HomeBlog YouTube Livestream Q&A Transcript, April 29, 2025

YouTube Livestream Q&A Transcript, April 29, 2025

May 2, 2025

Question

“Dr. Rita, I know two people with leukemia, both over 50. In addition to standard of care, what do you suggest? God bless you for taking this time with all of us.”  [0:02:58]

Answer

Well, leukemia involves a blood, or what we call a liquid type of cancer. The bone marrow is making your blood in an abnormal fashion, and there are different lines of the development of the blood cells. Some turn into red blood cells, some turn into white blood cells and their precursors. So, these different lines, and then platelets are a different line as well. So each of these can have a category of disruption or a malignant change. But in general, you have to ask the question, why have you been well for 50 years and then suddenly now you're changing? And I personally don't ascribe to the genetic theory of cancer. They've had this gene mapping explosion since the 1980s, and we have basically seen in the past 50 years no big reduction in cancer death rate through any gene intervention. In fact, if you really look at a tumor site, let's say you take a person with leukemia, whatever type of leukemia they might have, whether it's childhood leukemia or adult leukemia of the various strains of the bloodlines development, you can take those malignant cells, and no two of them will have the same genetic code because they're all morphing in an aberrant fashion, meaning they will all have different gene expressions. So how can you have targeted therapy against a malignancy for any malignancy, whether it's breast cancer, colon cancer, brain cancer, or any cancer? As those cells are rapidly dividing, they all are misbehaving and their genetic codes are different. Actually, some of the gene markers that they're looking at are very prominent in healthy cells, so these sites for gene coding can lie dormant in healthy cellular lines, and we, in fact, have them right now. 

So, to talk about thinking that you have the answers with genes or they're causative or the problem is to greatly mislead your patients and yourself. This is certainly something that is not unworthy of looking into with research, but we have spent vast billions upon billions and trillions of dollars, and we are not putting enough into lifestyle, therapeutic modulation of your lifestyle, and that would be things like what does exercise do to prevent cancer from developing? Or once you have it from metastasizing or growing, what does adequate water hydration do? What would deuterium-depleted water do? What would sunlight, get enough sunlight exposure in the day? What would vitamin D do? What would curcumin do? What would melatonin do? What would Artemisia do? All these things, I mean, we need tons of research. And we doctors, who are not oncologists, get the patients coming to us all the time, saying what can I do alongside my oncological work? And we have been, I have been doing this for 44 years and more. I was 18 years old when I first started talking about the book, World Without Cancer by Edward Griffin, who wrote the book Creature of Jekyll Island, and he was talking about amygdalin, which is vitamin B17, which basically has the cyanide in that amygdalin B17 thing, much like the cyanide that is in cyanocobalamin, which is the standard B vitamin that we give today. So why is it ostracized? So there's a billion questions. 

What can you do about this? I would go to high-dose vitamin C therapy. There is a lot of research about the oxidative stress that high-dose vitamin C puts on the aberrant malignant cell lines that are emerging. And I would do that at least twice a week, a high dose. What is a high dose? 25 mg and higher would be considered a high dose, or what we would call oxidative stress to the tumor line. Then, in addition to that, I would exercise. That's been shown to deprive the rapidly turning over malignant cells, of their ability to get enough sugar and glucose and glutamine. And then I would be on a very low carb diet, ketogenic, very low carb ketogenic diet, or a carnivore diet. I would be on vitamin D. I would get good light therapy by being outside for at least half an hour every day. I would drink adequate water. I would stop eating after about 3 o'clock in the afternoon with a high dose of vitamin C. We also know that the bone marrow is an area where a lot of the toxins in the bones are deposited, like heavy metals. This oxidative stress in the area is probably an issue. The pollution from the chemicals, PCPs, benzene rings, all these kinds of things. I would get away from all synthetic clothes and dry-cleaning, things like that. I would eat only natural foods, and I would eat only wild-raised, grass-fed, wild-caught, prairie-raised products. So, that's how I would begin, by getting a good functional doctor and start working on that kind of approach. Hopefully, that helps you. 

