285: Ozone Therapy For Pain, Autoimmunity, and Cancer

Episode 285: Ozone Therapy For Pain, Autoimmunity, and Cancer

with Tom Lowe

Additional Information:

Practitioners! Check out Dr. Pompa's Ozone Kit! Follow the simple steps and you will be on your way to becoming an ozone superstar.

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Ozone. What is it and what are the benefits? One of the top experts on the topic, Tom Lowe, is here to discuss it all — from using ozone for pain, autoimmune, and cancer – to how you can use it in an IV for blood treatments, with UV light, and even how you can use it at home for simple things like sinuses, wounds, and even cleaning! O3 is one incredible molecule that we hope more people can implement in their health and healing.

More About Tom Lowe:

Tom Lowe is an Entrepreneur, Researcher, Teacher, Designer, Inventor and Conference President.
Tom is the President of SopMed International – Society of Progressive Medical Education – a training entity and yearly conference hosting around 200 physicians. He is currently working with over 350 Physicians of Alternative and Integrative doctors and clinics around the US and world, as they develop their UBI and ozone programs. He also designed the new HD O3 UV therapy that is Better than 10 pass ozone.

Tom has a wonderful wife who he has been married to for 48 years, and they have 11 children.

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
Many of you have requested this topic, ozone. Here's what I realized, however. Most people don't even realize what it is. They definitely don't realize all the benefits of ozone. I interview one of the experts in this, Tom Lowe. I'll tell you what, we covered everything from blood treatments with IV, and UV light with ozone that you can get done in doctor's offices. Doctors, you should have this in your office.

We also talked about what you can do at home, like I do, twice a week. They've made it really inexpensive to do that. We talk about that. How you can do it in your ears, and how that affects your sinuses. How you can do it in your nose. We hit it all, how you need to do it on wounds, things on your skin. Anyways, we hit it all, and joints as well because ozone transforms joint health. From pain, to autoimmune, to cancer, we talked about it all.

You need to watch this show. This is great stuff. Even how to clean your washing machine with an ozone $90 unit, and vegetables. Anyways, I'm telling you, we hit it from food, to joints, to blood, you name it, and every condition there. I'm telling you, ozone is an under-looked subject, and really a therapy that really transforms lives. You're going to hear that and some amazing testimonies on this show. Stay tuned for this episode. You're going to love it.

Ashley Smith:
Hello everyone, welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I'm Ashley Smith. Today, we welcome researcher, teacher, designer, inventor, and the President of the SOPMed Conference, Tom Lowe. He's here to discuss ozone and its usage in healing modalities. He'll share data on ozone medicine from how it works to what it can help. This is going to be an informative episode that can transform your healing and the healing of your clients and patients. You can actually visit myo3unit.com to inquire about utilizing ozone in your home or practice. Let's get started, and welcome Tom Lowe and, of course, Dr. Pompa. Welcome.

Dr. Pompa:
All right.

Tom Lowe:
Thank you, very much.

Dr. Pompa:
I tell you, some people requested this topic. Tom, I find that most people, they don't know the healing benefits of ozone. Matter of fact, I would say this, that most of the public, maybe not our audience, we have a pretty educated audience, but most people would say, “Oh, ozone's bad for you,” which, of course, breathing in a lot of ozone in the lungs is not good. Yet, there's all of these healing qualities that we're going to discuss today.

Tom, you and I go back. I speak at your conferences and have for some years now. I appreciate that. Your whole SOPMed Conference is based on teaching doctors how to implement this into their practice because it has that much of an impact on people. It's been an amazing seminar every time. I always learn at your seminars. I appreciate that.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, great, well, it's an opportunity here to help a lot of people. I guess that's what we're about. If we can give something to people that's really going to help them, that is inexpensive, that is available, I mean, it's just one of those unknown secrets out there—ozone therapy. Everybody thinks ozone, and they think ozone hole, or ozone pollution. They don't realize there's 40,000 doctors around the world that use ozone every day as a reality.

Dr. Pompa:
I want to start with this. Some people will be like, “What is ozone? Does that happen when it rains outside?” You're actually right. Let's start with what is ozone, then we'll get into some of these applications. I want to say this from the beginning for the public watching. I have my unit right here. I can't tell you how many of my clients have bought this because you all have made it very inexpensive for a quality unit that our doctors have in their offices. Hang in there because we'll tell you how to get this.

I believe it's something we should all have in our home. You'll understand why because there's a zillion applications for this. By the way, one of the things you gave me as a gift, because I spoke at the seminar, was the ozonator that you can use, of course, in a stinky trash can.

You know where I used it, Tom? Our washer, I ordered a new one. Washers develop mold. The clothes have a stench to them, right. I put it in there, and it worked like—I was using peroxide, vinegar, you name it, to kill mold. The ozone—after each wash, I put it in there. I tell you, it was an immediate solution to that stinky washer problem. How much does that little unit cost that produces that ozone?

