The inventor injects bleaching into cancerous tumors – and wants to bring treatment to the United States


Liu was achieving the solution in his rented apartment in Beijing by mixing the citric acid with sodium chlorit, according to his shared account earlier this month on a alternative that revealed that a “violent explosion” occurred when he made a mistake.

Liu wrote, “The explosion is to take off my vision.” “The dense clouds erupted from chlorine dioxide in my face, filling my eyes, nose, and mouth.

LIU began a clinical study on animals in 2016, before starting to use a very trained solution to treat human patients in recent years. He claims that between China and Germany, he has treated 20 patients so far.

When the evidence was asked to support his allegations of effectiveness, Liu shared links with a number of princesses, which the pendants were not reviewed, with wireless. He also participated in the stadium platform for a seed tour of $ 5 million in an emerging company that focuses on the United States that would provide injecting chlorine dioxide.

The presentation contains a number of “status studies” for patients who have already treated them – including the dog – but instead of displaying detailed scientific data, the deck contains annoying images of patient tumors. The surface also contains, as evidence of the effectiveness of the treatment, a screenshot of the WhatsApp conversation with a patient who was apparently treating liver tumor with chlorine dioxide.

“Footage of WhatsApp chat with patients or their doctors is not evidence of effectiveness, however this is the only evidence he offers,” Alex Morozov, an oncologist who supervised hundreds of drug experiments in many companies including Pfizer. “And it goes without saying, until the appropriate studies are conducted and published in the magazines that the peer reviews, or presented in a respectable conference, should not be treated with any patients except in the context of clinical trials.”

WIRED spoke to a LIU patient, who seems to be the treatment of treatment effectively and asking dangerous questions about her safety.

“I bought needles online and made chlorine dioxide myself (then) injecting them into the tumor and lymph nodes myself,” says the patient, a Chinese citizen who lives in the United Kingdom. WIRED gave not to disclose its identity to protect its privacy.

The patient had previously taken oral solutions to chlorine dioxide as an alternative treatment for cancer, but he was not satisfied with the results, I called LIU via WhatsApp. On the spring evening last year, she took her first injection of chlorine dioxide, she says, almost immediately suffered from negative side effects.

“It was good after injection, but I woke up from the extreme pain (like) I have never tested in my life,” she says. “The pain lasted for three to four days.”

Despite the pain, she says, she achieved herself again after two months and a month after that she traveled to China, where Liu, although there was no medical training, was injected, using a drug cream for skin anesthesia.

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