DMSO: The Cheap, Effective Health Fix They Don’t Want You Using

I’ve done my best to compile the extensive (and largely forgotten) evidence showing DMSO works for spinal conditions, from acute spinal cord injuries where paralysis was prevented or reversed, to the degenerative disc herniations, radiculopathies, and chronic pain syndromes that affect millions.

Across approximately 400 studies and 300 reader testimonials, the same basic reality keeps showing up: DMSO’s combination of properties allows it to address the many different causes of spinal disease in a way no single conventional therapy can.

Veterinarians have been using IV DMSO for paralyzed animals for over four decades, with textbooks from the 1980s already listing standardized protocols, yet a human patient with a spinal cord injury is still told nothing can be done.

Every year, tens of thousands of people are consigned to permanent paralysis, wheelchair dependence, loss of bladder and bowel control, chronic pain, bedsores, and drastically shortened lifespans, to say nothing of the toll this takes on their families and the despair that drives the much higher suicide rates seen in this population.

That a therapy which routinely gets paralyzed dogs and horses back on their feet has never been seriously tested in human spinal cord injuries, not because it failed, but because the FDA prevented it from ever reaching human trials, is one of the more unconscionable failures of modern medicine.

Beyond acute injuries, millions more are trapped on disability by chronic spinal conditions, caught in a system that provides just enough to survive but strips away autonomy, purpose, and hope. Having evaluated numerous disability claims, I cannot begin to describe how frustrating it was to see how many people came through whose lives could have been easily restored with DMSO, to say nothing of the enormous social and economic costs their widespread but unnecessary disability entails.

Russian and Eastern European clinicians have similarly accumulated decades of clinical experience using DMSO for disc herniations, radiculopathies, and osteochondrosis (often via iontophoresis or in combination with enzyme therapy), yet these protocols remain virtually unknown in Western medicine. Fortunately hundreds of readers with chronic back pain, sciatica, failed spinal surgeries, and spinal stenosis have independently discovered that an inexpensive, readily available substance transformed conditions they had suffered with for years or decades.

I consider it a testament to how tightly information is controlled that almost no one in our culture knows about the simple solution DMSO provides, while simultaneously feel profoundly grateful we have at last reached an era where long-hidden truths like this can at last be revealed and I thank each of you for the support which has made it possible to finally get messages like these out.

This article is posted for informational purposes only about a remarkable and very promising compound with proven medicinal properties. Consult with your doctor before you decide to proceed with it.

DMSO is dimethyl sulfoxide: a highly polar and water miscible organic liquid with a low level of toxicity. It is an organosulfur compound with some remarkable properties. It has, for example, the ability to pass through the skin and other cellular membranes of the body.

DMSO has, since 1960 been used medicinally as an anti-inflammatory and as an analgesic. There have also been many trials to try and assess its efficacy in the treatment of many medical complaint for which there is anecdotal evidence of its effectiveness…. Continues” – https://www.dmso.org.uk

In the section that follows, I will provide:

•Practical guidance on sourcing DMSO (including how to obtain sterile IV DMSO from compounding pharmacies at a fraction of current prices),
•Detailed dosing protocols for topical, oral, and intravenous use
•The specific clinical spinal dosing protocols summarized from the Russian and Eastern European studies above (for back pain, trigger points, cervical radiculopathy, sciatica, disc herniation enzyme iontophoresis, and more).
•Treatment approaches for neuropathies and neuropathic pain (which will be the focus of the next part of this series), spinal cord injuries, spasticity, arachnoiditis, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, cognitive impairment, chronic stress, and other neurological conditions discussed in this series (e.g., developmental delay, fatigue, brain fog, psychiatric disorders, Down syndrome, or anesthesia toxicity).

Read the rest at www.midwesterndoctor.com

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