Tom Lowe:
That's $90. We've got that on a different website. That's Sweetwater Distributing. It's called a fresh thing. To clean your vegetables, to clean your fruit, to get all the bacteria and virus—I mean, like I mentioned when I'm training. I mean, Whirlpool was going to put these into these into their [00:05:33] crispers because it extends the life of the vegetable. That's the kind of thing people don't understand. There's so many uses for ozone. We're going to give you some medical ones. This is one that's a little different, but—and it works.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I think that's a good one to start with just because people like—okay, we're going to get into some medical amazing stuff with ozone. Right before the call, I was telling you, what's the proportion. I want to inject things. When you have aches and pains, put some ozone there. I'm not recommending that for you all, but I mean, I'm telling you.

What I'm telling you is that we're going to show you how something as simple as rectal ozone, and you can have your own unit in your house, will transform your life. [00:06:12] even how to put it in your ears. I'm telling you. Just hang on. We've got some amazing stuff here for you, the vegetables. All right, Tom, let's back up. Ozone, what the heck is it? Is it dangerous? What are all the things that we hear?

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, and we do this, usually, in an eight-hour class, but that's okay. The short of it is ozone is a gas. It is oxygen that when exposed to a spark splits that oxygen. You get an oxygen singlet, and it combines to have them three of oxygen molecules together. It's very reactive, but you have those three oxygen molecules together. It's called ozone.

You can get that if you're outside, or you're somewhere where you've got a thunderstorm. You smell that fresh smell afterwards. That's the lightening going through the air and causing, creating actually, ozone. Ozone is naturally occurring. We have an ozone layer above our planet. That is also activated by light hitting oxygen that's up there. It creates, again, that O3. That blocks our UVC light coming in, which is a good thing. We'd all probably be dead if it didn't.

The ozone layer is up there. It's very thin. It's created with sunlight. We also have ozone and pollution. The nitric oxide, the different exhausts that come from different vehicles or industrial, that too will cause a combination of the oxygen to create an ozone. People always think about the ozone level, pollution, and the issue is it's very easy to test. It doesn't mean—and it can be irritating to the lungs, but there's a lot of other stuff going on.

The neat part is ozone actually breaks down some of the pollutants too. It's got a positive effect. Since it's so easy to measure, they say, “What's the ozone level today?” That's what's the pollution level in some of these cities with inversion layers and so on. We hear about zone, but we never really think about it as a medical entity. It's really been a long time in world—well, actually, go back to the turn of the century. Tesla was the first one to patent an ozone machine.

Dr. Pompa:
That guy did it all, man. That guy did it all, I have to say. So much of his technology is in health care, and people don't know that.

Tom Lowe:
That was around, but they couldn't control it real well. World War I they used it because on gangrene and different exterior wounds and so on, they knew that it killed the bacteria, and so they used it that way. They couldn't control it real well as far as volume and concentration. That didn't happen until the 60s, a guy named Hänsler from Germany. They still make the units, Hänsler Units.

They were able to then control, know, and understand what part should be used with it. Today's ozone generators are compatible with ozone and oxygen. They are pretty easy—a small spark working that creates the ozone, like the unit you just showed there. It's a simple unit. The miracle is what that ozone does when it's put in the body.

Dr. Pompa:
No doubt. I mean, I already alluded to the fact that it can be used for aches and pains when injected into joints. It stimulates the body into actually healing, which is pretty amazing. Ozone has an oxidative effect, which I think that therein lies some of the confusion because I think most people have been trained to think that oxidation is bad, antioxidants are good. We know that oxidation is actually how the immune system works. The body uses oxidation to start the healing process. Talk a little bit about that so we can set the stage on why this may work in these different modalities.

Tom Lowe:
It's called immune modulator. Ozone goes into the system, and it's immediately gone or absorbed into the albumin of the blood. It goes into the albumin. When it does that, it creates ozonides and peroxides. These are the products—they're not reactive anymore, but they're traveling around the body causing an immune cascade, if you can say it that way. It's a wake-up slap. Exercise is oxidative, in a sense. You're causing a stress to the system.

We know preconditioning we can do that before surgeries and help the body actually stress a little bit is a good thing. You can call ozone, actually, a [proxident]. It's actually causing the system to say, “Okay, I need healing to this area. Wake up. Let's get going here,” so the oxidative stress. If you're oxidatively stressed because of some chronic disorder, and you try ozone, and you feel miserable afterwards, we just added to your oxidative stress. You didn't need that. Yeah, 70, 80% of the time it's not going to do that. There are a few cases where we can add too much stress to the system. It's pretty easy to tell. It's not going to hurt you. I mean, [00:11:47] is a great—it's one of those great issues that oxygen in the form of ozone really is. It's a safe modality.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, so I mean we talked about it. Obviously they use it. Some people watching this may have heard of Prolozone, which they use for pain. I always say it's where you start when you have a bad joint. Prolozone, PRP, stem cells, so Prolozone is actually the magic is in fact the ozone. We use a little procain and then follow it with ozone, which does exactly what you said. It brings the immune system to the area for healing. Did it start there? Is that one of the first, original things, or no?