Question

“My nasal passage is always closed on either one side or the other for about 10 years. I don’t really have sinus infections and maybe get some mild form of allergies. What can we do to open both nasal passages as this could be some cause of my snoring? Any suggestions? Thanks.”  [0:09:45]

Answer

I would go to a functional doctor and I would get your blood type. I would get your food allergies done, IgG. You might be eating a food that creates the mucus membranes around your throat and nasal passages inflammation, and that's why it'll plug up on either side. The eustachian tube is also here. The adenoids are there. You could have benign polyps, nasal polyps that are reactive, inflaming, or allergic polyps. You could have a deviated septum from some old injury or just the way you were born. You should drink an adequate amount of water. You should rinse your nose with Argentyn nanoparticulate silver. Argentyn silver over the counter, but it's only half strength, it's called Sovereign Silver nasal spray. I would do that every night of my life and just continue that. I would also drink adequate water with enzymes. I would take systemic anti-inflammatory enzymes. I would take something like Vascuzyme or Vitalzym, and I would take five twice a day. I would never, ever eat late. I would try and stop eating around 5 o'clock in the evening, maybe 3:00 to 5:00 stop eating, depending on how old you are. If you're 60 years old, try and stop eating by 3 o'clock in the afternoon. And then I would take iodine. Iodine will help mucus membranes. And I would take N-acetyl cysteine. N-acetyl cysteine is a mucolytic agent, just like iodine is. And then I would be very low carb because carbohydrates tend to clog capillaries create inflammation and damage the lining of blood vessels as the blood sugar average goes up. I would exercise regularly, both aerobic and weightlifting. I would see an ear, nose, and throat doctor because they could look up there and see if it's a polyp and snippet. They can sometimes give you magnetic tape and then put a brace that goes over your nose at night that will pull out the ala, what we call these wings of your nose, with magnets. So those are some suggestions. But if you've had this chronically for years, I think it's time that you at least get some sinus X-rays and see an ear, nose, and throat doctor. You could be doing all these natural things alongside that visit as well. 

Question

“My husband is a TLC patient. He is also seeing a urologist who is recommending a prostate MRI with a contrast solution. My husband has been using EDTA chelation suppositories for two years. He is concerned about what might be in the contrast solution, metals, and other toxins. Is this okay? Thank you.”  [0:12:54]

Answer

Yes. In fact, that's why God is so good. God always provides a way for his children. Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) is able to grab the dye that they use in the MRI, it’s gadolinium, and gadolinium metal is easily pulled out. So, he could, in fact, shove a suppository up his butt before he goes for the MRI, and then he can take another suppository afterward. Or even better yet, if he came into the IV suite and did a high dose vitamin C chelation together, the two combined, enhanced chelation or we do a 25-gram vitamin C with a mini bag of chelation with it. But yeah, it can be done. And I'm all in favor of getting a clear picture of his prostate. Make sure there's no nodule and make sure the capsule of the prostate is not broken through or invaded by any mass in the prostate gland. So, follow your urologist's advice, but we can protect you by doing the EDTA chelation. And the mere fact that he's been doing this with suppositories is very valuable, but he could also get the IV here. So, contact your doctor here and make sure he has an order for that as well. 

Question

“Can you explain the difference between digestive enzymes and systemic enzymes?”  [0:14:54]

Answer

Yes, both are similar enzymes. It's the timing largely. When you have a load of food in your stomach, and it's going to be there for three to six hours or longer, you take digestive enzymes to help break it up, because if you don't secrete enough of your own enzymes and acid, then you will not digest that food well that's in your stomach. It'll sit there longer. You'll get problems, burping it back up your tube, called reflux acid, and you'll be having problems with that. And the older you get, the more likely your digestion fails. So, the older we all get, whether or not your blood type A, A’s as a general rule make less enzyme and stomach acid than the AB or the B or the O. So, A type blood people pretty much need to start using it from their youth on up all through their life. I'm B positive and I started to need it and benefited from it. After I turned about 50, 55, I was not digesting as well. So again, the digestive enzymes will normally have betaine hydrochloric acid in with the enzymes, the protease that chops up the proteins, the lipases that chop up the fats, and amylase is usually the least added because we usually abundantly and easily make the carbohydrate digesting enzymes. But that's what typically is in a digestive enzyme taken with food. The systemic enzymes do not have hydrochloric acid in them, and they just have the enzymes that are listed, the protease, the lipase, and the amylase sugar-digesting enzymes. And these are taken on an empty stomach, and they're absorbed and go into the body, all over your body, to help with inflammation, if you had a broken arm, a broken nose, sinus infection, congested head, congested lungs, inflamed bowels, joint pains, skin rashes. For any cell damage, you will have an enzyme God will make to help chew up the injured cell if it cannot be repaired to get it cleaned up, reassembled, and/or eliminated. Hopefully, that helps you understand the difference. 

