The Stonewalling of Vitamin C
by Chris Gupta
www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris
September 14, 2005
..."Around 1942
Klenner’s wife suffered bleeding gums and her dentist
recommended pulling out all her teeth. Dr. Klenner thought
that solution too Draconian and remembered reading about
research using vitamin C to cure chimpanzees with a similar
problem. He gave her several injections of the vitamin and the
bleeding stopped. Soon, after, this dramatic result encouraged
him to try vitamin C on an obstinate man who was near death
from viral pneumonia. Klenner described this seminal
experience in a 1953 paper “ The Use of Vitamin C as an
Antibiotic”:"...
....From 1943 through 1947 Dr. Klenner reported successful
treatment of 41 more cases of viral pneumonia using massive
doses of vitamin C. From these cases he learned what dosage
and route of administration intravenously, intramuscularly,
or orally was best for each patient. Dr. Klenner gave these
details in a February 1948 paper published in the Journal of
Southern Medicine and Surgery entitled “Virus Pneumonia and
Its Treatment with Vitamin C”....
...when a measles epidemic came to Reidsville, Klenner was so
confident of vitamin C’s efficacy with these diseases that he
devised what would ordinarily be an outrageous experiment with
his two little daughters. He had them play with children known
to be in the contagious phase of measles. When the usual
syndrome of measles had developed and his daughters were
obviously sick, vitamin C was started. Again Klenner’s words
from his 1953 paper:
....“In this experiment it was found that 1,000 mg every four
hours, by mouth, would modify the attack. Smaller doses
allowed the disease to progress. When 1,000 mg was given every
2 hours all evidence of the infection cleared in 48 hours. If
the drug was then discontinued for a similar period (48 hours)
the above syndrome returned. We observed this off and on
picture for thirty days at which time the drug (vitamin C) was
given 1,000 mg every 2 hours around the clock for four days.
This time the picture cleared and did not return.”...
....With this background of experiences with human beings,
not experimental animals Klenner gained confidence in and
control over his vitamin C treatment...
.... Dr. Abram Hoffer recalls that a controlled study,
conducted in Great Britain in the late 50s with 70 young polio
victims, confirmed Klenner’s cure. All those given vitamin C
recovered completely, while a significant number of those not
given vitamin C suffered some permanent damage. (This study
was not published because of the success of the polio
vaccines.) Dr. Klenner himself reported that he received
scores of letters from doctors in the U.S. and Canada
corroborating his striking results. Some of the letters
described how they cured their own children, others, how the
doctors had cured themselves....
....The strategy of medical leaders conscious or
unconscious, planned or unplanned was clearly to ignore Dr.
Klenner and hope his claims would be forgotten....
...It’s as though polio-vitamin C research never happened....
....A thoroughly exasperated Klenner concluded a February 1959
paper in the Tri-State Medical Journal with these words:
“Should the disease be present in the acute form, ascorbic
acid given in proper amounts around the clock, both by mouth
and needle, will bring about a rapid recovery. We believe that
ascorbic acid must be given by needle in amounts from 250 mg
to 400 mg per kg body weight every 4 to 6 hours for 48 hours
and then every 8 to 12 hours. The dose by mouth is the dose
that can be tolerated. To those who say that Polio is without
cure, I say that they lie. Polio in the acute form can be
cured in 96 hours or less. I beg of someone in authority to
try it.”"....
This article clearly shows how the Medical Mafia along with
our politicians stonewall so many non toxic and efficacious
nutrients to protect their monopoly of disease treatment.
Ironically Dr. Klenner referred to Vitamin C as a drug! This
is a tacit example on why there is such an effort to regulate
our nutrients as drugs.
Even when one knows that IV vitamin C, magnesium, Hyperbaric
and many, many efficacious but less profitable treatments
exist majority are simply not able realize these benefits. It
is clear that we all need to learn this information, then
hopefully use it against these shysters in the courts. Often
the toxic drugs they foist on us are known be dangerous less
efficacious than that can be shown with nutrients!
