Insulin Potentiated Therapy
The intelligent form of cancer treatment!
The conventional chemotherapy carried out by conventional medicine has proved to have severe side effects because it destroys in addition to cancer cells even healthy cells of the immune system.
The insulin potentiated therapy follows a different principle.
The insulin potentiated therapy is a treatment for cancer patients, which uses the hormone insulin in order to improve drug transport into the tumor cells.
Insulin is normally formed in the pancreas of the human body.
With its help the glucose which is vital for life (blood glucose) can be transported to the cells.
Additional chemotherapy during the IPT is reinforced by the process - about 10-25% of normal chemotherapy doses which are usually given in conventional cancer therapies suffice.
Side effects of chemotherapy are significantly reduced by this process. Clinical trials have shown efficacy for cancer diseases.
During insulin potentiated therapy hypoglycemia of the body is effected by administration of insulin (hormone of the pancreas). Insulin allows the smuggling of glucose into the individual cells of the body - most of the body's cells need glucose.
At the rind of the tumor cells insulin receptors (docking sites for insulin) are found in a much higher concentration than in the other body cells. Cancer cells need a lot of energy which they gain from the glucose.
If the blood sugar concentration in the body is lowered by an overdose of insulin the tumor cells incur a hypoglycemia and thus open the membrane gates for glucose.
In the phase of hypoglycemia a low-dose chemotherapy is infused together with the glucose solution. 
This therapy can be carried out as an outpatient procedure and takes about 3-4 hours (the patient is under constant medical supervision) - as a side effect only sweating, hunger and fatigue could be observed- Conclusion of this treatment is due to the mild dose of chemotherapy - the immune system suffers here little damage.