Tom Lowe:
No, like I said, they're working with the bacterial infections on the skin a lot. That was the start of it. I'm not sure who started the injection into joints. We just call it—it's like this chromotherapy out there. Are you familiar with that? [00:12:47] joint doctors and number of shots, some of the same materials that they use, but they don't use ozone.

When you add ozone, it's just the next level up. Plus, you don't have to have ten shots around a joint. You do a single shot into the capsule, and that ozone then releases again with nitroxides and calls for healing into that area. It's a lot easier.

When we do our mission trips, we were in Guatemala last year, Mexico the year before. I've been in the Philippines. We'll be in San Salvador this year. The majority of our work, although we will put some in blood, most of it will be putting it into joints and causing that healing reaction.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it's amazing. It truly is. Let's talk about putting it into the blood. That's a big part of what you teach doctors to add to their clinic. We're basically bringing the blood out of the body—I've had this done many times—mixing it into an ozone mixture, and then putting it back in the body. Explain what that is and why somebody would do this. Why would we put ozone in our blood?

Tom Lowe:
It's called Major Autohemotherapy. We aren't the inventors of it. The Germans were. They found that if they could take a certain amount of blood out of the system, and add ozone to that, and put it back into the system, that they had all this healing response from it. Through the years, it's evolved a little bit. I tell people, there's about three ways we use ozone. We put it in joints, we put it in blood, or you do it rectally. Those are the major ones.

Dr. Pompa:
We're getting there.

Tom Lowe:
There's a whole bunch of other ones out there, but the major autohemotherapy is chronic disorders, some of the autoimmune disorders, and like I mentioned before, it's often combined with UBI or Ultraviolet Blood Irradiation. The two are synergistic. I've got a whole 20 minutes on the YouTube of ozone and UBI together. People can look that up and watch. It's been tested. We've got studies.

I talked to Gary Gordon years ago. He said, “That's like me finding chelation. I spent 100 hours just studying all the studies that were done to say, okay, how can we do this better? How can we make this the best therapy?” I think the United States has some of the cutting-edge stuff that other countries haven't found yet. That's exciting because we're seeing lots of—

Dr. Pompa:
You have a system that I think is—some doctors may have heard of the ten pass where they do it ten times. You have a system much simpler. It takes about 30 minutes as opposed to an hour and a half, oftentimes. I have it done every time I come to the seminar. I always feel absolutely amazing afterwards. We have a lot of doctors that watch this, as well. Where can they get one of those units that do the ozone with the UBI? That combination works really well.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, and the best thing, if they went to the SOPMed.org, that's our website. They can go into trainings. They can see. I talk about it more on there. They can see this new high-dose ozone. It's interesting, Dan, just when you're studying this you've got the German's saying, well, we ought to use somewhere around 3,000. Then some of the ozone organizations in the state, no, we can use 4,000. When I say that, that's a dose, so that's concentration times volume.

Then I can look at the Russian manual for that, and it says 9,000. These ten pass guys, two years ago, three years ago, said, “Oh, we can do this ten times. We're putting in 140,000 micrograms.” We went from 3, 4, 9 to 140. I thought, are they going to kill anybody? Is this going to help? After a couple of years, I thought, this is really helping people. Isn't it unbelievable we can have small amounts of ozone that help, and we have this huge 140,000 micrograms of ozone? Doesn't hurt the patient and helps in some of these cases that just can't be helped with anything else.

We designed another system. We called it five pass, but now we call it high-dose ozone UV therapy. It's caught on quite a bit. It's being used around the country. We're training doctors every couple of months around the country in it. Yeah, ozone, what a gamut of uses. Here we are with now this high dose, which I think will catch on in the future and [00:17:41].

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I think you're right. You're doing a good job of educating more doctors. I think every clinic that is doing—seeing these types of conditions need this as one of their treatments, for sure. Even Lyme cases just respond very well. I mean, obviously, when you're putting this ozone, it's activating the immune system against infections, viruses, Lyme, bacterias, funguses. I mean, that's the nice thing. It crosses into many different types of pathogens as well. Parasites.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, it's non-specific. That's the hard thing for us to wrap around because we have one pill for one [00:18:19] type situation. I was either trying to cover symptoms or—you can't have five different modalities. As you know, we need more sometimes. We need to address the diet, and the exercise, and the supplements, and the faulty methylation, or whatever's occurring.

Ozone is one tool that should be in every doctor's toolbox, that's doing alternatives, and just say, “I need this tool. This is going to help my patients.” It's good for the clinic. I mean, it brings in money, it helps patients, and it doesn't hurt anybody. That's the neat triumvirate there of what this stuff does.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I agree. Let's shift gears, what people can do, actually, at home. You said the three main things. Joints, which I've experienced, and I've watched—it just helps so many people. It's inexpensive. That's why I say start with that. It's way less expensive than, say, stem cells. Then we can do the high dose into the blood for these more serious conditions, which we hope more doctors get on board with.