**********************
The Origin of the 42-Year Stonewall of Vitamin C Robert Landwehr
1250 Grizzly Peak, Berkeley, CA 94708.
In the late spring of 1949 the United States was in the grip
of its worst poliomyelitis epidemic ever. On June 10 a paper
on ways to save the lives of bulbar polio victims was read at
the Annual Session of the American Medical Association
(subsequently printed in its journal, JAMA, September 3, 1949,
pages 1-8, volume 141, no. 1). Following the talk members of
the audience were invited to comment. The first speaker, a
leading authority from Pasadena, focused on details of
tracheotomy techniques caused when paralyzed breathing,
swallowing and coughing muscles of victims threatened their
lives. Why the next person was recognized is puzzling. The
only national recognition he had received and it was
obviously very limited was that his picture appeared in
Ebony in 1947 for having delivered of a deaf-mute black woman
the first known surviving, identical quadruplets in the
country. Here is the abstract of his remarks as recorded in
JAMA:
“Dr. F. R. Klenner, Reidsville, N.C.: It might be interesting
to learn how poliomyelitis was treated in Reidsville, N.C.,
during the 1948 epidemic. In the past seven years, virus
infections have been treated and cured in a period of
seventy-two hours by the employment of massive frequent
injections of ascorbic acid, or vitamin C. I believe that if
vitamin C in these massive doses 6,000 to 20,000 mg in a
twenty-four hour period is given to these patients with
poliomyelitis none will be paralyzed and there will be no
further maiming or epidemics of poliomyelitis.”
The discussion period was, of course, to be devoted to hearing
relevant comments of the world’s leading authorities on the
treatment of bulbar polio symptoms, not to airing another
claim of a cure. One can imagine the silence that must have
greeted this sweeping, out-of-place declaration by a
small-town general practitioner. Four other speakers, three
more bulbar experts and an anesthesiologist, followed. None
referred to Dr. Klenner’s remarks.
The empirical, clinical basis for Klenner’s statement is found
in his paper “The Treatment of Poliomyelitis and Other Virus
Diseases with Vitamin C”, published in the July 1949 issue of
the Journal of Southern Medicine and Surgery. On pages 211-212
he writes:
“In the poliomyelitis epidemic in North Carolina in 1948, 60
cases of this disease came under our care. These patients
presented all or almost all of these signs and symptoms: Fever
of 101 to 104.6°, headache, pain at the back of the eyes,
conjunctivitis, scarlet throat; pain between the shoulders,
the back of the neck, one or more extremity, the lumbar back;
nausea, vomiting and constipation. In 15 of these cases the
diagnosis was confirmed by lumbar puncture; the cell count
ranging from 33 to 125. Eight had been in contact with a
proven case; two of this group received spinal taps.
Examination of the spinal fluid was not carried out in others
for the reasons: (1) Flexner and Amoss had warned that ‘simple
lumbar puncture attended with even very slight hemorrhage
opens the way for the passage of the virus from the blood into
the central nervous system and thus promotes infection.’ (2) A
patient presenting all or almost all of the above signs and
symptoms during an epidemic of poliomyelitis must be
considered infected with this virus. (3) Routine lumbar
puncture would have made it obligatory to report each case as
diagnosed to the health authorities. This would have deprived
myself of valuable clinical material and the patients of most
valuable therapy, since they would have been removed to a
receiving center in a nearby town.
“The treatment employed was vitamin C in massive doses. It was
given like any other antibiotic every two to four hours. The
initial dose was 1,000 to 2,000 mg, depending on age. Children
up to four years received the injections intramuscularly.
Since laboratory facilities for whole blood and urine
determinations of the concentration of vitamin C were not
available, the temperature curve was adopted as the guide for
additional medication. The rectal temperature was recorded
every two hours. No temperature response after the second hour
was taken to indicate the second 1,000 or 2,000 mg. If there
was a drop in fever after two hours, two more hours was
allowed before the second dose. This schedule was followed for
24 hours. After this time the fever was consistently down, so
the drug was given 1,000 to 2,000 mg every six hours for the
next 48 hours. All patients were clinically well after 72
hours. After three patients had a relapse the drug was
continued for at least 48 hours longer 1,000 to 2,000 mg
every eight to 12 hours. Where spinal taps were performed, it
was the rule to find a reversion of the fluid to normal after
the second the of treatment.
“For patients treated in the home the dose schedule was 2,000
mg by needle every six hours, supplemented by 1,000 to 2,000
mg every two hours by mouth. The tablet was crushed and
dissolved in fruit juice. All of the natural “C” in fruit
juice is taken up by the body; this made us expect catalytic
action from this medium. Rutin, 20 mg, was used with vitamin C
by mouth in a few cases, instead of the fruit juice. Hawley
and others have shown that vitamin C taken by mouth will show
its peak of excretion in the urine in from four to six hours.
