265: CHTV in Mexico: Revolutionizing Cancer Treatments

265: CHTV in Mexico: Revolutionizing Cancer Treatments

with Dr. Dr. Antonio Jimenez

I am excited for this third and final episode of my Cancun Mexico health series. This week I'll be featuring a returning guest, and one of our favorite Cancer docs, Dr. Tony Jimenez.

His Seven Key Principles of Cancer Therapy utilize innovative, non-toxic treatments to treat all stages and types of cancer.

Dr. Tony owns Hope4Cancer centers, which is leading the charge in holistic and integrative oncology offering more treatments under one roof than any other integrative treatment center in the world. And today I will be taking a tour in this world class facility and bringing you along.

Additional Information:

Learn More about Dr. Antonio Jimenez or the Hope4Cancer Treatment Centers:

CHTV Episode #229: Hope For Cancer with Dr. Jimenez:

Live it To Lead it is here! Join us via livestream

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
I know you've been waiting for this episode. This is the third of the three-part series bringing you alternative treatments in Mexico that you haven't heard about, possibly, you need to hear about, and that's why I traveled to Mexico. This is the third of the three-part series, and, yeah, this is the one you've been waiting for because I'm going to tour you around the top cancer clinic. You're going to see an interview that I did with Dr. Tony Jimenez, and he is the brains behind a lot of these alternative therapies that he's brought together in two clinics in Mexico. I actually show you the actual things that they're doing. Really exciting.

By the way, it is a two-part series on Dr. Jimenez I did interview him on another lecture, but this one I think is the most exciting because you're going to see this clinic, Hope4Cancer. Man, can't wait. This is going to be one you're going to want to share. You're going to want to share this whole series. People need this information, so please share. I'll see you on this episode of Cell TV.

Ashley Smith:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I'm Ashley Smith. We are so excited for this final episode of our Cancún, Mexico series. This will be featuring a returning guest and one of our favorite cancer docs, Dr. Tony Jimenez. Dr. Tony owns Hope4Cancer centers, which is leading the charge in holistic and integrative oncology. Today, Dr. Pompa will be taking a tour in this world-class facility and bringing you along.

You can read more about Dr. Tony and his Hope4Cancer treatment centers in our show notes, and we'll also put the last episode he was on in there as well so you can check it out if you missed it. Everyone, this is our final chance to invite you to watch the live stream of our Live It to Lead It event in Nashville. You can go to DrPompaLive.com for more information.

Let's get started and welcome Dr. Pompa and Dr. Antonio Jimenez to the show. This is Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Pompa:
We are here live at one of your Hope4Cancer clinics. You have one in Tijuana and one here in Cancún.

Dr. Jimenez:
Yeah, the Tijuana clinic opened in the year 2000, and beautiful Cancún in 2015. We're able to diversify the area where patients come from. This would be easier for some people from the East Coast, or for patients that are at later stages. Earlier stage cancers come here to Cancún.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it's a hub, as I found out, this airport, Cancún. [Who'd have known?] People are flying from everywhere. It's a direct hub.

Dr. Jimenez:
That's right!

Dr. Pompa:
And it's beautiful here! Gosh, I really enjoyed myself. Amazing interviews while I'm here, and just seeing the lay of the land. It's been amazing. Yeah, I love it. This is actually part two, and, folks, we're going to link part one of an interview that we did some time ago, but I actually wanted to come and experience the clinic myself, especially because you're teaching at our March event, it has a focus on cancer, and that's a big deal because what you're doing here is a big deal.

We also got to interview Dr. V, who comes here quite a bit, and hear her story. If you didn't watch that one—it most likely is the Cell TV right before this—please do because there's a lot of lessons learned about cavitation, and her breast cancer survival—twice!

Dr. Jimenez:
Twice!

Dr. Pompa:
What a story, gosh! And you hooked me up with that [03:32], so I appreciate that.

Dr. Jimenez:
Yes, and now she's bringing people within her group that have breast cancer—mainly, a few with other types of cancer—regularly on a retreat. We do a really good integrative consultation, her and I, with the patient.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it's amazing. I want to bring my work here, the cellular detox. It's just putting it all together. Nobody's doing it.

Dr. Jimenez:
We'll look forward to that!

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that's very good. I have to say, just even being here in this clinic, what a professional clinic. I haven't been to the Tijuana one, but wow. We're sitting here in an amazing IV room that looks out over this amazing bay! It doesn't get any better than that!—and some amazing chairs! I have to say this story. We came in, and the first thing, she's, okay, let me give you a tour. The very first thing they showed me was the juicer! It was amazing! It's this big! I thought our juicer was impressive! This thing was incredible! I thought, okay, this is a really good start!

Dr. Jimenez:
It's interesting, because in Cancún there is hundreds of restaurants and hotels, and I believe we're the only one with this juicer! It's a cold-pressed juicer. It can pump up to 50 gallons an hour, cold-pressed. I think it's 6,000 pounds per square inch of pressure. You just put everything in, skins—

Dr. Pompa:
I could never [04:53]. I must put a picture up. I took a picture just to show you this juicer! It was unbelievable. By the way, you have a restaurant—a kitchen I should say, not a restaurant—a kitchen here. I see healthy food in every room. You all do it right.

Dr. Jimenez:
Yes, that follows the seven key principles, and of course nutrition is foundational. That's one of the challenges with the conventional medical world, they don't focus on nutrition, they don't focus on detox.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. One of the things that we talked about in Dr. V's interview was the statistics 20 years from now, it's going to be one in two people with cancer. I try to realize that everybody watching this, this applies to you. People, I think what's put in their minds is, well, it's not in my genetics. My mother didn't have cancer, my father didn't. India, you don't get cancer because of genes. Nor because you don't have the gene or have it does it go the other way either.

Dr. Jimenez:
Exactly. Statistically it's about 2.5% of all cancers are genetic in nature, the rest of them are small. The rest are epigenetic—lifestyle and everything that—

Dr. Pompa:
Stressors. Physically, chemically, emotional, turn it off.

Dr. Jimenez:
What you just said is very important because when I started working in oncology, which was in 1988—a few years ago!—we saw older patients with cancer, in their 60's and 70's. Now we have 18-year-olds with breast cancer, 20-year-olds with colon cancer. Before, maybe it took 15/20 years for cancer to develop; now that is shortened because of all the stressors, and toxicities, and everything you know of.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, your approach here I love because you don't just do amazing treatments, you talk about how important it is to [06:45]. Dr. V is a great example of that. It's so important to remove these stressors from your life, otherwise the genes [06:54]. It starts expressing these bad genes and bad cells, and cells that don't function normally in a normal environment.

Dr. Jimenez:
It is a process because according to what we know about cancer development, the works of homotoxicology many years ago, it's really six phases of development from patients having problems with excretion, excretion of the toxin. Then after that there's a reaction, which is the inflammatory reaction. Then what happens, there is deposition. These toxins, these stressors, begin to entrench themselves in the extracellular matrix. Then we have impregnation—that's when these toxins leave the extracellular matrix, they go into the enzymatic system, they go into the cells, they impregnate themselves, and then they start causing damage. Then that leads to degeneration, which is now cellular function is being affected, and then that's the cancer process. [07:59]

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, what he just described, most of which you're symptom-free along that [08:05].

Dr. Jimenez:
Exactly.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that could take 10/15, even 20 years. Now all of a sudden you get the diagnosis, and unfortunately western medicine teaches basically that, oh, that's when your cancer starts.

Dr. Jimenez:
The beauty about knowing this, is that the excretion, the reaction, and the deposition phase, before it gets to the impregnation phase, those three are reversible. We can be proactive. Start now. Don't wait until you're diagnosed with cancer.

