals
and bed time.
- Lipotriad. Three capsules yields 700 mg of choline. Two
capsules after each meal. It is used as a methylating agent.
- Calcium gluconate, 10 grain tablets. Twelve tablets
daily. May be omitted if patient can drink a quart of milk a day.
- Linseed oil capsules. One capsule after meals and at
bedtime. Contains linolenic, oleic and linoleic acids.
- Muscle relaxants. Prescribed according to patient
needs.
- Calcium Orotate (Vitamin B13) 500 mg tablet. One after
meals and at bed time.
- Calcium pangamate, 50 mg tablet. One tablet twice daily.
- Protein supplement containing eighteen amino acids. One
ounce in a glass of milk four times a day. Some of the above can be taken
with this drink.
[This list was originally numbered
1) to 22), with 11) and 12) missing –ed.]
Intramuscular injection, given five
to seven days each week.:
- 2 cc crude liver daily. (Hard to get now. I can’t find
it.)
- 2cc Thiamin HCl, (B1), 400 mg daily.
- 1.5-2cc Pyridoxine, (B6), 150 mg daily. Add
to B12.
- 1.5-2cc Cyariocobalamin, (B12), 1500 mcg
daily. Add to B6.
- 1.5-2cc Riboflavin, (B2), 75 mg daily. Add
to B3 amide.
- 1.5-2cc Niacinamide, (B3), 150 mg daily. Add
to B2.
Some of the above vitamins are given
one to three times each week:
Thiamin HCl, 1000 mg; Pyridoxine,
300 mg; Niacinamide, 500 mg; dilute these to 20 cc with saline solution or
best, sodium ascorbate (250 mg/cc). Give slowly with a 23 gauge needle, one
inch long. Pulse is taken during the injection; if the pulse rises, the
injection speed is slowed.
He found that RNA and DNA tablets,
100 mg of each, were helpful to some patients; one to three of each daily along
with the other vitamins. Inositol, 500 mg, one to three times a day may help.
Because of the large number of pills
and capsules to be taken daily, Dr. Klenner suggested they be put into a
blender along with a protein powder, milk, vanilla, and carob to make a tasty
drink. They all might go down more easily.
He cited some cases:
- Female developed weakness in extremities in 1961 (refer
to page 48). She was sent home to deteriorate. Dr. Klenner began his
program, and she is now cured and has been leading an active life for over
21 years. “The central nervous system can be regenerated, but it does
require time. Ten years was given to the restitution of her entire nervous
pathways.” She is “full of vim, vigor, and vitality.”
- Another woman had complete paralysis of both legs and
left arm. She required a steel brace from hips to neck. After two years of
this she was taken to Dr. Klenner and started on the above therapy.
In sixteen months she could move her right leg and left arm. In three
years she began to move her left foot and button her blouse. In nine years
she could stand unaided. A modem day miracle, “Enzyme, co-enzyme, and
metabolite theory is the correct approach to the rehabilitation of the
central system.”
- In 1918 a male was diagnosed as M.S. because of blurred
vision, numbness, and low back pain. In four months Dr. Klenner began
his program and in six months the man was back driving the fire truck. He
continued to improve and cut firewood during off hours. Early M.S. cases
will respond quickly.
- Another female with dizziness, poor vision, lateral,
and rotatory nystagmus (dancing eyeballs). The nausea was so profound; she
could not swallow the oral vitamins. But after one year of the vitamin
injections she could do the oral route. From not being able to read a
billboard, she can now read large type books. The nystagmus is gone, but
she needs a cane to ambulate.
Complications
Dr. Klenner reports on a few
minor complications. Some diarrhea might have been due to sodium bisulfite.
Induration after intramuscular injections was found to be due to the
Vitamin C not being injected deeply enough into the muscle. (One had to be
drained—a sterile abscess.) If the concentration was one gram to 5 cc it caused
a vein spasm up the arm from the injection site in three cases. A thrombosis of
the vein occurred in but one case. A minor face rash developed in a few that
cleared after the C was stopped.
