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911

Cellular mitochondria produce a small molecule called ATP. Inside cells, ATP serves as an energy source but released outside the cell, it acts as a danger signal. Suramin inhibits the signaling function of ATP, eliminating the cell danger response associated with autism. In a small, clinical trial, a single dose of the drug suramin produced dramatic, but transient, improvements in all of those receiving suramin with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). More broadly, the trial findings support the “cell danger response theory,” which posits that autism and other chronic conditions are fundamentally driven by metabolic dysfunction—and thus treatable.

Listen to this interview (soundcloud.com). It is as plain as the day-is-bright that toxins injected in one's body can trigger autism and a host of other auto-immune diseases. All vaccines contain toxins (adjuvants) to intentionally trigger an immune response. It is this folly that defies and contradicts Nature itself. To not acknowledge that an individual's immune system is vastly unique is appalling. The 'one-size-fits-all' ideology of the vaccine industry is harmful and delusional.

https://health.ucsd.edu/news/topics/Suramin-Autism/Pages/default.aspx

Cellular mitochondria produce a small molecule called ATP. Inside cells, ATP serves as an energy source but released outside the cell, it acts as a danger signal. Suramin inhibits the signaling function of ATP, eliminating the cell danger response associated with autism. In a small, clinical trial, a single dose of the drug suramin produced dramatic, but transient, improvements in all of those receiving suramin with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). More broadly, the trial findings support the ***“cell danger response theory,”*** which posits that autism and other chronic conditions are fundamentally driven by metabolic dysfunction—and thus treatable. [**Listen to this interview**](https://soundcloud.com/ucsdhealth/suramin-autism?utm_source=health.ucsd.edu&utm_campaign=wtshare&utm_medium=widget&utm_content=https%253A%252F%252Fsoundcloud.com%252Fucsdhealth%252Fsuramin-autism). It is as plain as the day-is-bright that toxins injected in one's body can trigger autism and a host of other auto-immune diseases. All vaccines contain toxins (adjuvants) to intentionally trigger an immune response. It is *this* folly that defies and contradicts Nature itself. To not acknowledge that an individual's immune system is vastly unique is appalling. The 'one-size-fits-all' ideology of the vaccine industry is harmful and delusional. https://health.ucsd.edu/news/topics/Suramin-Autism/Pages/default.aspx

(post is archived)

[–] [deleted] 3 pts (edited )

"a 100-year-old drug" figures I'm sure there is still "insufficient research"

Suramin sodium (scbt.com)

[–] 0 pt

Interesting. This site must be outside of the US because it is purported as not being available for sale in the US.

[–] 1 pt

To not acknowledge that an individual's immune system is vastly unique is appalling.

Spot on! Thanks for sharing. They still deny the connection to this day and most people believe their lies! Reminds me of Conspiracy Theories. The only people who call it that are people who haven't researched the heck out of it. If your kid has autism you will research the heck out of it.

So we can call the autism connection a Conspiracy and drop the theory part.

[–] 1 pt

You inferred it. He implied it.

[–] 0 pt

Infer - verb (used with object), in·ferred, in·fer·ring. 1. to derive by reasoning; conclude or judge from premises or evidence:

[–] 0 pt

But you seemed to be using it as him hinting at something without directly stating it, which is a common mistake people make. If you're the person suggesting things without outright saying it, you're not inferring - you're implying. If you're the one figuring out what that person is getting at, you're inferring.

I guess if you used it to mean he concluded something from his research, well, that's weird but fair enough. I stand corrected I guess.

[–] 2 pts

I won't quibble about it and could have used the word - 'implied'. It was my inference and deduction of the study, not the researchers, and added it to the headline to get people to read it. I think its important.

[–] 1 pt

Isn't suramin found in pine needles??? Pine needle tea is used to counter the protein spikes in vaccines.

[–] 0 pt

Someone else stated this too. Is this certain type of pine needles used in Essiac tea?

[–] 0 pt

They are long needles. You just cut the ends off and discard. Cut into small pieces like 1" . Place in a cup and pour boiling water over them.