Dr. Pompa:
Let's pick up on that thought because people here today, okay, early detection, early detection, but a lot of the early detection I think is problematic!

Dr. Jimenez:
It's not early at all!

Dr. Pompa:
Right, it's not early at all! It's mammograms and other things that could cause problems. Let's talk about some issues. In this clinic—we're going to talk a walk around, folks, so we're going to put you on pause and take you to some of these things to show you, that's why I'm here. You're doing some early detection that I think started in Germany perhaps, but you can get it right here in Cancún.

Dr. Jimenez:
That's right, that's right. Early detection is really we're talking now before the tumor, or the lump, or the nodule is found on a mammogram, ultrasound, because at that point—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that's not early.

Dr. Jimenez:
It's not early detection. In one cubic centimeter, like if a nodule or a tumor is 1x1x1 centimeter, there's already at least one billion cancer cells in that nodule. At this point that's not early. When we talk about early detection, is really screening for circulating tumor cells. These are cancer stem cells that might be in the circulation before they settle somewhere—in the breast, in the colon, in the lung, anywhere. We can detect or screen for these circulating tumor cells, and treat them at the same time.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh my goodness. We'll show this device, but explain to them a little bit of how that works.

Dr. Jimenez:
Well, circulating tumor cells are rogue cells that have left a tissue or an organ and they're waiting to go somewhere. It's an opportunistic—like all cancer, an opportunistic disease.

Dr. Pompa:
Just like a pathogen.

Dr. Jimenez:
Yeah, the terrain is altered, and then they're going to settle in that tissue or organ. With this technology, called photodynamic infrared spectroscopy, we can screen for these circulating tumor cells in your total blood volume. The test takes 17 minutes. Before that, we infuse an IV infusion of a non-toxic substance that attaches to the cancer stem cells or circulating tumor cells. Then we use hi-tech infrared fiber optic laser technology to detect those circulating tumor cells. Then at the same time, if there's any, we can treat them, or zap them, if you will.

Dr. Pompa:
Then how you do that zapping?

Dr. Jimenez:
With the laser, intravenously—infrared.

Dr. Pompa:
Which I'm actually going to get done.

Dr. Jimenez:
You are, yes, yes! Also, we have an external device that also emits infrared light at a specific wavelength of energy, so it targets those circulating tumor cells. Minimally invasive, non-painful, no toxic effects, no complication, and light.

Dr. Pompa:
When you compare it to other cancer treatments, I hate to use the word—okay, I won't. It's inexpensive, when you look at it compared to all these other things, even the testing itself.

Dr. Jimenez:
Absolutely. This test screens for both types of circulating tumor cells. It gets a little more technical, but there's two types of circulating tumor cell. One are called epithelial cancer stem cells, which are the minority. They're only like 1% at most of all cancer stem cells. The majority are called mesenchymal cancer stem cells. Lab tests are limited in detecting mesenchymal, they can only detect the epithelial cancer stem cell, where this technology, the PDIS, detects both our cancer stem cells.

Dr. Pompa:
I was impressed, I was sitting in your waiting room, and a woman came out and she was just talking about, okay, you're going to get your coffee enema today, your green juice. It was very dialed in, you could tell, from the beginning [chat]. What are some of the other things you're going to show us today on our tour?

Dr. Jimenez:
Wow, all of our therapies are based on the seven key principles of cancer therapy, which is non-toxic cancer therapy, so we're going to show the use of sound and light to kill cancer stem cells, to kill cancer cells, but also to decrease the blood supply to the tumor. Because a tumor cannot get greater than 2 millimeters in size without increasing blood supply. This is called angiogenesis. It's one of the hallmarks or characteristics of cancer.

Sono-photo dynamic therapy—is doing sound and light—not only kills cancer cells but also impedes and shuts down the blood flow to the tumors. Thirdly, it has an immune effect. It upregulates both the adaptive and the innate immune system. We've been doing sono-photo—

Dr. Pompa:
Which is huge because in many people with chronic inflammation—cancer—that's opposite; that immune system's reversed.

