siRNA is beginning to look very promising.
https://firstwordpharma.com/story/5927427@grok how to make penis testicles bigger, harder please sir
>Indian names
Vaporware. Looks like all of this shit is either theory (we COULD use AI to diagnose diseases!) or just speeding up the analysis process for protein assays. Either way, fucking nothing.
>>3654this has to be the scarier shit/turd that i ever seen
david's star + mud nigger + a random cow + uncanny ai pic
this is the perfect body horror pic
>>3652Get the fuck back to 4chan.
>>3656Found the Hindu. Sorry! AI can't make you White just yet.
>>3658AI powered personalized mRNA cancer vaccine.
Curious fact. 95% of modern medicine are "treatments" not cures.
Let that sink in.
>>3660As it turns out it's difficult to cure cancer, dementia, and diabetes. Who would have thunk?
>>3661>it's difficult to cure cancerLol no, the 'cure' has been known since the 80''s.
>>3662Let me guess it's ivermectin?
>>3663No, its a "fix what's wrong with your shit" sort of cure. Cancer is specific to the recipient. How one contracts cancer is (with exception, those lads at Chernobyl/Japan aren't getting a pass) more to do with the environment one fosters for themselves
>>3665You sure it isn't caused by a mutation that causes an out of control growth of cells?
>>3663>ivermectinThe anti-parasitical drug, aka horse dewormer, being anticarcinogen is known.
Ivermectin, a potential anticancer drug derived from an antipara..... ---> government link:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7505114/Also there were many reports of anti-parasitical veterinarian drugs doing miracles, see videos and pics.
>>3666I'm sure that the mutation that results in an out of control growth of cells has a cause
>>3667>and exerts the optimal effect when used in combination with other chemotherapy drugs.So not really something to use on its own then. Don't see why you would want to use chemo with adjunct therapies when the next generation of immunotherapy is safer, more effective, and cheaper than chemo. Granted that isn't a high bar to set.
>>3668It can have all kinds of causes from bacteria (Helicobacter pylori), to viruses, to mutagenic chemicals, to simply your body fucking up during cell division. You have 37 trillion cells so something will go wrong eventually. Once the mutated cells are there they are hard to get rid of. As it turns out it is hard to kill your cells without killing your cells.
>>3670It's reported to have all kinds of causes, that much is true.
The easier method is to take ownership of your cells and don't allow them to be corrupted by outside influences, but I'm not supposed to say any more
>>3671>The easier method is to take ownership of your cells and don't allow them to be corrupted by outside influences, Through the power of science yes. Next generation immuno therapies look very promising and can be tailored to anyone's unique situation. Seems like the perfect way to take control of the situation.
>but I'm not supposed to say any moreSo are you schizophrenic or just LARPing?
>>3669>chemo with adjunct therapiesAccording to (MD) Peter Gliddensome, chemotherapy is a scam because has a 97% failure rate.
>>3672Do you WANT to know how to command your own cells? Yes, it comes across as schizo-shit, but you literally can
>>3673Never heard of him. Why should I care what he has to say? And why would you link me an article discussing using ivermectin as and adjunct therapy with chemo if you didn't think chemo was a useful therapy? Chemo is mostly obsolete with the rise of immunotherapies anyways.
>>3674Pretty sure the advances in immunotherapy can give my cells the direction needed to fight off cancer. I am curious as to what you will say though.
>>3675Dewormers cost almost nothing, and giving them a shot is worthwhile. Unless you have FAITH in the pharma industry, then go ahead, it is your money and your health after all.
>>3676>Dewormers cost almost nothing, and giving them a shot is worthwhile.Sure if you don't have any other options, but bacteria and mRNA are cheap too and unlike ivermectin they can be tailored to the needs of the patient. Cheap and personalized. What is not to like?
>Unless you have FAITH in the pharma industry, then go ahead, it is your money and your health after all.I have more faith in pharmaceuticals then I do in herbal supplements or some dude on the internet telling me I can take control of my cells but refusing to elaborate further. Ironically the herbal supplements are less regulated and less proven then anything the pharmaceutical companies have to offer. The supplements market is like the wild west. I see you capitalized faith. Was there a reason for that? Something you want to say?