The average person at home—I have utilized it with my clients. They buy their own machine at home. They can do this weekly, by themselves. Rectal ozone, explain what that is because right now we've freaked, maybe, people out, and how it works, and how it gets into the blood. Tom, I've heard that for a lot of—maybe not the unit that you're doing with the IV or the way you're doing it, but the way most doctors do ozone in their clinic, rectal is just as effective.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, I've listened to some debates. Hänsler will say it's 95%. Some of the other Germans are no, no, it's 50%. It really doesn't matter.

Dr. Pompa:
Even at 50.

Tom Lowe:
Fifty's great, I mean, and doctors are earning a living. They're doing what they're doing, but there are patients that just can't afford it, or they have such a chronic disorder that they can't go to the doctor every week, every two weeks. For a long period of time, it would break them. The rectal ozone is really an easy-to-do—I know, it sounds a little gross at first, like coffee enemas, right? It's very easy to do. It's very effective. You've got the device there, but they need, very simply, they need an oxygen tank.

Dr. Pompa:
Yep, that's this. Explain that. This is the oxygen tank.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, that's the medical tank. The medical tank is fine if you can get a prescription from the doctor. You can buy the green and silver tanks, or you rent them from a hospital supply. They're inexpensive, 25, $30. That's the one thing. You need a regulator. You can point to the regulator, there. That hooks on. That's got a pressure gauge on it. You can see it. I can see the needle is up there, so he's got oxygen in there. That regulates that down. It's what's called a pediatric regulator because we need to control these different levels. Now, that one's a specific one to the unit you have in our hand, the Stratus 3.0.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s the thing, Tom, I think this is the perfect unit for a home unit because people don't have to calculate anything. They go, “Okay, a quarter oxygen.” People go, oh, you're confused. This is, okay, set the oxygen at eight, and that's it. You hit the right number in the concentration of ozone. That really makes it simple.

Tom Lowe:
It is a very simple one. My son, Micah, who's involved with designing this. I was involved with the design of the internal, so I know it's completely compatible. It's a good unit, sturdy unit, but yeah, for a homeowner, it's the way to go.

Dr. Pompa:
I love this thing. I use it a couple times a week. It takes me, literally, five minutes to do a rectal ozone. It's a way to get ozone right into the blood. As we're explaining, you can explain how that mechanism would have to work. Just so you know, the oxygen comes into this. It basically does what Tom said, right? I mean, it's basically turning the O2. It creates a free oxygen, a singlet. Then it makes—it comes back together as O3, very simple. Then it comes out this tube as ozone, or the other tube that I connect here. I don't have the bag.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, on the front, right, with your bag.

Dr. Pompa:
It comes out of here, and then so I can take this little insufflation bag—am I saying that right?

Tom Lowe:
Insufflation.

Dr. Pompa:
Insufflation, thank you.

Tom Lowe:
There you go.

Dr. Pompa:
Insufflation. I screw this on here, simple as that. I fill the bag up. When that bag's full, that's exactly the perfect amount to do for a rectal ozone. Then I take it off. I screwed on a little catheter thing, less than—smaller than this.

Tom Lowe:
By far.

Dr. Pompa:
Put it maybe this far in the rectal. They can watch your YouTube video.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, they can.

Dr. Pompa:
[00:23:44] give you an idea of how easy it is. I push the bag in. That's it. I'm done. I mean, that's how easy it is. Again, I've watched Tom's video. Tom, did we say how to get to the video to watch.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, if they just type in YouTube Rectal Ozone Therapy. I’ve got a couple of them now. I hate to say it's my most famous video, but it is. Claim to fame, there it is.

Dr. Pompa:
It's probably because when you actually showed your butt, Tom, it's probably, really, just people wanted more of that. That was—

Tom Lowe:
We can’t go there, Dan. We don’t—

Dr. Pompa:
For a minute there, you got my fuse going off.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, when people do it, and they realize how easy it is to get a therapy, that—you go to the doctor, it's going to be 200, 250, $300 to have a therapy. You can do this in a home in five minutes, like you say. The longest part, if you want to, is cleaning out the catheter, which you can use over, and over, and over.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and I just—I take some peroxide and spray it in. Just push it out.

Tom Lowe:
Take a syringe—it comes with a couple syringes, and it's so easy.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly, it is easy. I have to say, you all are—you sell this unit because, like I said, many of my clients have bought it. It's under $1000 for—

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, it's under 1000. I'm the UBI guy. I'm the trainer. Mike and my son, we've worked together for years and years. Do you know how many companies I've started, Dan? It's like 16, 18, 20. I didn't need another one. He took that on, and he's done a great job with it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you're not even selling this unit. I'm just telling them your son does that. I wanted to make it available for the people watching, obviously, because we talked about ozone, in the past we have. It's [00:25:33] you have to go to the doctor and spend $200, like you said. This is a way you can do it all the time at home. Then, okay, before we get to that. People are probably thinking, okay, you're putting ozone rectally. How does that get into the bloodstream? Why is that beneficial? Is it bad for my microbiome? Answer all those question.