Calcium seemed to enhance the
effects of the C when both were give simultaneously. But a gram of just the
calcium given intravenously can slow the heart rate to a dangerous degree.
Safety
He has some reassuring words for
those who feel kidney stones are an automatic result of large doses of
Vitamin C. He says in all cases a stasis of urine flow “and a concentrated
urine appear to be the chief physiological factors.” Oxalic acid precipitates
out of solution only from a neutral or alkaline solution—pH 7 to pH 10. Urine
pH in those consuming ten grams of Vitamin C daily is about 6. Even in
diabetics who take this large amount of C (10 grams), the urinary oxalate
excretion remains relatively unchanged. “Vitamin C is an excellent
diuretic. No urinary stasis; no urine concentration. The ascorbic acid/kidney
stone story is a myth.” One more bon mot: “Methylene will dissolve calcium
oxalate stones, if the patient is given 65 mg orally two to three times a day,”
he learned from Medical World News (Smith, M.J.V., M.D.: Dec. 4, 1970).
(90% of all stones are calcium
stones. Calcium is soluble in acid media. Vitamin C acidifies the urine.
Acid urine discourages the growth of bacteria. Although uric acid stones are
theoretically possible with high doses of C and a low urinary pH, none have
been reported.)
A report in N.E.J.M. on 11 Feb, 1971
[Merton Lamden] suggested that large doses of C might cause diabetes in humans.
The experiment was done in rats, but the dose translation in humans would have
amounted to 5000 grams! [Paterson] Maybe there is a toxic dose.
(Dr. Klenner at the time of that writing had been on 10 to 20 grams of C
daily for eighteen years. No diabetes, and no kidney stones). This study has no
relationship to the use of therapeutic doses of C.
Lamden found that an ingestion of 9
grams of C/day resulted in oxalate spills of 68 mg. in the urine per 24 hours.
Controls without C spilled 64 mg./24 hours. Not a big difference.
He reiterates the safety of large
doses of C. He states that plasma doses of greater than twenty times normal
produce no ill effects. Diarrhea is the most common side effect of large doses.
Some notice thickening of subcutaneous tissue is the C is not injected deeply
enough into, the muscle. (That induration will eventually resolve.) Some will
complain of venous irritation and spasm if the intravenous Vitamin C is
too concentrated or too rapidly injected. (C mixed with calcium will reduce
this irritation.) A rare thrombosis may occur if the concentration of the C is
greater than 500 mg per cc. Some will faint if the injection is given too
rapidly. (It is best to have the patient lie flat.) Large doses by mouth may
cause a genital or anal rash and itch.
He also showed how safe large doses
of C were. He gave 200 patients 500 to 1000 mg of C every four to six hours for
five to ten days. No laboratory abnormalities were found in blood or urine and
no symptoms were noted except one percent who developed vomiting; he assumed
from a hypersensitive stomach. And these patients had no virus infection to
“assist in destroying the vitamin.”
One volunteer received 100,000 mg in
a twelve day period; no problems.
Reluctance by Orthodox Medicine to Accept
Dr. Klenner knew all this way
back thirty to forty years ago. Why has the medical community taken so long to
use this cheap, safe, and valuable tool to control infections? Dr. Irwin Stone,
Dr. Linus Pauling, and Dr. Robert Cathcart have tried to popularize this method
and were only met with poor press and ridicule. Are the drug manufacturers
organized into a conspiracy too powerful to overcome? M.D. types will believe
what is published in their favorite medical journals, but Vitamin C
therapy studies are not seen in medical journals because much of the income to
the publishers comes from drug manufacturers. Vitamin C use represents a
threat to their income; it cannot be patented. Maybe if patients demanded the
therapeutic use of Vitamin C from their doctors, the doctors would become
familiar with its use and add it to their therapeutic tools. Their colleagues
would hoot: “Ha ha, you are a quack. You were suckered into that.”
The doctor could respond: “I didn’t
want to, but the patient made me do it.”
But the evidence for its use seems
to be there, right in the medical literature, but how many read the Journal of
Preventative Medicine?