Question

“Hi, Dr. E. How many tablets of Iodoral do you recommend daily?”  [0:17:33]

Answer

I recommend at least one, very often taking two a day is beneficial. 12.5 mg is the actual minimal amount on average that Japanese women get in all their seaweed and exposure to the dietary iodine 12.5 mg a day. Some are getting 50 mg a day, 25 mg a day, but at least 12.5 mg is what I would recommend for everyone from childhood on up and all pregnant women because you'll have better mental acuity, better memory with it, and better thyroid metabolism. Just overall general good health. 

Question

“I'm always confused with the enzymes as well.”  [0:18:29]

Answer

Well, hopefully that helps you to understand. Digestive is with a load of food and it has the acid with the enzyme. The systemic is on an empty stomach and it does not contain acid, betaine hydrochloric acid. 

Question

“My husband was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis. It happened out of nowhere. Could COVID-19 have caused this? And is this a way to heal the cytokine storm naturally without steroids and rheumatoid medicine? He is also on thyroid medicine Armour.”  [0:19:00]

Answer

Yes. The answer is clearly, yes, the COVID-19 infection is associated with an inflammatory autoimmune increase in the general population. Rheumatoid arthritis is more prevalent in women usually over age 50, but it can occur in men. And so, this autoimmune phenomena, whether it is rheumatoid arthritis, other autoimmune diseases, thyroid autoimmune diseases, all the various autoimmune phenomena have increased post-COVID viral infection. And the spike protein is the most toxic element and inflammatory of them all. And so, anything to reduce spike protein’s effect and replication on your own, if you took it through an mRNA injection, is what we're trying to do. And the number one thing you can do is become a carnivore. Just eat grass-fed only because if you buy grain or cheap meat, you can get the same inflammatory food particles that the cow ate or the animal ate, the pig, the lamb, or whatever. So, you want grass-fed only, 100% grass-fed beef, wild-caught fish, prairie-raised pork, and other goat and lamb kind of material. There are chickens and there are eggs, and the fish, wild. Be on that and their products. You can have the eggs, you can have the cheese if it's raw. Typically, if you are a complete carnivore, you've taken away a huge inflammatory anti-nutrient stimulation of the plant kingdom, all their lectins, the various types of oxalates, plant tannins, and so forth, you're getting away from on a pure carnivore diet. You can do that for let's say three to six months. Probably six months is a safer general thing that I refer to people who have already been diagnosed with a diagnosable autoimmune disease because it takes time to heal the lining of the gut and everything. So, adequate water. And then the enzymes we were talking about, like Vitalzym or systemic enzymes Vascuzyme, I would take five to eight twice a day on an empty stomach certainly before bed. 

Now, the medicines that treat rheumatoid arthritis also have antiviral effects. And so, hydroxychloroquine is very often used called Plaquenil 200 mg. 200 mg once or twice a day is a standard treatment for rheumatoid arthritis, but it’s also a very promising anti-inflammatory and antiviral. So, I wouldn't be afraid of using that at all if your rheumatologist is prescribing it, as for the hydroxychloroquine Plaquenil. And then I would be on vitamin D, and I would take the iodine, and I would take the digestive enzymes if you're older when you eat your food. I would stop eating at 3 o'clock. I would exercise, both weightlifting and aerobics regularly, no less than three times a week, and I would be on a good multimineral, find out your blood type, your husband's blood type, ABO blood type, and go from there. That's a good starting point. That's how I would begin addressing that. And yes, it does go up with COVID.

Question

“Would you take both?”  [0:23:38]

Answer

Well, I am a B-type blood, and I am not normally at risk for not digesting well. But as I got older, I'm in my early 70s now, so yes, I do take the digestive enzyme anytime I eat. I take the systemic enzymes first thing in the morning, and I often take them last thing at night if I feel achy at all. Like I took a bad fall, I fell down, I scratched, and bloodied up my knees and my right shoulder, and I hurt really bad, but I went and I continued working out the very next day, but I fasted 24 hours, drank extra water, and I took a lot more of my enzymes systemically on an empty stomach. Of course, I wasn't eating, and therefore I didn't take the digestive enzymes. But yes, nowadays I use both every day. Digestive when I eat, and systemic first thing in the morning for sure, always. And then, eat two to three hours later. And then I will often take my systemic again at night.  