Tom Lowe:
Sure, rectal ozone has been around a long time. I got to speak in Cuba a few years back. It was interesting, Ozone Conference. They are the ones who have really done tens of thousands. They don't have the money for drugs. They don't have all the things, but they can use rectal ozone. They had an ozone hospital down there. They did tens of thousands, did quite a few studies on rectal ozone. Basically 200ccs at about 40 or 50 gamma. That's the quantity that they put in, which is about 10,000. Now, yeah, it's nice to evacuate first, have a bowel movement, get rid of it, or even better yet, if you're a coffee enema people, this is the double kick, really.

Dr. Pompa:
Oftentimes, that's what I do. I don't always do that. I do the coffee enema, clear, and then I do the ozone.

Tom Lowe:
Another one of those things that people are going really… but really. It's easy. Then you're cleaned out. Then you can throw this ozone in. What it does, it absorbs into the mucosal lining there. The portal veins are right down there. It's carried up to the liver and then transferred throughout the body as a systemic, in other words, a whole-body immune system stimulant.

We put it in the blood, it does the same thing, goes through the body, and we've got the stimulant or the—sometimes it will even quiet down, so there's the idea of modulation more than stimulant. Yeah, rectal ozone is—you're going to lose half of it anyway with fecal material and just that kind of thing. It's not going to all go into the mucosa. Coffee enemas help that, but if you don't, don't worry about it. If you don't have a bowel movement still do it. It takes five minutes, literally. It is so quick, so easy, and it's just done.

Now, the biome is farther up into the intestine. There's some in the colon area, but again, the studies that they've done, the little bit that I've read and Bocci is the main guy, Velio Bocci from Italy. If you've read his book on ozone, a new miracle drug, he's the guy that I read and have read quite a bit of. He would say, no, there's no problem.

I've talked to a few other people, Chris Shade and so on. No, there's not really any problem with damaging the microbiome, which is, again, farther up. We really don't go very far with this gas. Really, two inches is probably good to go up into the rectum. Your portal vein's right there. It's going to carry it right up, so very easy, very quick.

I usually lube up with shea butter. They can use olive oils. I'll actually lubricate the anal area instead of trying to get it on that little tube. Just lube up that way with some toilet paper, and you're good to go. It slides in. You get used to it. I just stand up and do it. I don't know if you lay down, but you can lay down and do it. I just stand up.

Dr. Pompa:
I do both.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, and it's done. Roll the bag down. All the gas goes in. You hold it in for a couple of minutes anyway, somewhere in there. The idea that you have to hold it in for 30 minutes is a misnomer. The ozone reacts so quickly with either materials in the colon or the mucosal lining. It's gone. Realize, most of the gas that you put in as oxygen, it's like 95% oxygen, 5% ozone. Even when you release that gas later on, which you are going to, probably, it's oxygen. That's what's coming out.

Dr. Pompa:
I just try to hold it for five minutes. I know the whole thing [00:29:45] 30 minutes. That's nonsense because you're right, [00:29:47]. The reason we're even making that an issue is because trust me, when it's in, you're going to go, uh-oh, I want to go. You just have that urge. It creates the urge. Like I said, a few minutes, even, is fine. It goes in pretty immediately.

Tom Lowe:
That's a real great dinner conversation. I remember years ago we were at Thanksgiving. All the kids were making fun of all this stuff I was getting into, this being one of them. Now, I've got three of my boys that work with me in it. It's not funny so much now as business.

Dr. Pompa:
I remember the first time my son did it. He did it in the evening. He wanted to try it before bed. I said, “I don't know if that's good because I get so much energy when I do it.” I get energized. Sure enough, he wasn't able to go to sleep that night because he did it, literally, 11:00 at night. It took him two extra hours of sleep because he just felt bounding energy. It has an immediate effect. I mean, it really does.

Tom Lowe:
Let's [00:30:51] some of the chronic disorders a little. Oh, you want to talk about that one? Go ahead.

Dr. Pompa:
No, we can talk about that next. What were you going to say?

Tom Lowe:
Just so people understand. I've got a list here that I usually do in the training. Any of the viral infections, the hepatitis, the influenza, the herpes, the mono, all of these things are covered when you're doing an ozone treatment. It takes three or four. You're going to know if it's helping you in three or four treatments. You go to the bacterial infections, the pneumonias, and the different e-coli, and the different things that occur there.

Again, it's positive. Joint pain, we've talked about a little bit. Inflammatory conditions, the bursitises, anything that's got an inflammation going on, an infection going on, internally, you want to get ozone in systemically. The joints, yeah, you can inject there, but you want this whole-body treatment that's going to occur.

