We are all born with cancer.

When the sperm fertilizes the egg, it introduces a cancer microbe, which the Late Dr. Virginia Livingston named Progenitor (meaning life) Cryptocides (meaning death) (P.C.).

It gives us life and death.

Other researchers have, over the last 100 years, assigned different names to the same microbe.

The P.C. microbe is responsible for the egg dividing and multiplying (a process called mitosis).

Basically, a fetus is a programmed 9-month tumor. At birth the P.C. microbe P.C. remains in the blood of the mother and also moves in the blood of the new infant.

When our immune system becomes compromised, the Cancer microbe begins to multiply. P.C. causes anemia by eating the red blood cells. The patient becomes white as the Hemoglobin's destroyed. The cancer microbes penetrate normal cells; this allows the Potassium in the cells to escape. This potassium is now replaced with sodium.

These damaged cells can no longer use oxygen. An acidic fermentation process begins, going from cell to cell. This acidic and lack of oxygen (anaerobic) process now encourages the out of control cells to grow wildly. The P.C. seems to know where as oxygen is diminished concentration of P.C. in a failing immune system quickly shows up as metastasis and increases in as billions. The of the most common cancers we see are prostate, bone, breast, Lung, ovarian, colon, bladder, pancreatic, stomach, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

Most cancers are named for the type of cell or organ in which they begin. Cancer that begins in the prostate is called primary prostate cancer (or prostatic cancer). Prostate cancer may remain in the prostate gland, or it may spread to nearby lymph nodes.

Prostate cancer may also spread to the bones, bladder, rectum, and other organs.

When cancer spreads to other parts of the body, the new tumor has the same malignant cells and the same name as the primary tumor. For example, if prostate cancer spreads to the bones, the cancer cells in the new tumor are prostate cancer cells. The cancer then is metastatic prostate cancer; it is not bone cancer.


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