>>3677>some dude on the internet telling me I can take control of my cells but refusing to elaborate further.This is the funny part. The posts above are anon's tips, and spoon feeding is not a right. It is on you if you want to dig more or just follow the Matrix's options.
To my understanding, the video with the TV clip is interesting as it looks it was released to the public in those times when "Brought To You By Pfizer" was not widespread.
>>3679>This is the funny part. The posts above are anon's tips, and spoon feeding is not a right. No he isn't spreading tips he is afraid I will call out psuedoscientific bullshit.
>It is on you if you want to dig more or just follow the Matrix's options.I can get ahold of a DNA printer for under 5k and start working on this shit if I really wanted to. Don't see why cheaper and more effective cancer therapies would make you upset.
>To my understanding, the video with the TV clip is interesting as it looks it was released to the public in those times when "Brought To You By Pfizer" was not widespread.I looked him up and he has a website full of content behind payrolls. I'm really not interested in giving some herbal medicine quack money for le secret knowledge that the American pharmaceutical companies don't want me to know.
https://leavebigpharmabehind.com/ go give him your money and I'm sure he will tell you how to control your cells and live forever.
>>3680>I looked him up and he has a website full of content behind payrolls.You are not being rational. You are referring the 2nd video at
>>3667 which is a reposting of the original ABC News broadcast shown in 3rd pic and 4th video of the same post.
Go figures why are you so combative about it.
>>3681Go look at the website I linked. Dude wants 480 a year for le secret knowledge. Same nigger you were promoting and the research paper you linked me explicitly stated ivermectin as an adjunct therapy to chemo. Don't know why you are getting upset that I'm telling you chemo is becoming obsolete. That should be good news.
>>3682>Go look at the website I linked. Dude wants 480 a year for le secret knowledge.Please re-read my
>>3681 post, that grifter is only reposting the ABC news report and nothing changes the validity of it.
More good news.
Another oncolytic virus is in human trials.
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250520615879/en/KaliVir-Immunotherapeutics-Announces-Completion-of-First-Cohort-of-STEALTH-001-Study-Evaluating-VET3-TGI-in-Patients-with-Advanced-Solid-TumorsI'm more excited about programmable bacteria as they are cheaper to manufacture and purify but I welcome repurposed viruses in the fight against cancer too. It should be interesting to see what will happen when AI is used to help perfect oncolytic viruses and tumor targeting bacteria.
>>3683So Peter Glidden is asking 480 a year for random videos from news agencies? Doesn't exactly seem like the actions of a trust worthy dude and again the paper you linked me was talking about using chemo alongside ivermectin. And great if it saves a few lives, but with something as complex as cancer I like the idea of something that can be personalized to the patient's cancer. Which can be done with the technology shown in this thread. Why would you be upset about personalized medicine?
>>3685Are you hi? We are talking about the ABC report.
>>3686The ABC report is featuring a guy who took chemo then Fenbendazole right? There are papers on using parasite medications as adjunct to chemo
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7404055/ both the chemo and the parasite drugs work together in these cases. I don't know why you would choose that over something personalized.
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1609162/abstractPeptide based cancer vaccines are also starting to look promising. Not sure if they will be better than mRNA as mRNA can be used to produce antibodies in vivo.
>>3693At least these are going through medical trials, rather than straight to the market.
>>3694That's true of everything that I posted. I don't think any cancer treatments were allowed without tests. Even the covid vaxx required SOME testing although it was rushed many of the candidates did not make the cut. Still it should never have been forced on people.
https://www.caltech.edu/about/news/3d-printing-in-vivo-using-soundA new 3d printing technique using ultrasound made at caltech. Should be interesting to see where this goes. Could potentially be done in vivo.
>>3572>AI is now generating medicine. Everything from novel antibiotics, to diagnostics, to vaccines, to personalized cancer treatments. AI generated medicine is a field that is growing very fast.Dude!!! How deeply brainwashed can you be? It is all propaganda for the plebs.
Find out how many CURES this allegedly marvelous modern medicine had produced. Then find out how many TREATMENTS came out instead. The proportion is 1 to 97 in favor of costly and forever treatment.
