Dr. Kaushal K. Bhardwaj
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January 2008 Newsletter
February, 2008 Newslette
March, 2008 Newsletter
Insulin Potentiation Therapy (IPT)

What is it:  Insulin Potentiation Therapy (IPT) is a simple medical procedure that uses the hormone insulin, followed by glucose, to make a wide variety of drugs work more effectively, in smaller doses, with reduced or no side effects.  Other insulin-related mechanisms (e.g. detoxification, immune stimulation, angiogenesis) may also be involved.

 

The procedure:  An intravenous line with saline drip is hooked up to the patient.  A small amount of insulin is given intravenously.  Between 5 to 15 minutes later, oral and intramuscular drugs are administered.   About 25-40 minutes after insulin, mild hypoglycemic symptoms develop.  At this point, intravenous drugs are given, followed by intravenous glucose and a sweet drink.  Treatment is repeated at intervals of 2 to 21 days.

 

How it works:  Insulin is known to increase cell membrane permeability, and to assist transport of glucose, electrolytes, and many other compounds into cells and across the blood-brain barrier.  Other mechanisms and properties of insulin may also participate in the process of IPT:  blood chemistry changes, selective targeting of cancer tumors, angiogenesis (growth of new blood vessels), immune system stimulation and balancing, stimulation of neuron growth and myelination, etc.

 

What it treats:  In more than 130 doctor-years, over seven decades, IPT has been reported to be very successful in the treatment of many types of cancer, arthritis and related rheumatic syndromes, infections, cardiovascular, respiratory and neurological diseases.  Some successes have been reported for diseases for which standard treatments are difficult or rarely successful:  pancreatic cancer, multiple sclerosis, paralysis after stroke.  IPT doctors have found IPT to be a way to get better results much faster, using smaller drug doses, (1/2 to 1/20) and with side effects greatly reduced or eliminated.

 

When and how it was discovered:  Donato Perez Garcia, MD, who later became the highest-ranked military doctor in Mexico, discovered the procedure in 1926.  Observing that insulin seemed to be increasing permeability of cells throughout the body, he tested for increased absorption of heavy metal drugs into the nervous system of a number of dogs.  It worked.  He then (1928) tried insulin potentiation for treatment of tertiary neurosyphillis, a deadly and feared scourge of the time, essentially untreatable before antibiotics.  His treatment was spectacularly successful.  Over the following forty years he improved the technique and applied it to a wide variety of other diseases.  He treated cancer with IPT for the first time in 1945.

 

 

DR. BHARDWAJ TREATS THE CAUSE OF YOUR HEALTH PROBLEMS -

NOT THE  SYMPTOMS



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GROESBECK MEDICAL CLINIC IS NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS