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Metabolic Solutions Report

Terry Chamberlin, B.Sc., C.N.C., Bioanalyst Nova Scotia, Canada msibio@yahoo.com 902-584-3810

Addiction Therapy for Drugs, Alcohol, Caffeine, and Sugar


by Reagan Houston

(OMNS Oct 21, 2014) In 1977, Alfred Libby and Irwin Stone (1, 2) realized that addiction is both a disease
and poor nutrition. Having lost their appetite, addicts are deficient in vitamin C, other vitamins, minerals, and
protein. Genetics and certainly bad lifestyle may have contributed to the disease, but conventional medical
therapy is almost useless until their nutrition is restored. In one test, very high doses of vitamin C gave a
temporary cure to 30 out of 30 drug addicts. Vitamin C was observed to be an easy, quick, and painless
remedy. Ewan Cameron (3) treated cancer patients on heavy doses of opiate-type painkillers. When vitamin
C stopped the pain for five cancer patients, the patients wanted no morphine. Importantly, they had no
withdrawal symptoms. Stone suggested that ascorbate mimics morphine and probably fits into the opiate
receptor sites.

Libby and Stone's Protocol for Drug Addicts:

 Work with your physician and stop intake of all drugs or Methadone.
 Dissolve 25 to 85 grams (25,000-85,000 milligrams) of sodium ascorbate [or better, calcium
ascorbate] powder in milk and have the patient drink it during the day.
 Adjust ascorbate dose up or down according to the estimated drug intake. Continued to adjust dose to
almost cause loose stools.
 Give multivitamins, a mineral tablet, and vitamin E and protein powder. Doses were widely variable
and adjusted for each patient.
 The vitamin C was started as soon as possible in many divided doses through the day. Other items
were also given in divided doses.
 Continued full dose for 4 to 6 days and then slowly decreased the vitamin C down to 10,000 to
30,000 mg/day. Continued the lower doses indefinitely or as needed.

What Happened to Patients after Starting Vitamin C?

 One incoherent patient received 30,000 mg of vitamin C. In 45 minutes he could hold a normal
conversation.
 After 12 to 24 hours, appetite started to return, mental alertness and visual acuity were improved.
 Patient was often amazed that treatment worked without another narcotic.
 After 2 or 3 days, patient felt fine, and he or she could sleep.
 One patient took 45,000 mg of sodium ascorbate in milk. Five hours later, he took a heavy dose of
heroin but felt no drug effect. Remarkably, vitamin C had stopped the desire for drugs. (1)

To repeat: Libby and Stone demonstrated a simple but effective method of temporarily curing 30 out of 30
drug addicts regardless of the type of drug. Their cure is temporary since patients could be followed for
only about 30 days. This did not give time to evaluate and treat the basic causes of the addictions. However,
treatment for basic causes can proceed with greater expectation of success since the patients have become
properly nourished.

(Reagan Houston, MS, PE (Professional Chemical Engineer), age 91, takes his vitamins. His daily exercise
usually includes three flights of stairs in about 50 seconds. His web site is http://www.cancertherapies.org .)
References:

1. Libby AF and Stone I. The Hypoascorbemia-Kwashiorkor approach to drug addiction: a pilot study.
Orthomolecular Psychiatry. 1977; 6(4): 300-308. Read the complete article at
http://orthomolecular.org/library/jom/1977/pdf/1977-v06n04-p300.pdf or Google: "Libby Stone drug
addiction 1977."

2. Stone I. The Healing Factor: Vitamin C against Disease. 1972, New York. Free full text at
http://vitamincfoundation.org/stone/ .

3. Cameron E & Baird GM. Ascorbic acid and dependence on opiates in patients with advanced
disseminated cancer. J International Research Communication. 1973; 1(6):33.

Nutritional Medicine is Orthomolecular Medicine

Orthomolecular medicine uses safe, effective nutritional therapy to fight illness. For more information:
http://www.orthomolecular.org

Find a Doctor

To locate an orthomolecular physician near you: http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v06n09.shtml

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