Cell Therapy
Cell therapy promotes physical regeneration
with help of the injection of curing cellular material into the body. It
is used to stimulate curing, counteract the effects of aging, and
treat a variety of degenerative diseases, such as arthritis,
Parkinson's disease, atherosclerosis, and cancer. Cell therapy is not
approved in the United States, but it is widely used throughout Europe
and in many other countries.
Cell therapy was developed by the late Paul
Niehans, M.D., a noted Swiss specialist in the field of gland and
organ transplants. He discovered the process in 1931, while performing
an emergency operation on a woman, whose parathyroid glands had been
damaged during thyroid surgery. Dr. Niehans aimed to transplant
fresh parathyroid glands from a steer calf, but as there was no time to perform a transplant, he mixed
a finely minced portion of the gland with a saline solution and
injected it into the patient. Her convulsions stopped and she
recovered fully.
Following the success of this first procedure, Dr.
Niehans administered cellular injections to thousands of people
including Pope Pius XII, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Emperor
Hirohito, and President Eisenhower.