liposomal vitamin c alan smith

liposomal vitamin c alan smith

liposomal vitamin c adrenal

Liposomal Vitamin C Alan Smith

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Until recently, miraculous-healing mega-dose vitamin C could only be delivered through IV, and not orally. Those levels either blow out the bowel tolerance level or get urinated out before they can do their work. But now, you can achieve the results of IV mega-dose vitamin C orally, successfully. It’s called Liposomal vitamin C. Liposomal vitamin C is a lipid encapsulation of ascorbic acid granules that delivers more vitamin C to cells orally than even mega-dose IV vitamin C. At first, vitamin C expert Dr. Thomas Levy found this hard to believe, even as clinical results were being achieved. He investigated further and was impressed. It’s estimated that maybe 20% of IV vitamin C volume gets into cells, while 90% of liposomal C permeates tissue on a cellular level. Vitamin C is water soluble, and cell walls are fatty. Liposomal C is lipid (fatty substance) encapsulated on a molecular level. This enables higher oral doses of vitamin C to permeate cells while not overwhelming bowel tolerance.




If a cardiologist MD with years of experience administering mega-dose vitamin C such as Dr. Levy was impressed, you could be impressed too. Some of you may be familiar with the story of New Zealand dairy farmer Alan Smith, who recovered rapidly from a coma due to flu complicated double pneumonia and leukemia. Many online versions make it seem his recovery was only from IV C. Read: Man with Pneumonia Saved by High Dose Vitamin C But after several legal attempts from Alan’s family to continue administering 50 to 100 grams of IV C after showing positive results when they were ready to pull the plug on his life support, the hospital cynically conceded to continue with only two grams of IV C daily. That’s when his family members found out about a newly produced liposomal C which they brought to Alan daily. Each packet contained one gram of encapsulated vitamin C. Alan consumed six daily and achieved the miraculous results he had experienced with the 50 to 100 grams daily of IV C.




Yes, six grams of liposomal C did the work of 50 to 100 grams of IV C. He walked out of the hospital in days on his own power. A year later, he was examined and there was no trace of leukemia either. Here’s a New Zealand 60 Minutes video clip that covers his story well. Another example of liposomal C’s power: at the Fukushima hot spot, a team of orthomolecular (mega-dose supplement medicine) scientists administered 25 grams of IV C before working and six grams daily of liposomal C to one group of site clean-up workers while giving none to another group. The vitamin C crew came back with no signs of radioactive poisoning while the crew without vitamin C showed high toxicity levels. That radioactive poisoned group was given the same IV and liposomal C treatments as the first group, and they all recovered. This research team’s efforts at communicating their results were suppressed despite their pleas with various Japanese officials. Practitioners who administer mega-dose IV vitamin C are not easy to find, and neither is insurance coverage.




provides a directory of practitioners who deliver mega-dose IV vitamin C. Lypo-Spheric liposomal vitamin C is manufactured by Livon Labs, where you can get great information on how liposomal C works. But you can get it for around $30.00 U.S. for a box of 30 one gram gel packets from other sources. That may be pricey for normal vitamin C intake. But for a serious condition, it’s easier than trying to find a practitioner who can administer IV mega-dose vitamin C, and it’s a lot less expensive. Disclaimer: This story is for educational purposes and should not be construed as medical advice."Mr. Smith should be removed from life support and be allowed to die as continuing is only prolonging his inevitable death." These were the heart breaking words spoken to the family of Allan Smith, a dairy farmer from New Zealand, who had contracted acute swine flu while on a diving and fishing trip in Fiji in 2009. Knowing that swine flu (swine influenza) is a highly contagious, acute respiratory viral disease that can lead to death, it was no surprise that Mr. Smith's health was rapidly declining.




At his bedside the doctor asked Sonia Smith, Allan's wife, how many children they had. "I told him three sons. He looked at me and replied, "Your husband is not going to survive this. You had better get them over here now." Just days earlier, Sonia had greeted her husband at the Tauranga airport and now she was being told to prepare for his inevitable death. A shocking turn of events! Towards the end of Mr. Smith's trip to Fiji he was feeling a bit "woozy" but he had "toughed it out". By the time he stepped off the plane he was unable to see clearly and was having difficulty with his balance. His condition deteriorated through the night. The family called an ambulance; but they were unable to take him due to his severe flu-like symptoms. So his family drove Allan to a medical clinic and were told he had bacterial pneumonia and needed emergency care. The Tauranga ICU, having confirmed Mr. Smith had swine flu, conferred with nearby hospitals for assistance. By now Allan's body was starting to shut down.




He had scurvy and was bleeding from the mouth, nose and bowel. Auckland Hospital had an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine (ECMO), which is similar to a heart lung machine. The hospital sent an air ambulance to collect Mr. Smith. Unfortunately he was too unstable to travel. Time was a precious commodity and decisions had to be made quickly. Instead a mobile ECMO was flown to Tauranga Hospital; Mr. Smith was then transferred to Auckland's Intensive Care Unit once he was stable enough for transport. After three weeks in an induced coma, Mr. Smith's anxious family was told the ICU specialists were in unanimous agreement. Mr. Smith "should be removed from ECMO and be allowed to die as continuing is only prolonging his inevitable death". These are devastating words for any family, especially for a close-knit family like the Smiths. Not ready to give up, they searched for alternative treatments. Mr. Smith's brother-in-law, Jimmy, suggested intravenous (IV) vitamin C. The family decided they had nothing to lose and everything to gain.




The ICU specialists disagreed that IV vitamin C would improve Allan's condition. "But Jimmy had taken vitamin C for years and was convinced it would help Allan.", said Mrs. Smith. Mr. Smith's family continued to fight for the administration of IV vitamin C. Fortunately, Jimmy made contact with Dr. Thomas E. Levy, an American cardiologist, researcher, lawyer, and author. Dr. Levy is considered to be one of the foremost authorities on vitamin C. He has authored several books devoted to vitamin C including Primal Panacea and Curing the Incurable: Vitamin C, Infectious Diseases, and Toxins. Dr. Levy readily supplied the protocols for the IV vitamin C treatment. Allan began treatments with intravenous infusions of vitamin C at doses with the caveat that the treatments would be given for three days. After that the ICU specialist would remove Mr. Smith from life support. Two days later, Mr. Smith's lung x-rays showed a marked improvement. After a week of vitamin C treatment, he was well enough to come off the ECMO machine.

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