Hydrazine sulfate reduces tumors

        (in famed magazine publisher)

        Kathy Keeton, founder of Omni and Longevity magazines, and wife to Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione, credits her recovery from breast cancer to hydrazine sulfate, an inexpensive crystal salt that has been widely studied and rejected by conventional cancer specialists. Keeton was told in 1995 she had late, stage four breast cancer that had spread to her stomach, lymph nodes, aorta and liver. She was given six weeks to live, but today has a normal and nearly cancer-free life.

        Rather than undergo the standard treatment of chemotherapy recommended by her cancer specialists, she chose instead to use hydrazine sulfate. Magazines owned by Keeton and Guccione had reported repeatedly over the past 12 years on successful testing of the drug by Dr. Joseph Gold of the Syracuse Cancer Research Institute. "Most establishment doctors have dismissed hydrazine sulfate, even though every study done by the Syracuse Cancer Research Institute, and dozens of other anecdotal studies, have shown that it is remarkably effective in helping reduce tumors and allowing patients to eat normally," said Keeton. "The reason the drug is dismissed is perverse -- it's because the medical establishment can't make any money on it."

        Keeton has regained her normal weight, eats most foods and has resumed an active business life. "My recovery from cancer is all due to Dr. Gold and deciding to fight it with two of his hydrazine sulfate tablets a day," she said. "All my tumors have shrunk or disappeared. I have three tiny ones in my liver still, but there were six originally. Life is back to normal." Dr. Gold attributes the success of hydrazine sulfate to its ability to reverse cachexia -- the debilitating condition when energy in the body is depleted trying to feed tumors, and the body starts to consume itself until the patient dies. "The drug blocks the abnormal process in the body that causes cachexia, tumor-triggered starvation," Gold said. Gold suggested economics may explain why the cancer establishment refuses to fairly evaluate the inexpensive drug. "Hydrazine sulfate is a mass-produced substance," said Dr. Gold. "A one pound jar costs less than $10 and, depending on the situation, would provide enough material for anywhere from 50 to 100,000 doses."

        More information on hydrazine sulfate can be found at the Syracuse Cancer Institute Web site at http://www.ngen.com/hs-cancer/  or you can contact Dr. Gold at Syracuse Cancer Research Institute, Inc. Presidential Plaza 600 East Genesee Street Syracuse NY 13202-311 Phone 315.472.6616