Question

Hi Dr. E. My dad has cataracts. His doctor says he is eligible for surgery. We heard about some eye drops that can be helpful, but they are only available in the Philippines. Do you know of any type of eye drops that might help that we can find here? Thank you.”  [0:24:50]

Answer

No, I don't. But I know the medication that you're talking about. Now, I don't know if I can think of the brand name, but I think it's Lanosterol. It's a precursor to cholesterol, and that should tell you everything right there. See, when we eat enough eggs and egg yolks and meat and chicken with the skin on it, and fish and butter, we get our cell membranes beautifully made, including the lens of our eyes, will stay healthier and the cell membrane that makes up that lens and the proteins in it are protected with the membrane protection of the healthy fats, and then we can see through it beautifully. So, Lanosterol is an item. I think that's given not in the United States. I don't think it's FDA-approved. But you can go on a carnivore diet, and you can take high-dose vitamin C, and you can take high-dose systemic enzymes. Take five to eight twice a day of the enzymes and any of the floaters or the things…you know, I got a floater one time that was so bad, I woke up with it one time, I don't really know what triggered it. I'm under stress all the time. So, it would be funny to try and say, did I have any stress? I live the word ‘stress’. But I stopped eating and I stopped eating for five days. And I just drank water. I continued coming to work. I continued my exercise. Now, I had worked my way up to that. It's not like I'm a superwoman. I had built up my tolerance for not having any food to eat. And it's not like I don't have any fat that I could chew up. I've got enough love beds that I can live off of. So I did not eat for five days. I drank the water. I took my IV vitamin C and chelation for microcirculation, and I would say 80% of that big floater just went away. I think I can see a very, very slight floater from that, but that's not a cataract necessarily, although the pathophysiology of getting floaters is similar to developing cataracts. That's just the vitreous humor where you get that from the proteins in the liquid of your eyeball. The lens has also proteins in it, and it gets burnt/cooked by oxidative stress. So, your whole goal, the whole game plan in life is you're on 98.6 roast cooking slowly, and you're trying to drink enough water and you're trying to have good circulation, so the cooling pipes or cooling you down all the time, and you get enough sleep, so that you can have cool lenses, cool brain, cool everything, and only use the heat when you need it for your exercise and metabolism. 

So, that's the game plan folks. It's not hard. It doesn't take rocket science, and you don't need to have 10 different thousand vitamins to sell a patient. The most important thing is to drink water, get a good night's sleep, get healthy sunshine in the morning, ground yourself with your bare feet for a couple of minutes every morning in the wet grass, and eat a very low-carb diet. Stop eating late. Don't go past roughly 3 or 4 o'clock if you're over 60, and take enzymes, digestive and systemic, with your other enzymes, and you should live a long life. And I thank my heavenly father, my creator, and savior, Jesus Christ, for my lens, in my 70s, I still don't have any evidence that cataracts formed, and yet I see so many people in their 60s getting cataract surgery. So, praise God. You could work on that. 

Question

“This question is for my daughter. She has a pretty bad acid reflux and is taking omeprazole. Just found out she is pregnant and can’t take it anymore. Is there something safe she can take while pregnant?

Thanks!”  [0:29:11]

Answer

Yes, she can take L-Glutamine powder. Metagenics has an L-Glutamine powder. GlutaShield has that powder, and these usually both have extra vitamin A and zinc in them. These powders, you can take a scoop anytime, mix it in a little bit of water, swish it around, and swallow it down. You can do it preventatively or anytime you want. You could also take SBI Protect with Phospholipids, which the baby growing needs tons of protein and fat. So, the more the mother has protein in her diet, the better she'll be. You can also take a swig of high-quality olive oil and MCT oil. These all will come and help to repair the one-cell lining layer of the gut. Do not eat late. If she's tempted to eat something late, I would rather see her take a swig of Phospholipids and SBI Protect with good protective immunoglobulin A, which is our secretory protective for the gut with the phospholipids to help the membrane. I'd rather her have the amino acid glutamine than all these junk items. But the baby is made of phospholipids fats and minerals. So, that's what she should eat, not processed foods and these kind of things. What I give babies’ mothers who are pregnant, and what I really used, was vitamin D, iodine to have a very intelligent baby, a good multivitamin. We have the Mitocore here. Mitocore is an excellent prenatal, far better than these junk prenatal that they give by the OBGYNs. And then we give vitamin D, and we usually give at least 5,000 with K2. And then we give them the multimineral, TLC Multimineral. Usually, that's also helpful. Tell her to find out her blood type as well. 

