Dr. Otto Warburg
"If our internal environment was changed from an acidic oxygen deprived environment to an alkaline environment full of oxygen, viruses, bacteria and fungus cannot live." Otto Warburg, Nobel Prize recipient, 1931.
In the early 1930's Dr Otto Warburg, twice a Nobel Laureate was awarded the Nobel Prize for discovering the primary cause for cancer. He said, 'for cancer there is only one prime cause… the replacement of the oxygen respiration in normal cells by the fermentation of sugar'.1 In his speech at the annual meeting of Nobelists in Lindau, Germany he further stated … ‘All healthy normal cells are thus obligate aerobes (bacteria that must have oxygen), whereas all sick cancer cells are partial anaerobes (bacteria that must not have oxygen).
From the standpoint of the physics and chemistry of life, this difference between the normal and cancer cell is so great that one can scarcely picture a greater difference. Oxygen gas, the donor of energy in plants and animals, is dethroned in cancer cells and replaced by an energy-yielding reaction of the lowest living forms'.2 In other words, the growth of cancer cells is initiated by a relative lack of oxygen. Furthermore, cancer cells cannot live in an oxygen-rich environment.
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References:
1. Citizens Council for Truth In Medicine, Washington, D.C.
2. M & I Oxygen Therapy 7-94