Let me grab the next slide here. Circulation conditions, peripheral vascular disease, one of the main study areas on ozone has been in peripheral vascular disease because you get micro-circulation improvement. You get vasodilation, so the vessels are larger. Then you get more oxygen uptake because of the ozone oxygen mix going through. The same with UBI, but the two together, these neuropathies and the vascular disorders, these are really major players in that. It's unfortunate conventional medicine doesn't use this kind of thing.

Everything from headaches, [00:32:34], diabetic ulcers, they're all covered with the ozone. Autoimmune conditions, I like UBI a little bit better than ozone, but the two together again, synergistic, so fibromyalgia, lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, Raynaud’s, scleroderma, MS, allergies. All of these things have been covered with ozone through the years. Another number have really good studies. Everything, even through retinitis pigmentosa, tunnel vision. You wouldn't imagine that.

Again, it's been one of the positive things that the Cubans did and showed, hey, this really helps. I have a guy in our church that had that. It finally got to the point where he couldn't drive. I said, hey, I've got something you want to try, rectal ozone. It has stopped the progression of that. It's been two years, now. It usually just keeps closing up, and closing up, and closing up until they're looking through a pencil.

This has put that to bay for this fellow. You're just glad to be there to help them a little bit. A lot of people you talk to and they go, “What? Is it covered by insurance?” I say, “No.” You get desperate, and you finally go, okay, I've got COPD. I've got eye issues that I want to try it on. I've got psoriasis, or severe acne in so many areas that ozone has proven to be a positive therapy. I mean, how many—

Dr. Pompa:
I had a client. We were giving it to her for another reason. She said, “Okay. In one week, my acne went away.”

Tom Lowe:
That's one of the things I'll mention. Micah has a great cream. It's called Honest O3. I don't know if you've tried it yet.

Dr. Pompa:
I have it. I have it right over there.

Tom Lowe:
We looked at the different ozone oils. You can get safflower, you can get olive oil, you can get hemp oil. You can get some really strong ones, some weaker ones like [00:34:40] oil. He found a company that's mixing this with another blend. It has a better shelf life. It has better effectiveness. I'm not sure why. He's tested it out, now, for a couple of years. Honesto3.com has a really good ozonated product for skin.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I really like that product. I use it on everything. Let's talk about some off-uses now. This, we can put them in, and then connect this to where the ozone comes out, right? We connect that. Now we're able to project the ozone directly into our ear canal, which obviously it dissipates beyond that. It's a good way to get it in and around the brain. Talk a little bit about that procedure.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, and this is some of the other areas that people don't realize. Like I say, the major ones we have hit on. Putting it in the ears, any ear inflammation, infection, and I've heard lots of different people have used it. A little more anecdotal, the issue is you do have to moisturize the inside of the ear. Either send it through a bubbler, so it picks up some moisture.

Dr. Pompa:
I just take a little water and—

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, you can take water, and get it in there, and get it nice and wet. Then let it run for 10, 15 minutes. You're going to put that ozone into an area that's critical if you've got issues there. The other one that's really interesting is nasal or sinus. A lot of people have sinus infections. Again, I talked to someone just the other day. They had tried I don't know how many courses of antibiotic. Nothing's working. I said, “You really need to do this.” Again, they're coming from the white coat world, and they're looking at it. It's so easy to take a full breath, have a syringe with ozone, about 20, 30 gamma. Take a full breath. Inject that into each nostril. Hold it—

Dr. Pompa:
I think I have mine.

Tom Lowe:
—for about 30 seconds. You can just feel that ozone going up into the sinus cavities. There it is. There's the syringe. Now, you've got a catheter on it. You can either leave it on—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, so what we do is we connect. We fill the syringe here. It fills up. Unscrew it. Connect this catheter. By the way, the same one—I just said the wrong thing. It's not the same one that I use in my rectum; however, it is the same syringe. Meaning, same one, but I have two different ones. You get the point. Anyways, with this you take a deep breath. That way you get air in your lungs, so it does go down. Then you put this up. Then you shoot it up into the sinus and hold.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, you don't have to take it all the way up to your forehead. You just have to go a little ways. That's it. You're right. You take a deep breath, and you can never breathe it. One of the issues with ozone is it is an irritant to the lung. The lung can't combine with the ozone, so it irritates it, and you'll cough. If you have coughing, and it's with the ozone around, you've got too ozone in there. It's not going to hurt you, but it does cause a little irritation in the lungs.

If you take a deep breath, then inject that with a catheter, or just in with the nozzle, hold it 30 seconds. It goes up into the sinuses, and it's really a great treatment. You'd want to do a couple times a day for maybe three, four days of—it depends on how your sinuses are and how that works. Your nose might drip for half an hour or an hour, but that's part of what it's doing is going up into those—that cavity. A little bit of irritation, so but it is a great therapy.