Question

“Can you recommend systemic enzymes?”  [0:31:49]

Answer

Yeah. Well, the ones that I've used for 30, well 25 years here, and at least closing near 40 years, is the Vascuzyme by Ortho Molecular. Vascuzyme. Now, we private label it here, it's called Systemic Enzymes, so that we can sell it a little cheaper. So, that's what I recommend. I also recommend it but it's more expensive, it's called Vitalzym. That is Vitalzym Xe. It’s the most potent systemic enzyme that I know of. And the Vascuzyme nearly equals the power of the Vitalzym, and that's what I recommend. Digestive enzyme is what we private label, and that's Ortho Molecular’s Digestzyme. Ortho Molecular’s Ortho Digestzyme. 

Question

“Hi, Dr. Rita. What salt do you recommend for minerals?”  [0:32:46]

Answer

What is the name of that salt, Celtic sea salt? And I think there's one called black/gold sea salt and it has all the trace minerals in it, but that's what I use. And you can get it at Sprouts. I go to Sprouts for mine. 

Question

“I have a stubborn rash on my abdomen that I have been working on healing for 5 months. It’s almost gone but it’s been so hard to heal. I finally found that I’ve become allergic to milk and avocado. I’m eating cleaner now and using clobetasol, and it helps a lot. I’m also doing several cleanses for metal, and liver parasites, just in case.”  [0:33:13]

Answer

Now, let me put a statement here. Milk and avocado. You have been made allergic by pasteurized, homogenized, destruction of natural milk into a crazy inflammatory, ripped apart, baked up...of the proteins and fat that come out of natural milk, and they heat it up and they shake it up so that even the cream can't float to the top anymore. It's no longer milk. And that ripped-up stuff is so inflaming because it's got a bazillion different things in it, including xanthine oxidase which we develop antibodies to. Xanthine oxidase is usually in the lysosome of the cell to be powerful oxidative stress to help kill bacteria and parasites and fungi and all this kind of stuff, and it's eaten up like garbage to digest bad things, bad parasites, bad bacteria in your body. Well, that lysozyme gets ripped up in homogenization and heating and now it's floating free as an attack nuclear bomb in your blood, and we make antibodies and all these kids are getting allergies. So, this will inflame and hurt your gut lining. Remember, it's only one cell thick, and then once you have a breakthrough, other things you habitually eat over and over can leak through and you can get reactive to them. 

Just I have to tell you my bias. Doing this for 44 years now, I am just done with all these commercials on the internet, even on programs that I think are good programs. Everyone's got I know how to cure cataracts, I know how to cure tinnitus, I know how to cure guts. Everything is…did you know you have parasites? And I'd like to see any one of these people who are on these, and I have to watch these videos because I know you, my dear patients, are being tempted and bamboozled by them, and I get just so frustrated. It's amazing I don't have high blood pressure. Anyway. I'm done with all this marketing. Let these people put out that they have 44 years of clinical practice. And in those 44 years, long before JFK Jr., long before these grundy things on food allergy, long before all these Dr. Oz and Dr. Berg, and even Dr. Berry, and I'm happy they're all talking, all the carnivore doctors, Dr. Teo, Dr. Chaffee, Dr. Sinclair, I'm happy for all of them. But these people on this internet advertisement need to put out their experience in actually practicing day after day, hour after hour, week after week, year after year, decade after decade after decade with all these things. And we've laid this groundwork and there isn't any one answer. And they make it sound like black currant seed or black seed oil. This is the new one coming out lately, and now it's the rage like it does everything. There is internet data you can call upon the NIH research, nih.gov., about black seed oil, and indeed it has anti-inflammatory, antifungal, and anti-mutagenic. It has many properties. But I'm telling you, if they would train doctors adequately in medicine with enough chemistry, biochemistry, analytical chemistry, physical chemistry, and organic chemistry, they have to understand molecules and three dimensions. They have to understand the analysis, the physics of it, the physiology of it, and they have to understand, that these things behave differently in location, in concentration, and in certain surrounding environments. So, it isn't any one thing, and there are tens of thousands of them in any one thing you may eat, especially if it's a very colorful plant, like an apple a key lime, or an avocado. We don't know, but a tiny bit, but we're spending billions on gene therapy which is a dead end. I'm not saying there isn't some value in research, especially in law enforcement and investigation of genetic DNA coding and the DNA that you shed all the time, but as far as treatment of cancer and hope there, that's long gone dead. That hope is gone. 

