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Alzheimer's Disease: What If There Was a Cure?: The Story of Ketones

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I have 2 family friends who are suffering from early onset of dementia, one in hospital (helpiing her with appointments run around) currently. 2 died from Alzheimer's.
Done a bit of search and come up with coconut oil/ketone ester, both refuse - don't blame them. We have been drilled in our heads that coconut oil is bad for us.
Oh well, they have nothing to lose but their mind. Cocout oil is food, not medication.

CBN News – There are 2 parts to this video.
http://www1.cbn.com/video/coconut-oil-touted-as-alzheimers-remedy

Dr. Mary Newport homepage
https://coconutketones.com/

Pubmed: A new way to produce hyperketonemia: use of ketone ester in a case of Alzheimer’s
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4300286/

APOE-4: The Clue to Why Low Fat Diet and Statins may Cause Alzheimer's
by Stephanie Seneff
http://people.csail.mit.edu/seneff/alzheimers_statins.html

Please DYOR and seek medical advice, I'm no doctor.
 
There's are two enormous paradoxes in healthcare that very few people have heard of, let alone practice:

1- The more you try to help, the less likely you are to be of help. This goes for family, friends and professionals alike.
2- Real help (the kind that actually makes a difference) can only ever be given/received indirectly, never directly.

So it's natural to want to help, but the process of 'What about this? Have you tried that?' rarely works. Real change (for the good, for greater health) appears naturally when you engage the most counter-intuitive attitude you could possibly imagine - complete acceptance. It's so counter-intuitive, and so hard to do, that you could meet a million people before you encounter one who can do it. And it's many hundreds of times more powerful than any drug or therapy you could imagine.

This is the essence of what it means to use love* to heal. There are a few researchers and practitioners who have done some very rigorous studies in this area. The real life results they get are so superior to anyone else that they tend to get ignored. That's fairly typical for outliers.

*not the common definition
 
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There's are two enormous paradoxes in healthcare that very few people have heard of, let alone practice:

1- The more you try to help, the less likely you are to be of help. This goes for family, friends and professionals alike.
2- Real help (the kind that actually makes a difference) can only ever be given/received indirectly, never directly.

So it's natural to want to help, but the process of 'What about this? Have you tried that?' rarely works. Real change (for the good, for greater health) appears naturally when you engage the most counter-intuitive attitude you could possibly imagine - complete acceptance. It's so counter-intuitive, and so hard to do, that you could meet a million people before you encounter one who can do it. And it's many hundreds of times more powerful than any drug or therapy you could imagine.

This is the essence of what it means to use love* to heal. There are a few researchers and practitioners who have done some very rigorous studies in this area. The real life results they get are so superior to anyone else that they tend to get ignored. That's fairly typical for outliers.

*not the common definition
Huh?

Who is this addressed to, helpers or helpees? Complete acceptance of what? Or maybe of who? What researchers, practitioners, rigorous studies? What real life results and what makes them superior?

More information please.

Oh, and IMO the first statement is way over the top. Sure, sometimes help is the opposite of helpful, and sometimes the right help offered by the wrong person is no help, and sometimes... well there are a lot more possibilities than help that doesn't help and "complete acceptance" (i.e. doing nothing?)
 
"..........all six of the patients whose cognitive decline had a major impact on job performance were able to return to work or continue working without difficulty."
Dr. Dale Bredesen Prof. at UCLA.
Bredesen Protocol goes for whole body treatment approach.
Protocols are not profitable for big pharma so there are not many research.
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Reversing Alzheimer’s Disease- Dr. Dale Bredesen, MD


Video with case studies interviews and questions at end of video.
Note bullet point 4 in the summary below:
upload_2017-7-16_11-54-24.png


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http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/memory-loss-associated-with-alzheimers-reversed-for-first-time
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"One potentially important outcome is that all six of the patients whose cognitive decline had a major impact on job performance were able to return to work or continue working without difficulty."

Reversal of cognitive decline: A novel therapeutic program
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4221920/
http://www.aging-us.com/article/100690/text
 
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