Dr. Pompa:
We get a lot of people with cavitations. We do this after cavitation surgery. We do the ear, and then we do the nasal, which you're going to be experiencing. Now you know. You can probably put that together yourself. That ozone just really—when you get these cavitation surgeries, when I had mine done, I didn't have this. Otherwise, my bacteria wouldn't have mobilized like it did. It actually moved into my neck, and I didn't do things correctly back then. Anyways, but this will protect against that happening. It helps heal. I mean, it helps all these areas heal as well.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, and there are dentists that use ozone in their therapy. They inject it into these cavitation areas. They're killing the bacteria, that microbiome that builds up. All of this problem that we have of a toxic center being down in the tooth, it has no blood supply, but yet drops this toxin down into the body—ozone is just a natural for that. A biological dentist should be using ozone.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no doubt. Ours do. That's no doubt part of the process. It's amazing. I mean, it's such a simple thing. It really is. I know that people that have wounds, like diabetics that have wounds that aren't healing due to the diabetes. They have bags that you can put on that come—you can buy with your unit. You put it on, and it helps the healing [00:39:57].

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, and there's a whole—you can go on—there's a website, drs, like doctors, and then ozone.com. This is where you'll find all the information. You aren't going to find it when you're buying a machine or all this, but there's a lot of information on that website. I designed that quite a few years ago, and then Mike has rebuilt it into a whole full-blown videos and everything on just on ozone.

They can see limb bagging. One of the areas is if you have an open ulcer or wound, if you have a MRSA on there, and it's not being handled by something, it could be very dangerous, extremely dangerous. This kills. There's a sequence to doing it, but the first one is high levels of ozone, 70, 80 gamma for 10-15 minutes killing that bacteria that might be happening on that wound area.

Then, as you start to reconstruct, you lower the ozone, so day two, three, four, five you can have lower. That shoves oxygen into that area along with some of the healing effects of ozone. These ulcers start to go down. You go, wow, that's great. If you can do a UBI ozone, that's systemic. That's also going to help. That is one of the ways they use it for skin conditions, diabetic ulcers, anything that's occurring where what am I going to do, antibiotics or ozone? [00:41:29] take the easy one first. It doesn't hurt anyone.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely. I know most of the alternative cancer clinics are using ozone as part of their process as well.

Tom Lowe:
I've talked about this. I personally don't believe it is a kill the cancer type thing. I know I've been to places where they inject into tumors and so on. It is an injunctive therapy. It's going to give you antiinflammation, antiinfection, oxygen uptake, better oxygen utilization, better vasodilation microcirculation. Those are all really positive things. Immune system get going. As an injunctive, and I have a number of cancer clinics that use both the ozone and UBI is it's just part of their therapy. They're going to try everything they can to help people. A lot of times, they have some other ways that they're working against killing or working directly against cancer itself.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I mean, it's amazing. God provides for us everything we need and O3. We know O2, we can't live without it. O3, I [00:42:40] you can't live without it either. I mean, like you said, it protects our planet.

Tom Lowe:
Let me comment on direct intravenous DIV because these are some different things that are out there. These have been debated because there is a way to put ozone directly into the vein. It's ozone oxygen mix, low concentrations. Howard Robbins, out in New York, does a lot of it. Robert Rowan has done a lot of it.

There's a way to do it, but there are some precautions with it. It's not for the homeowner. There are a few doctors. A number of organizations have really dismissed it, saying it's too dangerous. I'd rather put it in the blood, too, than put it into the system because you know it's totally safe. DIV is out there. Some people use it. Some doctors use it. They're doctors. Hey, they can do it. There's a safe way to do it.

Dr. Pompa:
What are they claiming the advantage is?

Tom Lowe:
I talked to Chris Shade on that a little bit, from Quicksilver. He said, “I think it gives a little different response in the blood than putting it into the blood and then reinfusing it; more of a kick to it. It's quick. It's easy. I mean, the syringe, and a butterfly needle, and slowly infusing that gas into the vein. It is an ozone treatment.

Again, the foreign entities realize we're—there's probably 40,000 doctors that do ozone. We probably have 1,000 in the United States. We're only 140th of what's going on out there. A lot of times, we're the little bit of a cowboy. We're the ones that will try things that other people won't try.

DIV has been one of those things. It's one of the things we consider on the mission field where training someone really carefully because it's so inexpensive. It's pennies, basically, of oxygen. You can get a full ozone treatment in about ten minutes. It's got its cautions too. I wanted to mention DIV. That's out there. I want to mention ozone saunas. Do you have a sauna?

Dr. Pompa:
I do, but I don't have an ozone sauna.

Tom Lowe:
Let me [00:44:56]. You probably have a [00:44:58]. I wrote a paper about a year and a half ago because somebody asked me to analyze an ozone sauna. I'll say this, if somebody wants to prove me wrong, please prove me wrong. We tested one of the high-end ozone saunas. They wanted me to come in. I brought my analyzer in. Tested it against another analyzer first. They were just a few miles away.

We could not find ozone at skin level. Even though it was pumping 50 gamma as fast as it could for an ozone. Just think of putting in a small amount of air into a huge cavity. It's hot. That breaks down ozone. It's moist. That breaks down ozone.