Intravenous administration produces this peak in from one to
three hours. By this route, however, the concentration in the
blood is raised so suddenly that a transitory overflow into
the urine results before the tissues are saturated. Some
authorities suggest that the subcutaneous method is the most
conservative in terms of vitamin C loss, but this factor is
overwhelmingly neutralized by the factor of pain inflicted.
“Two patients in this series of 60 regurgitated fluid through
the nose. This was interpreted as representing the dangerous
bulbar type. For a patient in this category postural drainage,
oxygen administration, in some cases tracheotomy, needs to be
instituted, until the vitamin C has had sufficient time to
work in our experience 36 hours. Failure to recognize this
factor might sacrifice the chance of recovery. With these
precautions taken, every patient of the series recovered
uneventfully within three to five days.”
This paper is quoted at length to allow readers to judge for
themselves whether or not Dr. Klenner made up all these
details. In subsequent publications he gave details about
curing life-threatening polio cases, and described his general
procedures in his paper “The Vitamin and Massage Treatment for
Acute Poliomyelitis”, appearing in the Journal of Southern
Medicine and Surgery in August, 1952.
One of the reasons why Klenner’s declaration at the AMA annual
session was undoubtedly met with silence was that since 1939
polio experts were quite certain that vitamin C was not
effective against polio. There seemed little doubt that Dr.
Albert B. Sabin, a highly respected figure in medical research
even before he developed his successful vaccines, had
demonstrated that vitamin C had no value in combatting polio
viruses. In 1939 he published a paper showing that vitamin C
had no effect in preventing paralysis in rhesus monkeys
experimentally infected with a strain of polio virus. He had
tried to corroborate the work of Dr. Claus W. Jungeblut,
another highly respected medical researcher, who had published
in 1935 and 1937 papers indicating that vitamin C might be of
benefit. Sabin could not reproduce Jungeblut’s results even
though he consulted Jungeblut during the course of the
experiments. It seemed to be a fair trial, and Sabin’s
negative results virtually ended experiments with vitamin C
and polio.
How then could a Dr. Fred R. Klenner, a virtually unknown
general practitioner specializing in diseases of the chest,
from a town no one ever heard of, with no national
credentials, no research grants and no experimental
laboratory, have the nerve to make his sweeping claim in front
of that prestigious body of polio authorities?
Around 1942 Klenner’s wife suffered bleeding gums and her
dentist recommended pulling out all her teeth. Dr. Klenner
thought that solution too Draconian and remembered reading
about research using vitamin C to cure chimpanzees with a
similar problem. He gave her several injections of the vitamin
and the bleeding stopped. Soon, after, this dramatic result
encouraged him to try vitamin C on an obstinate man who was
near death from viral pneumonia. Klenner described this
seminal experience in a 1953 paper “The Use of Vitamin C as an
Antibiotic”:
“Our interest with vitamin C against the virus organism began
ten years ago in a modest rural home. Here a patient who was
receiving symptomatic treatment for virus pneumonia had
suddenly developed cynosis [sic: cyanosis]. He refused
hospitalization for supportive oxygen therapy. X-Ray had not
been considered because of its dubious value and because the
nearest department equipped to give such treatment was 69
miles distant. Two grams of vitamin C was given
intramuscularly with the hope that the anaerobic condition
existing in the tissues would be relieved by the catalytic
action of vitamin C acting as a gas transport aiding cellular
respiration. This was an old idea; the important factor being
that it worked. Within 30 minutes after giving the drug (which
was carried in my medical bag for the treatment of diarrhea in
children) the characteristic breathing and slate-like color
had cleared. Returning six hours later, at eight in the
evening, the patient was found sitting over the edge of his
bed enjoying a late dinner. Strangely enough his fever was
three degrees less than it was at 2 p.m. that same afternoon.
This sudden change in the condition of the patient led us to
suspect that vitamin C was playing a role of far greater
significance than that of a simple respiratory catalyst. A
second injection of one gram of vitamin C was administered, by
the same route, on this visit and then subsequently at six
hour intervals for the next three days. This patient was
clinically well after 36 hours of chemotherapy. From this
casual observation we have been able to assemble sufficient
clinical evidence to prove unequivocally that vitamin C is the
antibiotic of choice in the handling of all types of virus
diseases. Furthermore it is a major adjuvant in the treatment
of all other infectious diseases.”