Dr. Jimenez:
That's right, that's right. We know of course, everyone that comes here with cancer has an inflammatory effect going on, and their immune system is suppressed. Even if a standard blood test says no, everything is fine, your white blood cells are fine, and so forth, as you look deeper with some of the technology that we have using bioresonance energy, we can look more specifically at immune function.

Yeah, they're non-toxic therapies. A lot of ozone therapy. We use rectal. Sometimes we use a topical, it's [core/cold] plasma ozone technology, that we can deliver ozone and light over the—

Dr. Pompa:
Breasts, or maybe even—

Dr. Jimenez:
Liver.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.

Dr. Jimenez:
You'll see the juicer, of course! You'll see that. You'll see a lot of happy patients!

Dr. Pompa:
I did, I really did, yeah.

Dr. Jimenez:
Because once they come through our doors, that's the first thing. We have to have faith, hope, love, and generosity. Those are our core principles. Once you have that, the body is in an environment where it can heal.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. I won't make you re-tell your story because you have to watch episode one where you hear your story. Yeah, you definitely broke me. You were called to this, I'll just leave it there. God himself, like he did in my life, he put you here. We're grateful for that.

Dr. Jimenez:
You know Dr. Dan, one of the characteristics of someone that developed cancer is separation from God, is spiritual brokenness. I think that's primarily a characteristic of cancer patients or chronically ill patients. Secondly, we have the emotional traumas. Thirdly, is the physical things—the immune suppression, the toxicity, the acidic environment, and so on.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you put it all together and it's a perfect storm, as I said.

Dr. Jimenez:
That's right.

Dr. Pompa:
When we see any unexplainable illness, there's always a perfect storm of [structures] involved—and then the [gene] gets triggered.

Dr. Jimenez:
That's right.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I liken it to a three-legged stool. Every leg has to be there for the stool to stand up. That's the causative factor, but the solution lies there too. If you deal with all of those storms then the solution is there too.

Dr. Jimenez:
[Technically] put, that's body, mind, and spirit.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely.

Dr. Jimenez:
We could say—instead of mind we could say soul because the soul is the mind, the will, and the emotions. That's what the soul is. When we think about the soul, we're not thinking of something abstract; we're thinking of the patient's emotions, their will. Their will to survive, see themselves as living to live, not living to die because they have that diagnosis or that “prognosis”.

Dr. Pompa:
With that said, I think today it's in vogue to talk about more of the “soul[16:37]”! Our mind, please, it's an important factor, how we think, but yet the spiritual thing I think is pushed more to the side. Oftentimes, probably you and I would agree it's probably not in line with what you and I believe. I think the spiritual component is left out. I think it's a big player.

Dr. Jimenez:
It certainly is. I always say, in ancient times, in Greece, and in Egypt, when someone went to a clinic like this—well, I don't know if there was a clinic like this back then! When they went to a health facility, a clinic, the first person they saw was a spiritual adviser. Then they saw the emotional mental counsellor, and then they was us, the doctor. It was spirit first, emotional mind second, and then the physical part.

Dr. Pompa:
That homeostasis. When you're out of balance—and that's what the word means—disease eventually forms. Real healthcare brings back to homeostasis. I want to cover this before we take our tour. We talked a little bit about this in Dr. V's segment. Fear is used to drive people into treatments. I want them to realize that you don't just throw this alternative stuff out the window just because you ended up doing one of these treatments. In Dr. V's case, and many people, they don't choose that at all, they just [18:06] again. Talk about that, a balance of who do you see—how many people do both, how many people do just this?

Dr. Jimenez:
Well, first I'll touch on fear because I think the best explanation of fear in cancer is what a patient of ours says. She said, “Cancer is not the enemy; fear is the enemy.” It think that's very profound because in fear, we cannot heal. Cancer cells, healthy cells, are interchanging information—frequency, energy, resonance—and so when there's fear, it can't be in homeostasis, as you said.

Then, unfortunately, 92%, Dr. Dan, of the patients that come to Hope4Cancer are in Stage 4—92%.

Dr. Pompa:
Imagine if we could turn that.

Dr. Jimenez:
That means they failed conventional therapy—chemo, radiation, surgery, immunotherapies—or when they were diagnosed it was too late to even have those options available to them. That is one of the goals—for both of us.

Dr. Pompa:
That's why we're doing this show, and that's why I wanted to start with some of the early testing.

Dr. Jimenez:
Exactly, yes, because we want patients to come here at early stages. That being said, we did a third-party retrospective study, which is on-going, of 365 patients. One-year survival was 78.9%. Two-year survival, it dipped down to 77%.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and we're talking the worst!

Dr. Jimenez:
We're talking the worst. If you compare that to National Cancer Institute SEER data—surveillance, epidemiology, and end-stage result data, which is the gold standard—they're about 20 to 25%.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow.

Dr. Jimenez:
Guess what?

Dr. Pompa:
What?

Dr. Jimenez:
That's not Stage 4; that's only Stage 2 and 3.

Dr. Pompa:
You're talking Stage 4.

Dr. Jimenez:
We’re talking Stage 4.

Dr. Pompa:
That's incredible. See, there's a choice. The fear—they make it seem like you have to do this.

Dr. Jimenez:
That's right.

Dr. Pompa:
Then the family even has a feeling of, well, we've done everything. If they feel like they've done everything—and that everything means everything that the doctors told them to do— but, really, have you done everything, because look where I'm at right now. This is amazing.

Dr. Jimenez:
That being said, if any of you are watching this and you are getting chemo, or you're going to start chemo or radiation soon, our advice, my advice, is that you're not doing everything. You must do the rest of it, which we believe is as or more important. Chemo and radiation—

Dr. Pompa:
Well, statistics say it's more important.

Dr. Jimenez:
Exactly.

Dr. Pompa:
What you just said, it's not my opinion or yours; it's statistics that show it's more important.

Dr. Jimenez:
That's right, so I'm giving them the benefit of the doubt! No, it is more important because we're addressing the root cause of the disease. We're not putting a Band-Aid. We're not zapping that tumor because cancer is a systemic disease. Very, very, very rarely, if at any time, is cancer a local disease. Removing the breast cancer—we have a patient who I'm going to see in a few minutes…

Dr. Pompa:
I had wanted you to say that.

Dr. Jimenez:
…Who I'm going to see in a few minutes. She had the best of the best surgery, and they said—what did they say? We got it all.

Dr. Pompa:
And they're happy, they're happy. Oh, they feel like they have a new life, but you and I know a different reality.

Dr. Jimenez:
Right, and it's a false sense of security because then they don't think that nutrition is important, they don't think detox is important, they don't know about their immune system, and so forth.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it almost hangs death on them harder because then why would I do [21:41]; this worked for me. We're looking at it going, you didn't get to the cause, so it's going to be something else. Then the doctors will tell them that that's not related to this cancer. You are lucky twice, basically, is what they're saying.

Dr. Jimenez:
Then they call it recurrence or relapse. The fact of the matter is, the cancer cells didn't go away, so it's not really a recurrence or relapse, it's just the cancer cells are now forming another tumor, either in the same location or at a distant site—what we call metastasis.

Dr. Pompa:
The advancements in this area of “alternative”—I hate putting a word on it like that, but alternative cancer, is it's just expanding and yet so few people know. That's what brought me here. I also interviewed Dr. Rafael at the Stem Cell clinic because they're expanding natural killer cells. If you didn't see that one, watch that one as well. Just some amazing things that people just aren't being made aware of because of the drug company's hold on this area of cancer. It's a cash cow, and it's not going to go away any time soon.

