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Blood Doping with intravenous hydrogen peroxide for performance enhancement

George Spellwin

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Here's an AP article about the Hydrogen Peroxide therapy that allegedly lead to the Death of Dr. James Shortt's Patient Katherine Bibeau. If any of you have experimented with intravenous hydrogen peroxide therapy for performance enhancement or if you are considering it, please post your experiences.

Peroxide therapy leads to a patient's death in South Carolina

January 2, 2005
By ALLEN G. BREED The Associated Press

WEST COLUMBIA, S.C. ? When Katherine Bibeau's body arrived at the moorgue, she was covered in large, deep purplish-black bruises.

But the woman had not been beaten, Coroner Gary Watts discovered. Rather, she had bled internally, and massively, after receiving an unconventional treatment for her multiple sclerosis.

Intravenous infusions of hydrogen peroxide, administered by a physician named James Shortt, had produced bubbles in Bibeau's bloodstream that started her down a fatal spiral into multiple organ failure and cardiac arrest, Watts concluded.

The death, he ruled, was a homicide.

This case and the death of another of his infusion patients have put Shortt at the center of a controversy over a treatment that its opponents say has no proven benefits ? and serious risks.

Some 100,000 infusions of the chemical ? a refined form of the first-aid kit standby ? are given each year across the nation as a treatment for a variety of diseases, according to proponents.

Shortt, who is fighting to keep his medical license, denies harming anyone. "I might be the world's greatest lunatic," he says, but "I'm not going to do anything to my patients that I think might hurt them."

At the root of hydrogen peroxide's purported power is the same action that makes it foam when placed on a cut. Proponents of oxidative or "hyperoxygenation" therapy believe that many diseases ? including cancer and HIV ? can be linked to oxygen deficiency. They say that infusion or evenn ingestion of substances such as hydrogen peroxide, ozone and germanium sesquioxide deliver an "oxidative burst" that can kill cancer cells and viruses, and boost the immune system.

Shortt says he has been a believer since infusion guru Dr. Charles Farr helped him save a lupus patient's blackened toes from amputation.

Shortt says he has administered as many as 1,800 hydrogen peroxide treatments to patients from as far away as Europe, and has seen people in the midst of severe asthma attacks "go from gray to pink" during an infusion.

On a recent day at his clinic, Health Dimensions, patients occupied two of the dozen black leather chaises arranged in a spacious lounge off the waiting room. They watched videos as IV bags of yellowish and clear liquid emptied slowly into veins in their left hands.

Many of his patients, Shortt says, come to him when conventional medicine has run its course.

"We go to work from this point where you're hopeless," the 58-year-old said in a recent telephone interview.

But health experts say injecting hydrogen peroxide directly into the bloodstream can cause convulsions, acute anemia and deadly gas emboli. A 1991 article in the "Journal of Emergency Nursing" blamed the death of a 39-year-old cancer patient on such "cancer quackery."

The American Cancer Society says treating certain tumors directly with hydrogen peroxide "remains an area for responsible research." But as for infusion of the chemical into the bloodstream, there is "no scientific basis for the regimens utilized by the oxymedicine promoters."

In September, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society's Web site posted a "Medical Alert," saying: "Hydrogen peroxide, administered either orally or by intravenous infusion, is not a recommended or approved treatment for multiple sclerosis. ... Dr. Aaron Miller, the National MS Society's Chief Medical Officer, strongly urges people with MS to avoid this unproven and potentially unsafe treatment."

Physicians in Missouri, North Carolina and Tennessee have had their licenses suspended or revoked for giving patients intravenous hydrogen peroxide. In the Tennessee case, the medical board said the physician exhibited "gross malpractice ... and incompetence and ignorance in the course of medical practice."

Katherine Bibeau, a 53-year-old mother of two from Cottage Grove, Minn., was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2001.

The avid knitter, gardener and baker ? whom husband, David, has desccribed as "June Cleaver with an attitude" ? was a breast cancer surviivor. So when confronted with a degenerative and incurable disease, she embarked on an open-minded search for ways to combat it.

That search led her to Shortt.

"Hydrogen peroxide would be very good to kill whatever's in there," Shortt told her in a February phone call, according to a transcript of the taped consultation. "Because, right now, we don't know what it is."

March 9, 2004, she sat in one of those leather chairs in West Columbia as a 0.03 percent solution of hydrogen peroxide coursed through her veins. That first treatment lasted 90 minutes.

Afterward, Bibeau complained of abdominal pain and nausea, according to a federal lawsuit the family filed against Shortt. Two days later, the suit contends, she returned to Shortt's clinic extremely weak, with bruising at the infusion site and severe vaginal bleeding.

The lawsuit alleges that Shortt ignored these signs of "acute hemolytic crisis" and failed to order a blood work-up for Bibeau, or to refer her to another physician. Shortt, while acknowledging that hydrogen peroxide therapy can destroy red blood cells after repeated treatments, denies those allegations.

By the time she arrived at the emergency room on March 12, Bibeau was in multiple-organ failure. Two days later, she was dead.

In July, a second patient of Shortt's died. Michael Bate, a 66-year-old retired engineer, had advanced prostate cancer.