Dr. Klenner writes clearly and
cogently. He is cheerful, even enthusiastic. And I find no bitterness due to
the frustrations about the poor acceptance of his research by the medical
establishment. He had done his own literature search and finds plenty of
confirmation for his therapies in animal and human experiments.
“Many physicians refuse to employ
Vitamin C in the amounts suggested, simply because it is counter to their
fixed ideas of what is reasonable.” The new products advertised by an alert
drug company are okay to them. Dr. Klenner tells of many letters from
doctors who used this C treatment on poliomyelitis—in patients, their own
children and even themselves. They were cured.
Dr. Klenner commented that if
these spectacular results had been produced at a teaching and research center
and then published, the medical community might pay some attention and the use
of C would become standard and routine. “There is no doubt that physicians are
being brainwashed with the current journal advertising.” He uses an appropriate
quote from Herber Spencer, “… to keep a man in everlasting ignorance…
condemnation without investigation.”
He blamed the National Research
Council who planted the concept in doctors’ brains that any dose above 125 mg
per day is spilled by way of the kidneys. It was like any drug, the council
implied, and more was no more effective than the dinky dose that protected the
human from scurvy. Doctors do not seem to realize that the need for C is
different “in each one of us either because of the individual kidney threshold
level or because of greater requirements necessitated by pathology.”
A Few Quotes
He reminds us of Hippocrates. He
felt that of several remedies physicians would choose the least sensational.
Vitamin C meets those requirements.
“Adults taking at least ten grams of
ascorbic acid daily and children under ten at least one gram for each year of
life will find that the brain will be clearer, the mind more active, the body
less wearied, and the memory more retentive.”
Another summary by Dr. Klenner:
“I have never seen a patient that Vitamin C would not benefit.”
He discovered the tremendous
therapeutic power of Vitamin C to aid the immune system, to act as an
antihistamine, and to neutralize toxins. Again, let us not forget what comes
through after examining all these published reports: “Vitamin C should be
given to the patient while the doctors ponder the diagnosis.”
References
Page II:
- Pauling, L.: Vitamin C and the Common Cold;
W. F. Freeman & Co. San Francisco, 1970.
- Brody, H.D.: J. Amer. Diet. Assoc., 29: 588,
1953.
Page 2, How it Works:
- Klenner, F.R.: Virus Pneumonia and its Treatment with
Vitamin C. Southern Med. Surg., Feb. 1948
- Klenner, F.R.: Encephalitis as a Sequela of the
Pneumonias. Tri-State Med. J., Feb. 1960.
- Klenner, F.R.: An Insidious Virus. Tri-State Med J,
June 1957.
- Burns, J.J., et al: J. Biol. Chem., 207:679, 1954.
- Salomon, L.L., Conney, A.H., et al: NY Acad Science,
92:115, 1961.
- Burns. J.J.: Am. J. Med. 26:740, 1959.
- Stone, I.: Brief proposal. Per. Biol Med.,
Autumn, 1966.
Page 1-2:
- Arber, E: The Story of the Pilgrim Fathers,
1897.
- Correspondence with colleague from Puerto Rico.
- Kline, A.B. and Eheart, M.S. Variations in the Ascorbic
Acid Requirements for Saturation of Nine Normal Young Women, J.
Nutrition 28: 413, 1944.
- Joliffe, N. Preventive and Therapeutic Use of Vitamins,
JAMA, 129:613, 1945.
- Crandon, J.H., Lund, C.C. and Dill, D.B.:. Experimental
Human Scurvy. N Eng J Med., 223: 353, 1940.
Page 2-3:
- Klenner, F.R.: Massive Doses of Vitamin C and the
Virus Diseases. J. So. Med. & Surg., 113:#4, Apr. 1951.
- Larson, C.: Ordinace, pp. 359-360, Jan-Feb,
1967.
Page 3:
- Starr, T.J.: Hospital Practice, 52, Nov 1968.
- Kropowski, H.: Med. World News, p 24, June 19,,
1970.