Dr. Jimenez:
A few days ago I had an opportune meeting, a lunch meeting, with a gal in California who used to work for the FDA. She was a pharmaceutical scientist. A brilliant lady. Then she was an intelligence officer in the military, a data programmer, and a whole list of things. I say, well, why are you out of that area? She said, “I just couldn't do it. I was frustrated. I saw that when they do clinical trials they start from what they want to prove and work backwards.”

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely, and people look at that as proof that this is why they should do this particular treatment.

Dr. Jimenez:
Give yourself the benefit of the doubt. Do something really helpful for yourself, and let’s look at cancer from a fundamental perspective of what are the characteristics of cancer? The representation of the presentation of the tumor is a sign of what this regulation, lack of homeostasis, [23:45].

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely. Let's show your book because this is coming out. Here's the seven principles.

Dr. Jimenez:
Well, this is a life's work, Dr. Dan.

Dr. Pompa:
It is a life's work, I was going to say that!

Dr. Jimenez:
It's my baby!

Dr. Pompa:
It is a life's work, yes!

Dr. Jimenez:
Hope for Cancer: Seven principles to remove fear and empower your healing journey. I was blessed that I have over 20 endorsers, including yourself, from over 12 countries. We have a number of oncologists. The forward was written by a hematologist-oncologist from Brazil, who studied bone marrow transplant in Paris, France at the [Marine Corps] University—well recognized. I met Dr. [Vivella] a number of years ago at an integrative conference in Arizona. I saw his name tag and I said what are you doing here? You're a hematologist-oncologist, bone marrow transplant expert? He says, “Tony, I'm frustrated. Forty percent of my patients are dying in the transplant [24:41] in surgery.”

Now Dr. [Vivella] is doing integrative medicine. He quit doing bone marrow transplant. He's happier, he's getting better results, and he wrote the forward to my book.

Dr. Pompa:
That's powerful. Get the book. By the time this airs, perhaps it will be much closer to—it's in print! It's in print right now. Yeah, I can't wait! I can't wait for it. It is your life's work. Coming from a guy like you, that's a powerful piece of work right there. I would call it the number one cancer book to get right there. First of all, how would they reach—before we back out of here, how would they reach you here at Help4Cancer?

Dr. Jimenez:
Very easy. You could go to the website, www.hope4–the number 4—cancer.com, Hope4Cancer.com. There you'll see videos, you'll see round table discussions with me and my doctors talking about the seven key principle. You'll see a lot of interactional videos. You'll see one called I Am Hope. Oh, please, watch that film, I Am Hope. It's life-changing.

The numbers are there. You could call our office, or send an email, and we'll get back to you.

Dr. Pompa:
I'm going to ask you to share the link here with many people, but you need to share this one because cancer's touching all of us, every one of us, and one out of two of us will actually end up with cancer in the next 20 years.

Let's take us for a tour. We're going to take you all for a tour. Let's see some of this amazing stuff that's going on right here, Cancún—one of the easiest places to get. All right, so we're going to put you on pause and come right back!

Right, Tony, so here's the first thing you wanted to show us.

Dr. Jimenez:
Yes, this is a unique technology. We're delivering light through lasers. The difference between this laser and typical lasers [26:33] is they're cutting lasers. This is a laser light that is not harmful. As a matter of fact, it's beneficial to the body in many ways because our cells thrive on light, the mitochondria thrives on energy and light, so with this technology we can deliver laser lights from the ultraviolet spectrum all the way to the near-infrared and red spectrum.

Dr. Pompa:
Each wavelength has different properties. Ultraviolet we know, killing pathogens. Infrared I've done shows on different red frequencies, how it helps the ATP production, [27:12] pathway. You take advantage of all of that?

Dr. Jimenez:
We take advantage of all of that. For cancer specifically [we're giving] [27:20] a non-toxic substance—[it's called a] sensitizer. This substance, like curcumin, or Hypericum, which is St. John's Wort extract, and others, bind to cancer cells selectively, but in and of itself, nothing happens, but when you wake them up, as you will, or activate them with a specific wavelength of light, then it liberates from the active oxygen [27:45], that's free radicals within the cancer cell, and causes the cancer cell [27:52] to die.