Saunas are great, but don't worry about an ozone sauna. Get your ozone rectally. I know that's a treatment. I put it in rectally. I've got a treatment, tried and true, tested, studies, the whole thing. Ozone in a sauna, and particularly don't put it into one of these grey nylon saunas because nylon breaks down with ozone. You don't want to put it in there either.

Do you want a therapy? Do rectal and take your sauna. I mean, great, easy. I've got the paper on it. If somebody wants to, they could write me, info@sopmed.org. I'd be glad to send it off to them. If they can prove me wrong, fine. We tried every which way, hot, and cold, and took the heat out, and did everything. Bocci wrote on it in his too. He said, “I think there might be something.” It was like, one gamma at skin level. Skin's pretty impermeable for ozone. It's pretty good with oxygen. Maybe there's something, but I go, “Do a rectal ozone.”

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, when you get so much more. Why would you not? I mean, rectal ozone's studied. We know that works.

Tom Lowe:
Right.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, so it's a big world of ozone out there. People need to do their own study, take a look at it. Drsozone, UBI, look at Simple O3. There's other companies.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly. It's free, free information, go there, absolutely. We'll provide the link here. I'll have Ashley put the link here on how to get this for the price. We appreciate that, by the way, for the price our doctors get it for. It's a great, great unit to have at home. We appreciate that. As I said, we have doctors who view this. We have so many public that do it. You offered that. I appreciate that. Yeah, no, Tom, thank you. What a wealth of knowledge on ozone. I just can't wait for you to be at our seminar next.

Tom Lowe:
For our doctors out there, we do trainings four or five times a year around the country, and just try to put it in an airport, someplace close where they can just go in, spend two days. We have some that are bring your nurse, the high dose, especially, so they can learn it. We do a BOGO, buy one get one. We try to make it as accessible to the doctors out there too, so they understand it.

I always have another doctor, or a doctor that trains with me since I'm not a physician. That's that other dynamic. What do you do in your clinic with this? How does it work with this? It's just a great opportunity for them. Really pretty inexpensive to add something.

I was looking at one of my small machines, the UBI machine. It had 1700 hours on it. I just calculating real quickly, I said, they brought in $400,000 worth of business in four years with this little device. I think, so what. They spend on the top end ozone machine, four or five grand. I think, boy, they've got these tools out here. Use them, guys. If we can help you, let us know. That's what I do.

Dr. Pompa:
Every doctor listening should have this as part of their practice. I mean, come on. I mean, it's just such an amazing treatment for people. I've seen it. I've watched people transform. We discussed the conditions. Yeah, I mean, look we have—the doctors should be doing that for the—doing it. Your method is, I think, the best with the UV like that. To get that high dose in 30 minutes like that, no better.

Tom Lowe:
Yeah, we had a lady whose husband had EBB chronic, which a lot of them don't have. It was two years. He was almost disabled, in bed most of the time, brain fog, horrible. He did the combination of the ozone UBI. It took probably about eight to ten treatments, but he's fully regained. Do you know how sick people get? They feel like, “I don't know how to come back from this. I have no idea.”

Again, it's one tool. There's no silver bullet out there. Ozone UBI might not be it, but it certainly helps. I ran a clinic for a year. Seventy, eighty percent that chronically had disorders would say, “I've been significantly helped with four to five treatments. I mean that's pretty amazing.

Dr. Pompa:
It really is. They can get the $90 unit for their washing machine, garbage cans, and wash their vegetables.

Tom Lowe:
They can, yeah. It's a great little tool too. I've got mine going day in, day out, that run two years just to clean the smell out of the garbage.

Dr. Pompa:
Mine's running right now, actually, yeah. Where do they get that? Remind them where they get it.

Tom Lowe:
That one would come from sweetwaterdistributing.com. That's a catch-all. There's a few ozone things in there. There's UBI things. We were getting too many companies, too many places, so we made Sweetwater Distributing. You can watch a video, “A Fresh Thing,” afreshthing.com. You can see how to use it. I do a couple videos on there on it. It shows the garbage pan, or the cat pan, or the vegetables, so afreshthing.com.

Dr. Pompa:
Listen, we met everybody at every place we could possibly meet them, from food, to washers, to garbage cans. Intravenous, we've met them in their joints, rectum, I mean, come on. We hit it all, ears, nose, skin, bags, we hit it all. Great episode, Tom. I appreciate you coming on, your wealth and knowledge of this topic. I knew my viewers would absolutely love it, so thank you.

Tom Lowe:
I appreciate you Dan and what you're doing. I know we've got a few years left in us. Maybe we can keep doing this, and helping people, and that's our goal.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, God willing, you're right. Thanks, Tom.

Tom Lowe:
All right, take care.

Ashley Smith:
That's it for this week. I hope you enjoyed today's episode, which was brought to you by Fastonic molecular hydrogen. Please check it out at getfastonic.com. 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.