Now, we need to say, oh well, it's anti-inflammatory. Guess what? Water is anti-inflammatory. Oh, we have to say it's antibacterial, we can say water's antibacterial. We want to say it is anti-tumorigenic or mutagenic, we can say water has these properties. If you drink enough water, if you have adequate amounts and you have it moving through, removing debris, stopping inflammation through having adequate removal of damaged material, yeah, sure, it's an anti-inflammatory. So, this talk about you're looking for a dream molecule, no, I'm sorry. You have to face this jar every day and you have to drink it, and you have to use this mouth as an entry point to put in things to repair your protein and fat, not an entertainment zone that'll hit your dopamine, dopa-receptors for happiness and euphoria with sugars, and chocolates, and so forth. You must control your body. You must exercise. It needs the sunlight. It needs the water. It needs sleep. And it doesn't need food late at night. It doesn't even need food in the early evening hours. We really all should be stopping eating before 6 o'clock for sure. And those of us over 60, probably by 3 o'clock. 

And so, with this cleansing stuff and parasite talk, I am not against ivermectin or fenbendazole. In fact, I'm using it myself. In fact, I'm working with ParaGon by Mahoney for the 222 mg of that with fenbendazole with ivermectin 12 mg. and then I have the ivermectin, and I pulse this in my own life. And I don't want to develop cancer, but the older you get, your probability of having something starts to increase. So, I am starting to pulse it. I'm not doing it because I think I have parasites. I was working with a guy who helped develop the very first complete digestive stool analysis at Great Smokies Medical Center, Dr. Levine, in Asheville, North Carolina. He worked with John Wilson, and he left, and I was hired to kind of work in a spot, and I learned so much back in the mid-90s. And we're talking closing on 40 years nearly, at least 35 years ago. So don't tell me about parasites, okay? I have a doctorate in integrative medicine, and I did the black light screening of the blood for iridology of your eye. I've done all that. I see where you can cheat on these tests with the black light microscopes and you can make it look bad depending on where you position the little thing there with a little gentle push of your finger and no one would notice it. So, I have seen corruption in the alternative world, and I've seen what could be good science turned into junk science because people sell out for people walking in and selling them treatment, and they're not accountable to God as to they really need it and is it really helpful. You know, it's just, it's very hard to be a general practitioner because you have to study everything all the time, every day, and you have to be on top of these nuances coming left and right. Left and right. So there you go. I've got to see this on your abdomen. Very often the gut breakthrough creates an autoimmune reaction, and you'll get it manifested in the skin. Again, why do I say do a three-month all-perfect carnivore for three months? It's the most anti-inflammatory, immune-healing lifestyle you can do.

Question 

“Did you say that grounding mats are beneficial?”  [0:43:52]

Answer

Yes, but not all producers of grounding mats are good people doing quality products. And I think one of the company's names that I'm looking into right now for my sheets on my bed is called, I think GrundLuv. It's made here in America and he’s a younger man. He's on it, he'll do a comparison on the internet for you of the various products. So yes, it is beneficial too electrochemically because we are three-dimensional bags of balloons, you might say, with fatty membranes of our balloon and protein with water inside, with proteins inside, the little intracellular organelles. So, we're water, so we're polar electrical beings, and if you put your feet on the ground wet, moist in the morning, you're going to get the anionic negative ions discharged from you and the earth together and grounded while the sunlight is coming at you, infrared, those waves will penetrate your skull, go through your eyes. It will help energize the gel structure of the water in all your cells and give you more energy, and transmembrane potential. It's just amazing. The whole entity of the human body. It's just amazing. 

