Therapeutic Fever“I would cure all diseases if I only could produce fever.” Parmenides, Greek physician and philosopher, 510 BC This chapter will discuss modern innovations to both approaches, as applied in the treatment of cancer. Fever turns out to be one of the missing links in understanding cancer. Most cancer patients have a lower core temperature and cannot mount a fever. Thus they are unable to activate their immune system. We know scientifically that fever is a protective mechanism. When body temperature reaches 101.3° F (38.5° C) the immune system shifts into a state of alarm. |
Within six hours, almost every major defense within the immune system doubles its efforts. |
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This approach is necessary to raise the body to a therapeutic fever range, unlike traditional methods such as sauna methods and hot tub, which do not affect core temperature or achieve temperatures that are as high as the temperature range that occurs during a fever. In the Gorter Model, total-body hyperthermia is provided to about 70% of all patients. |
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Hyperthermia for cancer treatment
Fever and heat therapy have been recognized for their beneficial effects on health since antiquity.
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Fever: Foe or Friend?
In our culture, there is a pervasive fear of fever. Many people see fever as the cause of illness, rather than the body’s natural attempt at healing.
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The Role of Fever in Immunity
The research makes it clear that fever is a protective mechanism which plays an important role in fighting infection, healing wounds, and destroying malignancies.
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A Century of Research on Fever
A number of researchers have tracked this issue in large clinical trials over the past 100 years, starting with published reports in 1854 that many cancer patients have a “remarkable disease-free history.”
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How Fever Activates Immune Function
As described in detail earlier in this chapter, fever is actually the signal that mounts immune activity in response to infection, illness, injury, or malignancy.
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The Role of Fever in Immune Development
In a newborn the immune system is immature and underdeveloped. For example, protective antibodies are not made by the infant’s body, and the baby relies on those ...
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all cervical cancers.
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Effects of Fever Suppression
When fever is blocked with medication such as aspirin, Tylenol, or antibiotics, that appears to compromise long term health by impairing immune development.
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Fatima Galamba, a patient with metastatic breast Erik Peper, PhD Truus Kleij-Swan, more than five year long-term survivor of
Partner of Teun van Vliet, Tour de France |
Patient's Experience at MCC
See what our patients say about their experience with cancer treatment at the Medical Center Cologne
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References
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