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      Archived from 
      Charlotte Gerson's book 
       
      Story 
         
      E.B., aged 43, reported to her doctor with a lump in her breast in January2002, was biopsied and told that she had breast cancer. She took no
 action. In January 2004, she reported to Loma Linda University Medical
 Center and was diagnosed as suffering from Stage 4 breast cancer with
 liver metastases. According to the medical report, her liver was "covered
 with tumors and was shutting down; her skin and the whites of her eyes
 were yellow." (7)
 
 E.B. was offered chemotherapy and, not knowing otherwise, she
 accepted one treatment. Her oncologist stated that, in view of her
 advanced condition, he was not sure she could survive for two months,
 but he hoped that chemotherapy would give her a year of life. That was
 when the patient began to look for other options and found out about
 the Gerson Therapy. From her research she knew that, with conventional
 medical treatment, cases of breast cancer with liver metastases
 had less than a 1% two-year survival rate, so her only hope was to try an
 alternative protocol.
 
 After completing two years on the Gerson Therapy, E.B. was well
 enough to go skiing in Tulluride, Colorado, one of the steepest mountains
 in the U.S. Now, after three years, judging by her PET/CT
 (positron emission tomography/computed tomography) scan of August
 2006, she has a fully functioning liver and no malignancy or metastases
 anywhere in her body. E.B. enjoys skiing in winter and water skiing in
 the summer, rock climbing, playing golf and riding her motorcycle. She
 also travels frequently.
 
 REFERENCES
 7. Letter to Charlotte Gerson from patient.
 
 
  
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