Bate's wife, Janet, said he received eight hydrogen peroxide infusions, along with other treatments. (Bate also obtained the banned, discredited drug laetrile. Shortt acknowledges showing Bate how to use it after Bate made it clear he intended to do so against Shortt's advice.) In this case, too, the physician has denied doing anything to harm his patient.

In September, armed state and federal officers raided Shortt's office and confiscated his files.

Later that month, the South Carolina Board of Medical Examiners asked a judge for an emergency suspension of Shortt's license.

Seeking support, Shortt traveled to the October conference, in Atlanta, of the International Oxidative Medicine Association, which developed the regimens he used. The group found that Shortt had followed its "well-established" protocols.

In its position paper, the group's president, Dr. Robert Rowen, instead zeroed in on two FDA-approved drugs that Bibeau had previously been prescribed: the MS drug Copaxone and Tegretol, which is used to treat seizure disorders.

Rowen noted that among Copaxone's listed side effects are "metorrhagia (profuse uterine bleeding), thrombosis, bruising, clotting problems, and infections." An Internet site dedicated to Tegretol warns of "easy bruising, or reddish or purplish spots on the skin" as possible "signs of a blood disorder brought on by the drug."

Rowen says it is "more than reasonable to conclude" that the interaction of these two drugs was "the proximate cause of this death."

Shortt says he knew of no reason his treatment would react negatively with the drugs Bibeau was taking. He did not suggest she drop those medications.

Israeli drug company Teva Pharmaceuticals, maker of Copaxone, told The Associated Press that its drug had been "extensively studied and tested clinically ... and has proven safe and effective." Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Tegretol's Swiss-based manufacturer, declined to comment.

Richland County forensic pathologist Clay Nichols says Bibeau had been on both drugs for more than a year "with no adverse effects."

As the investigations go forward, Shortt has voluntarily ceased performing hydrogen peroxide infusions. The South Carolina medical board has scheduled a Jan. 21 hearing to revisit his case.

Coroner Watts stands by his conclusions.

"I don't think he meant to kill her," Watts says. "I'm just saying ... she died as a result of his infusing her with something he shouldn't have infused her with."
 
Thanks GS nice read. I see no good benefit from doing this other than death. As you can see from the two people above.
 
This guy should be in prison. This is just the injection version of the hyperbaric chamber. Remember the photos of the child molester Jackson sleeping in one.

The Nazis did experiments on slave labor to oxygenate their blood so they could work longer in deep mines. It didn't work then either.
 
i have been using hydrogen peroxide for ony year. i would say it is toally safe. conventional medicine will try to discourage you from using it by scaring you with shit like telling you someone died from taking it. i doubt seriously that it can be linked to hydrogen peroxide.
 
I have heard of people using "food grade" hydrogen peroxide foor health benefits, but in a very diluted solution.
 
resres said:
i have been using hydrogen peroxide for ony year. i would say it is toally safe. conventional medicine will try to discourage you from using it by scaring you with shit like telling you someone died from taking it. i doubt seriously that it can be linked to hydrogen peroxide.

:rolleyes: says the guy with one post.
 
I found this thread when searching google for info on H2O2. Apologies if I have not done enough posts to qualify for an opinion, but if one reads the article carefully, they can see that it is obviously loaded with innuendo and insinuation. But here are the facts according to the article.

The patient took Copaxone.
drugs.com/sfx/copaxone-side-effects.html
Acoording to Drugs.com, the second most common side effect is bleeding. There are two possibilities here; 1) the H2O2 exacerbated this side effect, or 2) the patient was already desparate and decided to take extra to see if that would help. Ether way, to decide that a well used regimen of H2O2 suddenly causes something that a primary side effect of another drug THAT SHE WAS TAKING is the culprit defies logic. What's happening here is that people have purchased the innuendo and insinuation built into the article (which is essentially a hit piece on H2O2 as a legitimate therapy).

I think it's disturbing that Shortt had little to say about his investigations into the possible intereaction between H2O2 and Copaxone - and for that, he needs to face a review board or something. But the usage of this case as a weapon against H2O2 just smells like a rat.

Even the article states that 100,000 infusions are given each year, yet they cannot cite the statistics for how many people die every year for said treatment.

"In July, a second patient of Shortt's died."

and they don't tell you what the cause is. He had "advanced prostate cancer" ... might have had something to do with it ... or he may have died from his chemo prior to the H2O2.

"Shortt says he has administered as many as 1,800 hydrogen peroxide treatments"

So if this was so dangerous, where are all the other deaths from the files that were ceased in the raid?

Come on guys...

I have a mate involved in documenting an effective cancer therapy in China which is not available to the citizens of the USA because the amount of testing to pass the FDA was going to require nearly ONE BILLION DOLLARS (seriously). So they decided to spend the money on building more clinics outside the USA. Screw the FDA as far as credibility is concerned for what is approved and what is not approved. Gotta laugh every time someone cites "FDA approval" - what a joke.

It's a shame no one has pursued H2O2 since this thread was posted. Shows how easily people can be scared off. One guy shares his experience and he is chastised for not having posted enough. That's just lame. I got on here because I don't like seing dis-info hit pieces from the media having a win. Who makes money from H2O2? No one. So where is the profit motive for falsely espousing it's benefits? Cui bono. Plenty of benefit for discrediting it if you're in the multi-billion dollar cancer industry.
 
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