PROCEDURE
A brief description of ASI® production´s procedure:
- 30 cc of venous blood is taken.
- Treatment under sterile condition (laminar-flow technique, GMP standards).
- Isolation of the Buffy-coat.
- Separation of the Buffy-coat elements and treatment in different biochemical and physical steps.
- Addition of different immune activating/modulating substances.
- Boosting therapy with ozone.
- Preparation of 30 vials of 1ml for injection on alternate days (subcutaneously).
New molecular immunological investigations have shown that the presence of cancer is also an immuno-biological problem in which case a therapeutic procedure appears meaningful.
In all reports about injections using treated or prepared tumour cells, the significance of the survival period is emphasised through freedom from relapses in the case of many types of cancer. One can assume that the different approaches taken during cell preparation, as well as the quantity and time periods between repeated uses, play an important role.
Methodology according to stages of cancer can be broadly classified into the following 3 categories:
-
Small vaccinations from 10 ml of blood from the patient for 4-5 subcutaneous injections spaced one week apart.
This procedure is for prevention purposes and can still be recommended in an early to medium phase of cancer stages
- A large vaccination from 30 ml of blood from the patient for treatment by means of a series of injections in an advanced stage of the disease.
- Manufactured of a specific-active vaccine from a native operation preparation for the patient for a series of injections of graded individualised vaccines of cytoplasmatic cell wall fractions, protoplasms (without nucleic acid and deactivated tumour commensals), in order to trigger various immune responses.
Procedure and removal guidelines
- Prevention for Anti Ageing, prevention to early medium stage of cancer
About 30 ml of blood is drawn from the
patient with 3 standard 10 ml syringes (only
normal syringe is allowed). The syringe is
then positioned vertically with the piston
facing downwards at room temperature
(e.g. in a plastic cup); labelled with the
patient’s name and date of birth and the
diagnosis will be sent by specically
human courier to our German set up
certified lab within the next 24 hours after
the formation of buffy coat normally after
36 hours.
- Advanced stage of cancer from the Tumour
tissue
A piece of tumour tissue is needed
weighing between 5 and 10 grams which is
roughly the size of the round end of the
little finger or the thumb. The preparation
should be stored in a small sterile pipe in its
native form and kept in a refrigerator until
it is picked up. Do not freeze!
Transportation to the laboratory should
take place within 12 hours at 4-8 degrees
Centigrade.
Disorders of the Immune
System Fall into 4 Main
Categories:
- Immunodeficiency disorders
Primary
Primary immunodeficiencies are disorders in
which part of the body’s immune system is not
present or is not working properly. Most primary
immunodeficiencies are hereditary, autosomal
recessive or X-linked. About 1 in 500 people is
born with a primary immunodeficiency (e.g.
Digeorge syndrome and chronic granulomatous
disease).
Secondary
Secondary or acquired immunodeficiencies are
the result of external processes or diseases
through infection. Common causes are
malnutrition, ageing and certain medication (e.g.
chemotherapy, immunosuppressive drugs,
disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs).
It wipes out certain types of lymphocytes, i.e the
T-helper cells. Without T-helper cells that acts as a
conductor of an orchestra who direct and stimulates the
entire system to defend the body against any invading
micro organism, the entire mechanism will collapse.
- Allergic disorders
Allergic disorder occurs when the immune system
overreacts after exposure to antigens, usually the
surrounding environment.
Example of such disorders includes asthma, eczema or
specific allergies which include environmental allergies
(e.g. dust mites), drug allergies (e.g. specific
medications), seasonal allergies (e.g. hay fever), food
allergies (e.g. nuts).
- Cancers of the immune system
Cancer is characterised by the development of abnormal
cells that divide uncontrollably and have the ability to
infiltrate and destroy normal body tissues. Cancer can
spread throughout the body. Examples are leukemia and
lymphoma.
- Autoimmunity
Autoimmunity refers to the failure of an organism to
recognise its own constituent parts as self, which causes
the immune response against its own cells or tissues, i.e.
our immune system mistakenly attacks our body’s
healthy organs and tissues as if they are foreign invaders.
Example of autoimmune disorder includes insulin
dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), rheumatoid
arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).
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