- Lojkin cited in Klenner’s paper: Massive Doses of
Vitamin C and the Virus Diseases.
- McCall, C.E., and Copper, R.,: Vitamin C Shows
Promise as a Bactericidal Agent. Bowman Gray School Med. Alumni News,
14:1, Feb, 1972
- Wintrobe, M.M.: Clinical Hematology, Lea and
Febiger, 3rd Ed 1952.
- Nossal, G. Most Killed Vaccines in Use not Termed Fit
for a Mouse. Medical Tribune, Apr. 5, 1972.
- Kiegler, Guggenheim and Warburg: Vitamin C vs.
Toxins, 1938. (No reference cited.)
Page 4:
- Harde and Benjamin (1934-1935) found the Vitamin C
fraction of the adrenal glands greatly reduced in monkeys killed or paralyzed
by the virus of poliomyelltis.
- Yavorsky, Almoden and King (1934) reported identical
findings in humans having died of various infectious agents.
Page 4,5:
- Klenner, F.R.: An Insidious Virus. Tri-State Med. J.,
June 1957
- Klenner, F.R.: Virus Pneumonia and its Treatment with
Vitamin C. Southern Med. Surg., Feb. 1948.
- Klenner, F.R.: Encephalitis as a Sequela of the
Pneumonias. Tri-State Med J., Feb, 1960
- Gothlin, G.F.: A Method of Establishing the
Vitamin C Standard of Requirement of Physically Healthy Individuals
by Testing the Strength of Their Capillaries. (No reference cited.)
- Baker, A.B. and Noran, J.A.: Changes in the Central
Nervous System Associated with Encephalitis Complicating Pneumonia. Archives
of Internal Med., Vol 76: 146-153, July-Dec. 1945.
- Krumholz, S. and Luhan, J.A.: Encephalitis Associated
with Herpes Zoster. Arch Neur Psych, 53: 59-67 Jan-Jun, 1945.
- Bakay, L,: The Blood-Brain Barrier, C. C.
Thomas, Pub., Springfield, IL 1956
- Chambers, R. and Zweifach, B.W.: Intercellular Cement
and Capillary Permeability, Physiol Rev., 27: 436-463, 1947.
- Youmans, J.B.: Nutritional Deficiencies, 1941.
Page 5:
- Hawley, E.E., Frazer, J.P., Button, L.L. and Stevens,
D.J.: The Effect of the Administration of Sodium Bicarbonate and of
Ammonium Chloride on the Amount of Ascorbic Acid Found In the Urine. J.
Nutrition, 12:215 (August) 1936.
- Klenner, F.R.: Significance of High Daily Intake of
Ascorbic Acid in Preventive Medicine. J. Intl Acad Prev Med.,
1:45-69, Spring, 1974.
- Klenner, F.R.: Use of Vitamin C as an Antibiotic. J.
of Appl Nutrit., 6: 1953 (Paper presented at AAN Convention, May,
1963, Pasadena, CA.)
Page 6, Dosage:
- Klenner, F.R.: Massive Doses of Vitamin C and the
Virus Diseases. J. So Med & Surg, 113: #4, Apr. 1951.
- Shaw, et al: Acute and Chronic Ascorbic Deficiencies in
Rhesus Monkeys. J. Nutrition, 29: 365, 1945
- Rivers, T.M.: Immunological and Serological Phenomena
in Poliomyelitis. Lecture III, Infantile Paralysis, 1941.
Page 7:
- Klenner, F.R.: Significance of High Daily Intake. op
cit.
Page 8:
- Klenner, F.R.: Use of Vitamin C as an Antibiotic,
op cit.
Page 9 Tests:
- Klenner, F.R.: A New Office Procedure for the
Determination of Plasma Levels for Ascorbic Acid. Tri-State Med J.,
5, 1956.
Lingual tests:
- Ringsdorf, W.M. & Cheraskin, E.: Sec. Oral Med.,
U of AL Med Center, Birmingham, AL
Page 9-16, Insidious Virus:
- Klenner, F.R.: An Insidious Virus, op cit.
