367: How To Accurately Detect Your Risk For Cancer

This replay episode from 2019 is so important, I knew I needed to bring it back. Dr. Dan Beilin, who has been recognized for determining how to inexpensively and accurately screen for cancer with unique thermography technology from Germany joined me for this interview. We talked about how this test can offer a cancer diagnosis years before the conventional medicine model would ever detect it. You will also hear about Merily’s results from this amazing device. I’m grateful for this advanced, fine-tuned ability to screen for early cancer, and this form of thermography will indeed save many lives.

More about Dr. Dan Beilin

Dr. Daniel Beilin was born in Los Angeles and has practiced complementary medicine for 35 years. He has a neurophysiology, gastroenterology and herbal pharmacology background. His first scientific endeavor included his own designed laboratory research at the UCLA Brain Research Institute, studying evoked potentials in the brain at the age of 16.

Dr. Beilin has been recognized for his teaching and education on early detection of women’s cancers by dynamic thermometry analysis methods and testified before the US Congress, bringing this possibility to the forefront, as well as importing 3 complementary methods from Europe to North America (Electrodermal Devices, Darkfield Hematology and Regulation Thermography).

From his website, www.fortifyhealth.com, Dr. Beilin provides consultation services to help those who feel the causes of their symptoms are not being fully addressed by conventional methods or services. Dr. Beilin outlines strategies for patients to help overcome diseases and dysfunctions using non-toxic dietary modifications, life style changes and herbal supplementation, at the same time raising awareness for emotionally co-created disorders.

Dr. Beilin focuses on causal factors in disease, often neglected and responsible for recurrence of many disorders including cancer. Dr. Beilin plays violin, practices yoga, meditation and the martial arts.

Show notes:
  • Practitioners! Use this link to implement this amazing thermography device in your practice.
  • Read more about the AlfaSight 9000 here
  • To purchase many of the supplements mentioned on our show, please visit AsSeenOnCHTV.com and use the code CHTV15 for 15% off.
  • CytoDetox: total detoxification support where it matters most – at the cellular level.
  • CytoDefend
  • Dr. Pompa's Beyond Fasting – now released!
  • Fastonic

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Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
On this episode of Cell TV, again, this is one you’re going to want to share and make sure that you stay tuned for. Why? Look, let’s say you have a set of symptoms that you’re not happy with. Where is the cause coming from? There’s an inexpensive, accurate, reproducible test that you can get. I discovered it when I was in Mexico at one of the top cancer clinics, and you may have seen that episode, Dr. Tony Jimenez, Hope for Cancer. This was one of the devices that they were using to determine cancer.

Let me just say this, four years before you actually may get a diagnosis, you can determine if you have a problem with this technology. That’s why you’re going to want to stay tuned for this show. Let me tell you something, wait ‘til you see this because we actually determined something about my wife that we would never have determined if it wasn’t for this testing. I’m very grateful that I came all the way to Cancun to discover this technology that’s from Germany, but I’m also very grateful that I came to California to actually get this further assessed. Wait ‘til you see this show, and you’re going to want to share it.

Hey, I want to tell you about one of our sponsors, CytoDetox. Look, podcasts cost money. There’s a lot of production going around this, but we are grateful to have CytoDetox as one of the sponsors. It’s so easy for me to talk about the product because myself and my family use it constantly as we practice what I preach. For over 15 years, I have talked about and taught doctors and the public about cellular detox. I’ll tell you, Cyto was a breakthrough. Cyto was a breakthrough for us, and it’s changed so many lives. We’re grateful that they sponsor Cellular Healing TV. It makes sense, doesn’t it? They should.

Ashley:
If you’re listening to this podcast and want to access the amazing CytoDetox product Dr. Pompa just mentioned, please visit detoxoffer.com. Again, that’s detoxoffer.com.

Hello, everyone, welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. This episode welcomes Dr. Dan Beilin who has been recognized for determining how to inexpensively and accurately screen for cancer with unique thermography technology from Germany. He’s here to talk about how this test can offer a cancer diagnosis years before the conventional model would ever detect it. Dr. Pompa will also share Merily’s results from this amazing device. Practitioners, also please check out our show notes for a link so you can implement this incredible technology into your practice. This is an important episode, and we are grateful to be able to share this advanced, fine-tune ability to screen for early cancer, and this form of thermography will indeed save many lives. I’m happy to introduce Dr. Dan Beilin and, of course, Dr. Pompa. Welcome!

Dr. Pompa:
All right, came to California to see your technology.

Dr. Beilin:
It’s good to meet you.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely, nice to meet you too, Dr. Dan.

Dr. Beilin:
We’re both Dr. Dan.

Dr. Pompa:
We are, exactly, Dr. Dan and Dr. Dan. I was introduced to this technology when I did—which most of them have seen already. I went to Mexico, one of the top cancer—alternative cancer clinics in the world, and that’s where I saw your technology. I was fascinated because at first I thought it was just standard thermography, and what I found was it’s not standard thermography. You’re going to find that out here in a second why that is. Dr. Dan, I do want you to talk about how you found this technology because this goes far beyond thermography. How did you find this? It’s from Germany I heard.

Dr. Beilin:
Originally, I had left medical school at UC Davis because I didn’t want to be brainwashed to only look at drugs to treat people. I had had a number of negative things happen to me through my life with hospitals and just wanted to do something that would really be healthy for the body instead of killing things and doing negative things to the body. Our bodies need nutrition. They need energy. They need force behind getting repair mechanisms going.