Question

“What are your thoughts on the use of augmented N-acetyl cysteine (not regular NAC) to clear COVID spike? A video I saw from a doctor from England found it helpful to her patients with COVID-19 vaccine injury. ZeroSpike website info https://zerospike.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/ZEROSPIKE-PROJECT-BROCHURE.pdf.”  [0:46:12]

Answer

Yes, I am familiar with this, but I don't think it is “augmented” in the way you're thinking it is. Now, I don't know everything and I'm not God, and I have to study a ton of different things every day of my life. Plus, I have to cook and clean and clean my toilets, and do my laundry, and exercise, and go to church and study my Bible, all those other things as well to live. But in N-acetyl cysteine, I think the term “augmented” is to actually use a higher dose, and frequency of dosing is what they mean by augmented NAC therapy. It's not that it's a different or conjoined two molecules of NAC because then it's not NAC anymore, it's a different molecule. So, I am using 500 mg NAC from a quality source, we have it here. I take two in the morning and I take two in the evening. I take my enzymes, my Vitalzym, five in the morning, and oftentimes five at night. I drink my water. I do my vitamin C EDTA chelations here. I eat a very low-carb diet. I exercise. I do my weight training. I take my iodine. I take my D. I take my Juice Plus. I take my quercetin, which is in Ortho Molecular’s D-Hist, which we renamed Seasonal Shield to sell it for a lower price here. That's about all I do. And I do pulse myself with ivermectin and now I added in fenbendazole. And that's what I think of NAC. And yes, it is associated with having ACE2 receptor diminishment of attachment of spike protein. Some people argue that the studies are not valid. I mean, it's a whole field. We need this money. If I'm paying tax dollars and it's going to corrupt people in the NIH and the CDC and the HHS and they're making patents on it and getting money on it, and I'm breaking my butt, barely making two nickels scrubbed together here to serve my people, we need that money here. So, you call (202) 224-3121 and you ask at the switchboard there, they'll say, “Capital switchboard. How can I help you?” And you say, “Give me the HHS.” And you say, “My Dr. Ellithopre wants more money put into doing research on N-acetyl cysteine and its effect on spike protein ACE2 receptors compared to controls that don't get any of it.” Okay? So just call. Call. Call anybody there at the switchboard, ask for anyone, and tell them what your thoughts are, and what your needs are. 

Question

“Are you familiar with the Blue Zone documentary and diet? What are your thoughts?”  [0:49:34]

Answer

I don't know, per se, if one came out because I've probably, watched maybe three documentaries a week, week after week after week after week after week even before Alex Jones did any of his documentaries. I was watching documentaries when I was 7 years old. And one of the first documentaries I saw at age 7 with my father was the UN alleged peacekeeping people, I believe it was in the Congo, and they were shooting the medical doctor and his nurses. The UN blue hats were shooting them in this black and white 8-mm when I was 7 years old. I became very suspicious of the government and anyone with a uniform or a title because when I saw that documented, that this had been corrupted and they were taking the UN money and using it locally to keep the people suppressed, so they didn't want them help, so they shot the doctors, I started realizing, you have to be accountable locally where you're at for yourself and your behavior and what, anyone who is advising you or giving you work relationship, they have to have ethics. They have to have a history behind them. And now we have such a mobile society, you don't know what a doctor is. And they're never in one place, and you don't know who they grew up with, or are they married, or do they raise good kids, or do they go to their church or spiritual worship center, are they faithful people. Everyone's moving. You can't know it. So, I say to my patients, ask your specialist what their worldview is for their moral decisions. If you're going to take care of me, and maybe do surgery, I might be out on the table and you're going to have to make a moral decision if I have a crisis, and I need to know how you make your decisions. And they may say they’re of this religion, that religion, or no religion, and at least they stand for something and they're clear and they have integrity to that sense, because I didn't always profess my faith, but I was sincerely looking, you know, and trying to understand what I grew to know to be my savior Jesus Christ. So, I think we have every right to know about who's giving us advice or in charge of us, especially if we're incapacitated. Now, how did I get to that point? How did I get to that point? She was asking about N-acetyl cysteine and the quality of the money and the research and all that. Yeah, that's how I got there. Well, thank you for letting me vent. 