- Klenner, F.R.: The Clinical Evaluation and Treatment of
a Deadly Syndrome Caused by an Insidious Virus. Tri-State Med J.,
Oct. 1958.
Page 15, Virus Pneumonia:
- Klenner, F.R.: Virus Pneumonia and its Treatment with
Vitamin C. So Med & Surg, Feb. 1948.
- Klenner, F.R.: Encephalitis as a Sequela of the
Pneumonias. op cit ibid.
Page 15, (Herpes Encephalitis):
- Lerner, M, et al: Detecting Herpes Encephalitis
Earlier. Med World News, May 20, 1972.
Page 15, (X-ray Therapy):
- Oppenheimer, A.: Roentgen Therapy of Virus Pneumonia. Amer
J of Roentgen., 49: #5.
Page 17-21, Poliomyelitis:
- Klenner, F.R.: The Treatment of Poliomyelitis and Other
Virus Diseases With Vitamin C. So Med & Surg, Vol. 111:
#7, July 1949.
- Klenner, F.R., The Vitamin and Massage Treatment for
Acute Poliomyelitis. So Med & Surg, 114: #8, August 1952.
- Klenner, FR.: Poliomyelitis—Case Histories. Tri-State
Med J., Sept 1956.
- Sabin, A.B.: Vitamin C in Relation to Experimental
Poliomyelitis. J Exp Med., 69: 507, 1939.
- Heaslip, Australian J. Exp Biol. & Med.,
1948.
- Jungeblut, C.W.: Vitamin C Therapy and Prophylaxis
in Experimental Poliomyelitis. J Exper Med., 65; 127, 1937.
- Jungeblut, C.W.: Further Observations on Vitamin C
Therapy in Experimental Poliomyelitis. J. Exper. Med., 66: 450,
1937.
- Bodian, D. and Horstmann, D.:. Review of Their Work. JAMA,
149: Aug30, 1952.
Page 22-23, Hepatitis:
- Freebern, R.K. & Repsher, LR.: Med. World News,
Jan 23, 1970.
- Klenner, F.R.: Unpublished paper.
- Klenner, F.R.: Significance of High Daily Intake. op
cit., page 56.
- Klenner, F.R.: Massive Doses of Vitamin C, op cit.
- Klenner, F.R.: Observations on the Dose and
Administration, op cit.
Page 23-24, Herpes:
- Klenner, F.R.: Significance, ibid, page 64.
- Stephens, J.C. and Cook, M.: Cases of the Hidden Herpes
Virus, Med World News, May 26, 1972.
- Goodpasture, E.W.: Case of the Hidden Herpes Virus. Med
World News, Feb 25, i972.
- Roizman, B. et al: Tracing Herpes Viruses. Med World
News, Oct 1, 1971.
- Klenner, F.R.: Use of Vitamin C as an Antibiotic.
op cit.
Page 24-25, Chickenpox and Measles:
- Klenner, F.R.: Massive Doses, op cit.
- Klenner, F.R.: The use of Vitamin C as an
Antibiotic. op cit.
Page 26, Infectious Mononucleosis:
- Hellne, C. and Helene, W.: EB Virus in the Etiology of
Infectious Mononucleosis, Hosp Pract., July, 1970.
- Niderman, College Findings tie Mono to ED virus. Med
World News, Dec 1968.
- Klenner, F.R.: Observations of the Dose and
Administration. op cit.
Page 27,
- Klenner, ER.: Unpublished work on RMSF and tick bite
fever.
Page 28 Trichinosis:
- Klenner, F.R.: The Treatment of Trichinosis with
Massive Doses of Vitamin C and Para-aminobenzoic Acid. Tri-State
Medical J., April i954.
Page 30, Urethritis:
- Rous, S.: Urethritis in Men. NY Soc Med., Dec
15, 1971.
Page 30, Antabuse:
- Klenner, F.R.: Unpublished paper.
Page 31, Arthritis:
- Klenner, F.R.: Significance. op cit.