Again this paper is quoted at length to allow readers to judge
for themselves whether or not the author made this up or
deluded himself in some way. From 1943 through 1947 Dr.
Klenner reported successful treatment of 41 more cases of
viral pneumonia using massive doses of vitamin C. From these
cases he learned what dosage and route of administration
intravenously, intramuscularly, or orally was best for each
patient. Dr. Klenner gave these details in a February 1948
paper published in the Journal of Southern Medicine and
Surgery entitled “Virus Pneumonia and Its Treatment with
Vitamin C”. This article was the first of Dr. Klenner’s
twenty-eight (through 1974) scientific publications.
Klenner realized, of course, that vitamin C’s effectiveness
with viral pneumonia opened up the possibility of curing other
viral diseases. “With a great deal of enthusiasm,” in
Klenner’s phrase, he tried its effectiveness with all of the
childhood diseases, particularly measles. By the spring of
1948, when a measles epidemic came to Reidsville, Klenner was
so confident of vitamin C’s efficacy with these diseases that
he devised what would ordinarily be an outrageous experiment
with his two little daughters. He had them play with children
known to be in the contagious phase of measles. When the usual
syndrome of measles had developed and his daughters were
obviously sick, vitamin C was started. Again Klenner’s words
from his 1953 paper:
“In this experiment it was found that 1,000 mg every four
hours, by mouth, would modify the attack. Smaller doses
allowed the disease to progress. When 1,000 mg was given every
2 hours all evidence of the infection cleared in 48 hours. If
the drug was then discontinued for a similar period (48 hours)
the above syndrome returned. We observed this off and on
picture for thirty days at which time the drug (vitamin C) was
given 1,000 mg every 2 hours around the clock for four days.
This time the picture cleared and did not return.”
With this background of experiences with human beings, not
experimental animals Klenner gained confidence in and
control over his vitamin C treatment.
One reason he turned his attention early to treating measles
was that he knew that measle [sic: measles] viruses were about
as small as polio viruses and he hoped massive doses of
vitamin C would be effective against the dreaded Crippler. By
1948 he was ready to treat polio with vitamin C, and in that
year North Carolina suffered its worst epidemic ever 2,518
new cases. Dr. Klenner’s hopes were realized when, as has been
related above, he cured sixty patients with massive frequent
injections of vitamin C.
With seven years of experience behind him one can understand
not only why Dr. Klenner had the nerve to speak up on June 10,
1949 but why he undoubtedly felt morally obligated to do so.
After 1949 polio epidemics continued to take their terrible
toll. The peak year for The Crippler in the U.S. was 1952
57,628 cases. During the 1950s isolated doctors around the
world tried Klenner’s cure. Those who used vitamin C at doses
below those recommended by Klenner reported no benefit; those
who followed his dosages reported good results. Dr. H. Bauer
of the University of Switzerland Clinic, Basel in 1952
reported benefits to his polio patients with 10 to 20 grams of
vitamin C per day. Dr. Edward Greer, using doses in Klenner’s
recommended range of 50 to 80 grams per day, recorded in 1955
good clinical results with five serious cases of polio. Dr.
Abram Hoffer recalls that a controlled study, conducted in
Great Britain in the late 50s with 70 young polio victims,
confirmed Klenner’s cure. All those given vitamin C recovered
completely, while a significant number of those not given
vitamin C suffered some permanent damage. (This study was not
published because of the success of the polio vaccines.) Dr.
Klenner himself reported that he received scores of letters
from doctors in the U.S. and Canada corroborating his striking
results. Some of the letters described how they cured their
own children, others, how the doctors had cured themselves.
What kind of reception did Dr. Klenner’s discoveries receive
from the medical establishment? There are two references to
Klenner’s 1949 paper in national, mainstream publications. The
title of that paper was included in the October 7, 1949 issue
of the Current List of Medical Literature, published by the
U.S. Army Medical Library. The paper was also included in the
second edition of A Bibliography of Infantile Paralysis
1789-1949, published in 1951 and prepared under the direction
of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. Instead of
abstracting the paper in the usual manner, it printed only Dr. Klenner’s last paragraph, which was not a summary but an
obvious rhetorical statement Klenner felt necessary to counter
the skepticism he knew would greet his quick, inexpensive
cures. Other than these two references, mainstream medical
publications made no mention of Klenner and his work. One of
JAMA’s regular departments was Current Medical Literature, in
which its editors abstracted papers they considered of special
note. Many polio papers were abstracted in 1949, but not
Klenner’s.