Question

“What are the effects of long-term Celebrex that's on a 70-year-old male who is in the gym daily and sports also every day?”  [0:52:32]

Answer

That’s an anti-inflammatory that's usually given for, you know, tissue damage, autoimmune damage to the tissues. I'm going to have to look up what Celebrex is. A COX-2 inhibitor, I'm not sure. These enzyme inhibitors really give me pause. I've been able to work for decades without ever having to prescribe Celebrex. And I remember when Vioxx came out. That was also I think a COX-2 inhibitor but I'd have to check again on the data, but we can actually create problems with blocking pathways, just like statins block the coenzyme reductase production, you know, get CoQ10 produced, which you need, and then you can get gradual heart failure from it. So, before we start using all these prescription medicines, please consider seeing a functional doctor who spends all their time trying to understand biochemical pathways, biochemistry and physiology, and the stereotactic physical dynamics of energy and light on the human being, including the energy given by structured water. You have to look into all those things with the enzymes and everything. So, get a good functional doctor and address that. I'll have to check into Celebrex since I've learned to practice medicine almost without needing any prescription medications, but I'll have to look up Celebrex and ask me again next week. I'll be brushed up on it. 

And then the Blue Zone Documentary and Diet, what are my thoughts? These documentaries, I don't know that I trust them all. I'd have to look up the exact one if it's called Blue Zone Documentary and Diet. I'll try and look it up. But we can go searching everywhere, but we know what to do right where we're at. Are you drinking enough water? Are you filtering it? Are you exercising? Do you know we’re made of protein and fat and you have to eat plenty of it to repair it? Do you know that you're a one-cell membrane separating you from the outside world from what you eat and scratch down your throat? Are you aware that the food quality, food drug, and agricultural studies that are done every five years on the nutritional contents of foods are published just like the named three studies about nutrition, education, and health? And these studies point out that every five years, the value of, let's say an orange compared to an orange in the 1950s, is maybe an eighth of its nutritive density. So yeah, we've got to be taking some very good quality minerals, methylated B complex, vitamin D. Get some sunlight. Get your bare feet out there in the grass like we used to do when we were kids. Get a good night's sleep. Have some hygiene. Have some rules about your life. Eat the rich protein and fats that we need. Very limited carbohydrates, mostly complex. Use the enzymes. Find out your blood type. These are the things. Don't go looking anywhere else if you're not doing the foundations. That's like a woman who doesn't have her house built or anything and she's already talking about wallpaper. You know, you can look at wallpaper all you want, but until you get a strong foundation and good position where the house is and the drainage and the sunlight to the north, south, and all this, it's kind of foolish to be looking there for blue zone material. And there's so much corruption. What is the book called…Forks Over Knives. Yeah, I think that was a documentary. And that was all epidemiological material in there. It was really notthe lowest kind of quote you can make is from epidemiological memory of food diaries. Give me a break. That's not science. That's associations. 

Question

“Do you recommend EDTA chelation for preventive purposes? Also IV versus oral?”  [0:57:43]

Answer

Yes. Yes. Yes. And yes. Remember, I have been telling you there are so many gimmicks out there and there's so much corruption in the functional alternative, complementary natural ways, it’s getting just as bad as standard medicine. And I only stick with things that have the years and decades that show value. And what is it? EDTA chelation. And our faithful God and creator knew that we were going to get these pollutants that are going to be exposed to us, and these are heavy metals, we have no natural way to get rid of them. And the chelating grabbing effect of the molecule, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, an amino acid made by man, grabs the mercury, the lead, the gadolinium, the arsenic, the uranium, the aluminum, et cetera, et cetera, it helps you pee it out. Therefore, it improves microcirculation. Therefore, better circulation helps you live longer, and healthier, have better lenses for your eyeballs and brain, and skin and longevity. We also give it with the vitamin C. So we do this anti-cancer by stressing any potential accumulation of cells. We kill it off with a high-dose burst of vitamin C with our chelation. Then we put in the methylated B vitamins, the zinc, and all these minerals. So yeah, it's very, very, very valuable. The oral is very limited. I'm not saying it's not valuable in the sense that it at least prevents what you take in your food from being as damaging as it would be, but don't think it's getting to your brain and your lens of your eyes and your heart and stuff like that.

Question

Hi Dr. E! I'm trying to drink half my weight in ounces of water. I’m working on getting on an exercise routine. I eat clean, and in addition to that, I'm wondering what you suggest for keeping the skin on the legs and arms from becoming "crepey." Thank you!”  [0:59:35]

Answer

Eat a lot of protein. There's a lot of collagen in the protein. That protein will then help the elastin/collagen get some natural hormones, and that'll help hold up all this stuff, so it doesn't wiggle as much or wiggle as much. Okay? If you're going to have that collagen/elastin, eat the protein, use the digestive enzyme, and get on natural hormones.