- Abrams, E. and Sandson, J.: Ann Rheum Dis., 27:
1964.
Page 31, Cancer
- Klenner, F.R.: Unpublished paper.
- Schiegel, G.E. et al: The Role of Ascorbic Acid in the
Prevention of Bladder Tumor Formation. Trans Amer Assn Genitour Surg.,
61: 1969.
Page 33-34, Cholesterol and
Arteriosclerosis:
- Ginter, E.L.: Cholesterol and Vitamin C. Amer J Clin
Nutr., 24: 1238-1245, 1971.
- Spittle, C., Atherosclerosis and Vitamin C. Lancet,
II: 1280-1281, 1971.
- Ginter, E.: Effects of Dietary Cholesterol on
Vitamin C Metabolism in laboratory animals. Acta Med Acad Sci.
Hungary. 27:23-29; 1970.
- Ginter, E., et al: The Effects of Ascorbic Acid on
Cholesterolemia in Healthy Subjects with Seasonal Deficit of
Vitamin C. Nutr Metabol, 12: 76-86. 1970.
- Willis, G.C.: An Experimental Study of the Intimal
Ground Substance in Atherosclerosis. Can Med Assoc J., 69: 17-22,
1953.
- Shafer, J.: Ascorbic Acid and Atherosclerosis. Amer
J Clin Nutr., 23:27, 1970.
- Stamler, J.: Comprehensive Treatment of Essential
Hypertensive Diseases. Monograph on Hypertension, Merck, Sharp and
Dohme.
- Hecker, R.R. et al: J Am Chem Soc., 75:2020,
1953.
Page 34, Corneal Ulcers:
- Boyd,T.A., & Campbell, F.W.: B Med J.,
2:1145, Nov 1950.
Page 35, Glaucoma:
- Virno, M.: Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Monthly,
46:1502.
Page 35, 36 Pregnancies:
- Greenblatt, R.B.: Obst & Gyn, 2:530, 1953.
- King, C.C. et al, New York Times, Nov 2, 1952.
Page 36-39, Schizophrenia, Heat
Stroke, Sunburn, Slipped Disc, Toxins and Heavy Metal Poisonings:
- Klenner, F.R.: Significance of High Daily Intake,. op
cit.
- Klenner, F.R.: The use of Vitamin C as an
Antibiotic, op cit.
- Mokranjac, M. and Petrovic, C.: Report on Mercury
Studies in Guinea Pigs in Relation to Amounts of Vitamin C
Administered. Cr Acad Sci., Paris.
- Dannenburg, A.M. et al: Ascorbic acid in the treatment
of chronic lead poisoning. JAMA, 114:1439-1440, 1940.
- Pelletier, O.: Experiments with smokers and
non-smokers. JAMA, April 1969.
- Mayers, B.W.: Where there’s smoke there may be carbon
monoxide. Med World News, Jan 21, 1972.
- Hoffer, J.: Use of Ascorbic Acid with Niacin in
Schizophrenia. Can Med J., Nov 6, 1971.
- Hawkins, D.: Back to Reality the Megavitamin Way. Med
World News, Sept 24, 1971.
- Greenwood, J.: Optimum Vitamin C Intake as a
Factor in the Preservation of Disc Integrity. Med Ann DC, 33:6,
June 1964.
- Massell, B.F. et al: Antirheumatic Activity of Ascorbic
Acid in Large Doses. New Eng J Med, 1950.
- Kyhos, E.D. et al: Large Doses of Ascorbic Acid in
Treatment of Vitamin C Deficiencies. Arch Int Med., 75:407,
1945.
- Dalldorf, G.: Vitamin C in Health and Disease.
W.B. Saunders, 1945.
- Musser, J.H.: Nutrition in the Aged. W.B.
Saunders Co., 1945.
Page 36, Burns:
- Knisely, M.H. et al: Arch Surg, 51:220, 1945
- Knisely, M.H.: Science, 106:431, 1947.
- Berkeley, W.T., Jr.: So Med J., 58:1182-1184.
