breast milk?: my daughter is a nurse and... - Cure Parkinson's

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breast milk?

20 Replies

my daughter is a nurse and she told me how breast milk is helping people with a variety of problems, intestinal issues, skin problems and even Parkinson’s! Has anyone tried this? There is a good article about it online. “Breastmilk, a natural stem cell therapy”. I just may try it. My daughter who nurses my granddaughter, produces a lot more milk than she can use so I won’t have to buy it from a stranger. Opinions?

20 Replies
park_bear profile image
park_bear

It would not do any harm but stem cells will not survive passage through the stomach and the rest of the digestive tract. Nor would you want them to since they would have a different genetic makeup than your own cells and be rejected by the immune system.

PixelPaul profile image
PixelPaul

this is to weird for me

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson

Hmmmm. I'd buy it.

AGH_1966 profile image
AGH_1966 in reply toMBAnderson

😂

Marie1895 profile image
Marie1895

Colostrum supplements are available. Colostrum is fantastic for so many things. My dad loves it.

healthabc profile image
healthabc in reply toMarie1895

Yes, colostrum is where its at, if anything. Tell me more about your dads use of it, etc...?

BlueHawaii profile image
BlueHawaii

I have told here before that I have a friend that was in a clinical trial a few years ago. 3 different groups given different things. His group given a shipment of a liquid 2x/week. 6 oz a day to drink. He didn't know what it was till the end. 18 months. Then told it was breastmilk. He got off all meds. He works again, and is still not taking meds. He said when very stressed he will still have a slight tremor. Doesn't claim it's a cure, but lives pretty symptom free. It has to be fresh, not frozen. That kills the stem cells. So there may be unbelievers, but everyone in his group improved. They had to blend an egg for every 2 oz of milk. That is to get it as far into the digestive system as possible for the best absorption. I am currentlyd doing this. I am down from 9 Rytary a day to 3. I am going to try to get off all meds soon. Then comes the hard part. He said it was 6-8 months before noticing improvements. It isn'te easy, at least for those who have had PD a long time with pretty severe symptoms. He told me he wouldn't sugar coat it. It was very hard! I should add that they told him 0-6 months postpartum is the prime quality stemcells in breast milk.

So there you have it. I hate to tell this because someone usually attacks me for it. My friend is the living proof, however.

rebtar profile image
rebtar in reply toBlueHawaii

any documentation of that trial? Not criticizing it, but it would be good to share the documentation.

BlueHawaii profile image
BlueHawaii in reply torebtar

It was done through the University of Western Australia. I couldn't find my friends clinical trial when I tried, but I am not very tech savvy. He asked what would happen with the results, and he was told just put in a pile. Big pharma cannot make any money with breastmilk. Sorry I have no documentation. Just the word spread like to me, and us trying it too. At least we need no Rx to try it. I know it was conducted in several different places here in the U.S.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply toBlueHawaii

This is very exciting! Can you please tell us more about this breast milk protocol?

1: How much breast milk do you take in, how many times a day?

2: One raw egg for every two ounces of milk?

3: Is your friend still on the breast milk protocol or do they not need it anymore?

4: How long was the trial your friend was on (and do they need to stay on it to keep symptoms at bay?)?

Any details on the protocol would be very much appreciated. Thanks!

BlueHawaii profile image
BlueHawaii in reply toBolt_Upright

I do believe I answered most of your questions in my original post. He was in the trial for 18 months. They sent him 2 shipments a week. (So it would be fresh.) He took 6 oz a day with a raw egg for every 2 oz of the breastmilk - blended in a blender. Just once a day. He did not know what the liquid was till the trial was done. It has to be fresh. Never frozen, it kills the stemcells. He was not doing it for a period of time after the trial, but was not sure how long the good results would last. He chose to start again so he would not lose what he had achieved. Of course, he had to then find sources himself. He was told the premium quality stemcells are 0 to 6 months postpartum. Anyone wanting to try this may want to talk to him. I will ask him if it is ok if you call, and if he says yes, I will text you his number if you send me yours. I don't want to post it here. I respect his privacy. He knows the details better than I do. I still ask him questions myself. I hope I answered all your questions. I don't enjoy lengthy typing.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply toBlueHawaii

Thank you so much! Yes! You answered all of my questions! Thanks!

kidgarden1 profile image
kidgarden1 in reply toBlueHawaii

Hello my name is Kathy. I have had Parkinson's for over 10 years. My daughter had our Grandson a month ago and I am interested in trying the breastmilk natural stem cell therapy noted above. Would it be possible to speak with your friend who did this, as I still have questions. How do you suggest we get in touch privately? Thank you so very much, Kathy D.

Smittybear7 profile image
Smittybear7 in reply toBlueHawaii

Thanks for sharing! Keep us posted! Good luck to you

SilentEchoes profile image
SilentEchoes

I'm not convinced that stem cells are the solution or even the active part of breast milk. It's the antibodies that treat the (autoimmune) neuro-inflammation. You can get this commercially from colostrum.

I thought we made a lot of progress in moving the needle towards the autoimmune/ neuroinflammation theory as the underlying pathology for neurodegenerative diseases. We seem to be sliding backwards by looking for a medical/pharmaceutical solution (stem cell therapy) that isn't curative.

We have to address the inflammation. I tried intranasal autologous stem cell transplant. It didn't work and it was expensive. Twenty years ago my mother participated in a stem cell clinical trial with donor stem cells surgically injected into her brain. She lost the ability to speak for two weeks. Ultimately her PD became more difficult to manage and she had DBS surgery. At the end of her life the PD looked more like ALS and she didn't require Rytary anymore.

We need to focus our efforts here. Colostrum is a low cost/risk intervention that we can all try right now and report back on the efficacy. Let's do our own coordinated "clinical" trial.

Just a thought.

SE

*I'd invite the ALS community but the majority are still brainwashed.

marnegro profile image
marnegro in reply toSilentEchoes

where did you get colostrum?

faridaro profile image
faridaro in reply toSilentEchoes

Bovine colostrum appears to strengthen gut lining according to some studies and probably may improve gut microbiome - have not done any research on the subject yet.

Smittybear7 profile image
Smittybear7 in reply toSilentEchoes

Sounds like a plan! Right now I'm trying B1 therapy.

HopeForce1 profile image
HopeForce1

where one can get fresh breast milk ? i guess that is not commercially avaiable

BlueHawaii profile image
BlueHawaii in reply toHopeForce1

Go to online breastmilk groups. Place ads everywhere.

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