Dr. Pompa:
Got it. The people around here that are getting the treatment, they're like, wow, I didn't know that! That's really amazing! Yeah, so you're learning something! You're not on camera, don't worry! Is this also the—

Man:
This is a good example.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, we will show that. Yeah, that's amazing. Yeah, we're putting the light directly into the vein.

Dr. Jimenez:
We're putting the light directly into the vein, so it goes systemically. These photons of light travel through the venous circulation, and even go into the brain. We can treat brain tumors with intravenous laser [28:28].

Dr. Pompa:
That's incredible.

Dr. Jimenez:
In addition to that, we can put the laser directly into a tumor. If someone has a breast tumor, a tumor in the neck, or even in the lymph nodes, we could put a very small, fine needle, put the fiber optic light into the needle, and then direct it specifically to a tumor. There's many applications.

We've had great success with bladder cancer. With an ultrasound, we put a catheter into the bladder, we locate the tumor, and we put the sensitizers, the [agent], into the tumor, and then with the light.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow.

Dr. Jimenez:
We've seen up to [40 to 75]% reduction in the tumor just with one treatment.

Dr. Pompa:
That's incredible. I think that is incredible. How many clinics are using this technology, do you think?

Dr. Jimenez:
Well, in the western hemisphere there's us, and then there's us! In Europe there was about three clinics. This technology, as well as some of these sensitizers, were developed at Marburg University and Paderborn University in Germany. There's a few—[three] clinics in Germany, in Asia there's a few clinics using it, but in this part of the world we're [29:39].

Dr. Pompa:
Is this equipment that you talked about even for early detection, or is that [29:44]?

Dr. Jimenez:
We use the infrared and the laser light together with the early detection technology called photodynamic infrared spectroscopy. We combine the two.

Dr. Pompa:
What are you going to look at next? Let me just show you one of the people utilizing that there!

Dr. Jimenez:
Show them your light!

Woman:
I don't know that I have one yet.

Dr. Pompa:
Sir, could I show him yours? Because yours is glowing, yours is glowing, yeah. I don't know if you can see that.

Dr. Jimenez:
This is the green light, and green light is very good to oxygenate the body and increase nitrous oxide production.

Dr. Pompa:
That's awesome.

Dr. Jimenez:
And here—

Dr. Pompa:
And there's Tony's beautiful wife! My beautiful wife! What's going on over here? You, sir, you're on film. Are you okay with being on film?

Man:
Yes, I'm fine.

Dr. Jimenez:
Here you have the blue light. You can see it going right into the vein.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh yeah, that's blue light, yes.

Dr. Jimenez:
Yeah, blue light, very good also for pathogens, for mitochondrial function, up-regulating immune system as well.

Dr. Pompa:
All right, okay. Where are we going next, Tony?

Dr. Jimenez:
Let's see. Let's find something really fun to show!

Dr. Pompa:
All right, we'll see you there.

Okay, some exciting things happening here. Tell us what's going on here. I see two different machines going on.

Dr. Jimenez:
Right, so this is called ultraviolet blood irradiation. What we do is we draw some blood based on the patient's [rate], and we put it in the solution, in the saline solution—this is [what you see] [31:20], it's blood—and we add ozone to it. Ozone will further oxygenate the cells, and it [31:29] immune factors as well in the blood. You see the blood getting a brighter red.

Dr. Pompa:
I see that.

Dr. Jimenez:
Because now it's fuller in oxygen. Then it drips down, it goes through this technology here, it's an ultraviolet blood radiation technology. There is three volts in here. This is ultraviolet light A, B, and C. The main function of this, besides oxygenating with the ozone, is to cleanse the blood of [32:01]. Because we know that cancer patients, and a lot of people in general, are [32:08] with viruses, fungi, parasites, and bacteria.