- Lund & Levenson: Arch Surg., 55:557,1947.
- Bergman, H.C. et al: Am Hrt J., 29:506-512,
1945.
- Lam, C.R.: Col Rev Surg Gyn & Obst.,
72:390-400, 1941.
- Klasson, D.H.: NY J Med., 51:2388-2392, Oct,
1951.
Page 37, Surgery, Shock;
- Chambers, R. & Pollock, J.: J Gen Physiol,
10:739, 1927
- Clark & Rassiter: Q J Exp Physiol., 32:279,
1944.
- Barlett, M.K. et al: NEJM, 226:474, 1942.
- Laninan, T.H. & Ingalls, TB.: Am Surg.,
105:616, 1937.
- Schumacher: Ohio State Med J., 42:1248, 1946.
Page 41-42, Poisonous Insects and
Reptiles:
- Klenner, F.R.: Hunting and Fishing Magazine,
April, 1950.
Pages 43-54, Myasthenia Gravis and
Multiple Sclerosis:
- Klenner, F.R.: Response of Peripheral and Central Nerve
Pathology to Megadoses of the Vitamin B Complex and other Metabolites. J
Appl Nutrit., 25:#304, 1973.
- Klenner, F.R.: Multiple Sclerosis Diagnosis and
Treatment Suggestions. Original paper, unpublished.
- Klenner, F.R.: Fatigue—Normal and Pathological with
Special Consideration of Myasthenia Gravis and Multiple Sclerosis. So
Med & Surg., 111:#9, Sept 1949.
Page 45:
- Stern, E. I.: The Intraspinal Injection of Vitamin B1
for the Relief of Intractable Pain, and for Inflammatory and Degenerative
Diseases of the Central Nervous System. Am J Surg., 34:495, 1938.
- Rosenberg, L.E.: Vitamin Deficiency Diseases and the
Vitamin Dependent Diseases with Reference to B and D., National Health
Federation Bulletin Vol XVIII. #10, Nov 1972.
- Moore, M.T.; Treatment of Multiple Sclerosis with
Nicotinic Acid and Vitamin B1. Arch Int Med., 65:18, Jan
1940.
Other supportive articles from the
medical literature:
- Kempe, C.H.: A Key to the Secret of M.S., Med World
News, July 7, 1972.
- Schandl, D.K.: Dissertation on Environmental and
Pyridoxine cause of M.S., The Charlotte Observer, Charlotte, N.C.,
April 23, 1973.
- Brickner, R.M.: A Critique of Therapy in M.S., Bull
Nue Inst NY., 4:665, April 19367.
- Zimmerman, H.H. and Burack, E.: Lesions of the Nervous
System Resulting from a Deficiency of the Vitamin B complex. Arch Path.,
13:207, Feb 1932.
- Spies, T.D. et al: The Use of Nicotinic Acid in the
Treatment of Pellagra. JAMA, 110:622, Feb 1938.
- Spies, T.D. and Aring, C.D.: The Effect of Vitamin B1
on the Peripheral Neuritis of Pellagra, JAMA, 110:1081, April,
1938.
Page 55, Toxic Doses:
- Patterson, J.W.: J Biol Chem., 81-88, 1950.
- Lambden, M.P. et al: Proc Soc Exp Biol Med.,
85:190-192, 1954.
Need for Vitamin C:
- Sabin: J Exp Med., 89:507-515, 1939.
- Wright: Ann Int Med., 12, 4:516-528, Oct 1938.
- Brody, H.D.: J Am Diet Assn., 29:588, 1953.
- Regnier, E.: Rev of Allergy, 22:948, Oct 1968.
Adapted from Vitamin C as a
Fundamental Medicine: Abstracts of Dr. Frederick R. Klenner, M.D.’s
Published and Unpublished Work,
ISBN 0-943685-13-3, first printing 1988.
ISBN 0-943685-13-3, first printing 1988.
Page references apply to original
publication.
HTML Revised .
Corrections and formatting © 2004 AscorbateWeb
Corrections and formatting © 2004 AscorbateWeb
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