The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis was founded in
1938 by polio’s most famous victim, President Franklin
Roosevelt, to raise money through the March of Dimes to combat
the disease. Most polio research was funded by the National
Foundation. There is no mention of Dr. Klenner’s work or of
vitamin C’s possible benefits to polio victims in any of the
Foundation’s annual reports. Not one dime was spent to prove
or disprove Klenner’s claim. Before 1949 a claim of a cure was
promptly looked into and money spent until it was proved
false. But with Klenner’s claim nothing happened.
It was certainly not for lack of research funds that nothing
happened. John M. Russell, in the 1960 book The Crisis in
American Medicine, edited by Marion K. Sanders, described the
glut and waste of money for medical research in the l950s.
Russell points out that the public clamor for a cure for polio
was so great that in 1954 Congress appropriated $1,000,000
specifically earmarked for polio research. It turned out that
there was so much polio money floating around that the
recipient of this largess, the U.S. Public Health Service,
classified such unlikely diseases as hepatitis as “poliolike”
so that none of this money would have to be returned to the
U.S. taxpayer.
Five International Poliomyelitis Congresses were convened
every three years from 1948 to 1960 to deal with the polio
epidemics around the world. In all of the voluminous reports
of these conferences there is no reference to Klenner or to
vitamin C. Only the first congress dealt briefly with the
possible effect of nutrition, and this was dismissed by the
statement of an expert “that no clinical evidence is known to
me which justifies an increase in intake of vitamins beyond
usual recommended allowances”.
Thus in 1949 the polio experts at the Annual Session of the
AMA knew of Klenner’s claim, as did the many readers of JAMA’s
lead article of its September 3 issue, the many researchers
who used the National Foundation’s Bibliography, those that
kept up with the titles in the Current List of Medical
Literature, and the relatively few readers of the Journal of
Southern Medicine and Surgery. All this exposure led to no
official inquiry or follow-up of Dr. Klenner’s work by U.S.
government health authorities or the National Foundation. No
one in authority anywhere stepped forward to insist that it be
checked out. The strategy of medical leaders conscious or
unconscious, planned or unplanned was clearly to ignore Dr.
Klenner and hope his claims would be forgotten.
It worked. Klenner’s cure never became well known and today
has sunk almost into oblivion. A synopsis of polio infection
and research by Ernest Kovacs entitled “The Biochemistry of
Poliomyelitis Viruses”, published in 1964, makes no reference
to Klenner. In 1985 Friedrick Koch and Gebhard Kock published
The Molecular Biology of Poliovirus. It contains in its
opening chapter a history of the disease, but it says nothing
about Klenner, or even about the extensive vitamin C research
done by Drs. Jungeblut and Sabin with monkeys in the 50s. It’s
as though polio-vitamin C research never happened.
To this day it is mainstream medicine’s position that there is
no cure for polio. The Encyclopedia American quotes Richard W.
Price of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center of New York
City: “No specific treatment is effective once neurological
involvement becomes manifest.” A thoroughly exasperated
Klenner concluded a February 1959 paper in the Tri-State
Medical Journal with these words:
“Should the disease be present in the acute form, ascorbic
acid given in proper amounts around the clock, both by mouth
and needle, will bring about a rapid recovery. We believe that
ascorbic acid must be given by needle in amounts from 250 mg
to 400 mg per kg body weight every 4 to 6 hours for 48 hours
and then every 8 to 12 hours. The dose by mouth is the dose
that can be tolerated. To those who say that Polio is without
cure, I say that they lie. Polio in the acute form can be
cured in 96 hours or less. I beg of someone in authority to
try it.”
Today there are areas of the world where polio vaccine is
still not used and where the incidence of polio is increasing.
Polio remains The Crippler, and the only effort of the World
Health Organization is to increase vaccination. The leading
medical authorities the editors of the leading journals, the
heads of the AMA and the National Foundation, U.S. Surgeons
General and the heads of other U.S. governmental health
agencies were, and are, responsible for stonewalling for 42
years Dr. Klenner’s simple, inexpensive cure for many viral
diseases, including the dreaded polio.
1949 a year in medicine which will live in infamy.
From Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine, Volume 6,
Number 2, 1991, pp. 99-103