Oftentimes patients just feel better [quality of life] [linked up to] this thing, feel that they can breathe better, their energy is improved. The benefits sometimes are that immediate.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I've had this done myself, and I can say that you feel the benefits pretty immediately.

Dr. Jimenez:
Yes.

Dr. Pompa:
Then there's another device here. What does this one do?

Dr. Jimenez:
Yeah, so this is a pulsating electromagnetic frequency technology. This is emitting subtle electromagnetic fields into the specific area of the body that you want to address. This has various loops. [32:53] this loop, you could put on your shoulder, like this. If you have someone who has a breast tumor, you could put it on the breast tumor [33:02], and specifically, Dr. Pompa with stem cells, pulsating electromagnetic field is very useful.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it is.

Dr. Jimenez:
The other loop is this one, and you could put this here, or right by the breast [33:19] so that it can affect the breast tissue, the lymphatic circulation. This [33:25] to improve microcirculation, decrease [33:28], and it can improve [33:32], for example.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I'm a big fan of this technology, just by the way. This is fantastic. You're right, [33:40] stem cells [33:42] fantastic, but everything you just mentioned as well. All right, you have one more thing for us to see.

Dr. Jimenez:
Let's go!

Dr. Pompa:
All right, let's go! We'll see you there!

All right, Tony, we're in the hyperbaric room now. They look like some fancy, modern coffin but it's really not! It's quite the opposite, actually! Explain this technology.

Dr. Jimenez:
It's very safe, contrary to what some people might think. Hyperbaric is a way that we could deliver oxygen to deep tissue under pressure.

Dr. Pompa:
Cancer cells hate oxygen.

Dr. Jimenez:
Cancer cells hate oxygen. They're hypoxic-type cells.

Dr. Pompa:
That's that other technology, the ozone [34:18] is using oxygen. This is just doing it with pressure.

Dr. Jimenez:
Exactly, with pressure. We have the patients here for one hour. We combine it with some of our other therapies because if we increase the oxygen uptake by cells, and then we do the sono-photo, we do the laser lights, then the effects are enhanced. Patients love it—they can read, they can meditate, they can pray while they're doing the hyperbaric oxygen. They also have nasal oxygen at the same time, so we're doing two different therapies, in a way, at the same time. [34:50]

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, many of our viewers have heard about hyperbaric, but I think the key is what you said, it's getting it all done in one day.

Dr. Jimenez:
That's right.

Dr. Pompa:
You go some places, they don't have this, they don't have the laser, but you're doing all of these things and people are moving from different sections.

Dr. Jimenez:
The combination of therapy, they have a synergistic effect. One plus one doesn't equal two when you're doing these therapies in sequence [35:17].

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. Well, we appreciate you having us here. Believe me, we haven't even touched on it. There's a lot more going on here, but we don't want to get in the way too much! You're doing a great work. I heard you might actually have an opportunity in Spain to open up another one, is that true?

Dr. Jimenez:
Well, I've been asked to speak in Spain at a very select [35:38] group of doctors. That's coming next. We are opening a clinic in Asia soon in [35:46].

Dr. Pompa:
That's what I heard. Well, here you go, this is the man. We appreciate you. We were walking around here, by the way, and all of the patients were coming up and just thanking him for all that he does and what you've done. We thank you as well. Thanks for being on Cell TV, and thanks for speaking at our next event!

Dr. Jimenez:
Oh, I look forward to that, thank you so much!

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely, can't wait to have you.

Ashley Smith:
Well, that's it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today's episode. Don't forget to check out our next HCF Seminar in Nashville, where we'll have a lineup up of top health experts who will explore the latest research and most effective strategies in the field of cellular healing. We now offer a live stream option. You can check that out at DrPompaLive.com, so you can enjoy the seminar from any location in the world.

We'll be back next week and every Friday at 10 AM Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at CellularHealing.TV. Please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, or sharing the show with anyone who may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.