Also knock it off with this A.I. bullshit, A.I. is a marketing term/ploy to sell services powered by software. There is nothing miraculous about it, except the low IQ chumps that fall for it.
>>3833I used to work in biopharmacueticals. You are retarded.
>>3834But you are not calling him a liar.
>>3837I'll do it right now. He is a retarded liar jealous of the knowledge and power someone like me has.
>>3833>Find out how many CURES this allegedly marvelous modern medicine had produced. Then find out how many TREATMENTS came out instead.Silver-bullet cures aren't exactly easy to create. In most cases, the concept of just giving someone a that instantly cures their disease just isn't feasible. Treatments can sometimes cure diseases overtime, as alleviating symptoms can give the immune system a chance to fight off the disease, and many treatments have made otherwise-hopeless diseases survivable. Antibiotics, for example, have save thousands of people every day from otherwise lethal infections.
>A.I. is a marketing term/ployI do agree that shoving AI into everything is a marketing bubble, but the merits of computational chemistry in medicine are potentially very helpful. It takes years of research to mathematically construct the chemical compounds that form medications one by one, and AI can help speed up that process hundredfold by analyzing hundreds of potential chemical structures in rapid succession, so that they can be synthesized and tested. It's the kind of tedious, time-consuming, repetitive task that automation can help with.
>>3838He's just intimidated by concepts that he doesn't understand. He thinks any medicine more sophisticated than herbal tea is fake.
>>3833>CURESWhat exactly is the definition of a "cure" to you?
>The proportion is 1 to 97 in favor of costly and forever treatment.Where did you get that statistic from?
>>3840>herbal teaFunny story, but herbal tea almost ended up killing me.
>>3841Not that anon but to me a cure is one and done and with DNA and mRNA vaccines you could potentially do that.
>>3845Idk about vaccines, but mRNA treatments could potentially trigger the immune system to target and eradicate cancer cells, which really could cure cancer.
>>3847Idk how a cancer vaccine would work, because every cancer is unique, but the same technology that works with vaccines could be used to create targeted immuno treatments for the most common types of cancer, effectively curing them in a manner of months.
I have no idea how cancer vaccines would work? I still feel drunk but I think a better approach would be to find a way to deprive cancer cells from energy. I'm wondering if ketogenic diet would be effective? I have heard that mitochondria are defective in cancer cells, and I assume that glucose is more easily used by cancer cells? Another approach would be drugs that interfere with mitosis (colchicine?) because they would affect cancer cells more vs regular cells, since cancer cells grow without control. Drugs that prevent blood veins from growing weren't a breakthrough.
>>3858I don't believe a cancer vaccine would work, but a treatment similar to vaccination could be used to train the body's immune system to better target specific cancer cells.
The major problem with cancer is that it's hard for your body to fight because cancer cells are just ordinary cells (albeit, mutated), and your body cannot always tell them apart from regular cells. T-cells will try to fight cancer by attacking cells that divide rapidly, and chemotherapy works by accelerating that, but it's a scorched-earth process.
mRNA-based treatments could potentially spur the body into attacking cancer cells by getting them to target cells that give off specific compounds linked to cancer. It would be similar to a vaccine in theory, except that it would be done reactively rather than proactively.
>>3848>Idk how a cancer vaccine would workIt is an oxymoron and zog propaganda.
To begin with, nobody knows the cause of the disease, then nobody knows the cure.
A vaccine presuppose that a particle called virus is the cause, but nobody knows that is the case.
Then ALL these therapies are a shot in the darkness as they target the symptom, a tumor for example.
>>3861>nobody knows the cause of the diseaseCancer has a lot of known causes.
>A vaccine presuppose that a particle called virus is the cause, but nobody knows that is the case.What are you even trying to say here?
>Then ALL these therapies are a shot in the darkness as they target the symptom, a tumor for example.A tumor is a mass of mutated cancerous cells: the tumor is the disease itself. If you remove every cancer cell (easier said than done), the cancer is no more.
>>3862I was thinking why I dislike this thread and you so much. Suddenly I had a lightbulb moment and realized that you are matrix automaton acting, perhaps willingly, as a shill.
Nevertheless, the industrial society you cherish must come to an end.
>>3871Or you could simply adapt...