In 2003, we noticed that the cytokine storm kills patients, not viral replication per se. This means gentle immunosuppression might be more effective than antiviral drugs, which invariably produce resistance, or vaccines, which don’t yet exist for most viruses. A safe, widely used class of blood pressure pills turns out to provide gentle immunosuppression. We’ve successfully used this approach in 20 of 24 patients with West Nile virus encephalitis since 2003. Our first 8 WNV patients were published in 2004 (1), and our approach was included in the Project BioShield II Act of 2005 (2). It’s patent protected.
Nevertheless, for humanitarian reasons, we’re offering our protocol for free. It should work for most viruses, including avian influenza. Anybody who wants to download it can do so by going to GenoMed’s homepage at www.genomed.com.
1. Moskowitz DW, Johnson FE. The central role of angiotensin I-converting enzyme in vertebrate pathophysiology. Curr Top Med Chem. 2004;4(13):1433–54. PMID: 15379656 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
2. Section 2151 of S. 975, pp. 295–6 [available at: http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=s109-975]
Sincerely, Dave Moskowitz MD FACP CEO GenoMed, Inc. St. Louis, Missouri www.genomed.com Ticker symbol: GMED (on OTC Pinksheets)
Thank you Dr. Moskowitz. Several here have spoken of the usefullness of statins - please continue to share the information that you have with us all.
Pixie - These two clinical studies (WNV & Avian Flu) by Dr. Moskowitz, involve Blood pressure meds, not statins, ACE inhibitors & angiotension II blockers. I read his web page, it looks very interesting, and hopefully promising.
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My husband pointed out an article appearing in Esquire magazine this month discussing ACE2 (angiotensin converting enzyme 2) as a potential drug to treat AI. Here’s a link to the study: http://tinyurl.com/yms96e
I believe these meds are much safer to take than the statins. Doc, thanks so much for allowing the access to the dosing info. I read the study results for WNV and clearly you were on to something that will make a huge difference.
Could someone who knows these medications please tell me if Tenex is in any of these categories or what category it is in? Thank you
Sunny, Answer-NO. Your drug class is alpha adrenergic receptor. You could go to the website of the docs-he has a Q&A where you might be able to ask questions.