I started going to Germany in around 1979. I worked with the Queens doctors in homeopathy, and then I started going to Germany. Now, Germany has had a very open relationship to complementary medicine as 50% of their doctors practice some form of complementary medicine. One of the major forces is Dr. Voll, called EAV, electroacupuncture, after Dr. Voll. He was actually a surgeon that would take electronic readings of your skin, of the acupuncture points before his surgeries and go in and corroborate what he would find electronically with a galvanic [albinism] of the points to what he would find pathologically with cancers and with tumors and with growths and with things that he found.

One of his colleagues came to me in my many trips to Germany and taking in their understanding of how you have to really treat the whole terrain of the body. You don’t just kill diseases that are coming from other places. You have to build the terrain, and when you build the terrain, you’re not vulnerable anymore. My colleague came to me and said there’s a thermographic method that used a sampling of projection zones from the organs. In other words, it’s known in—when you went through your chiropractic medical school, as well as in neurology. It’s straight neurology that the—there are zones above the liver right here under the ribs that are controlled through the autonomic innervation or the nervous system innervation to a region of about two inches this way and four inches this way.

Dr. [Schwalm] from Germany was the first to start to take temperature measurements. First he did it at a distance. Then they came up with a probe. This is like this. Now, I improved the probe. I had a patient come into my office and say, “Here’s half a million dollars. Realize your dream.”

Dr. Pompa:
That’s nice.

Dr. Beilin:
I improved the old German method by making an infrared sensor that does not touch the skin because the old one was touching the skin. As soon as you touch the skin, you change the temperature. Then we go around sampling these points before and after we administer just the stress from the room. You take someone’s clothes off, but before you do that, you take the first measurements. They take their clothes off. You quickly do a second test. That means you complete the first test first, and then you take a second test after they’ve been exposed to the room air. That’s enough to elicit a fight or flight reaction.

Dr. Pompa:
Right, it stresses the body. I just watched him do my wife, which we’ll show you the report. Yeah, you did her first readings. What are there, 121 different points or something to that degree?

Dr. Beilin:
With women, the breasts as well, so it’s a very accurate comprehensive system. It’s about ten times more accurate than the infrared camera thermography because we’re using mathematics. We’re using actual temperature denoted in an actual temperature like 34.1 Celsius, and then we’re using mathematical algorithms to find patterns that have been identified over the last 50 years. We have about 60,000 patient database, and we’re comparing the ideal response to people that have come in sick. Then we send them for other lab tests to corroborate what we find. In other words, if we find suspicion of the breast, we don’t just go and do a biopsy. We send them for either mammography or MRI when we’re really concerned.

This is called an adjunct diagnostic by the FDA. It’s cleared by FDA. It’s cleared by CE. We’re in 15 countries now and 170 devices.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s why Dr. Tony uses it in his cancer clinic, obviously. This shows years before there is a problem.

Dr. Beilin:
It’s been proven through infrared cameras and our method that we can see the breast tumors in the terrain assessment. You can see the physiology going downhill well before there’s an actual tumor that’s discernable by an image up to four years in advance.

Dr. Pompa:
One of the things that actually interested me in it was because when—the reason I had it done originally on Merily was we were looking for a cavitation. She got cavitation surgery on her left, and then she started getting this drainage. I thought I don’t think the cavitation healed correctly. Actually, the thermography actually showed that in fact it didn’t. Matter of fact, not only that. As you’ll see, she has a lot of blocked lymph because of the infection in her jaw. It was a very—affecting her breast as well, so it was even moving to the right side.

Dr. Beilin:
I mean, never before has there been a rendering of physiological dynamics in a colored image. We’re actually looking at a treadmill test for all the organ systems in—portrayed in a colored image.

Dr. Pompa:
To be clear, this is not regular thermography. I mean, you’re stressing tissues like you’re getting on a treadmill for—like you said, like you’re checking your heart. You’re stressing it. It’s like a stress test, but we’re stressing organs.

Dr. Beilin:
Actually, in this diagram, on the right side, we’re seeing these abnormal colors that should be the light blue. That’s health. The abnormal yellow means inflammation, and the black means a blockage to the normal sympathetic control of those tissues.

Dr. Pompa:
You can see some different things happening right there in the jaw, and then you can see what’s happening down her lymphatic system in the neck. Then you can see some blockage right here near her breast. Matter of fact, there’s a different page. Show that of the breast. This is even more descriptive of what was happening here.

Dr. Beilin:
It shows the factors that are going in to create the stress to the breast. Not only do you know the breast itself has a problem, but then you can say, okay, the breast problems are due to endocrine imbalances, lymphatic imbalance.

Dr. Pompa:
Right, it was lymphatic imbalances.

Dr. Beilin:
Focal infections in other parts of the body that would be heading into the lymph feeding this array, the terrain.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, her immune system was being affected by it. By the way, that’s why we wanted the test done. We knew that something in that cavitation was still not right.

Dr. Beilin:
Say we were to attack a country and that country was so disorganized that people just ran crazily through the streets, and they couldn’t get a defense mechanism up and running. We can see how organized the response is in every area of the body. Here, this charting system with this device…

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, go closer.

Dr. Beilin:
…shows us that in this left area, which is the head region, that the curve actually goes up, which means that there is more chaos.

Dr. Pompa:
A stressor, yeah.

Dr. Beilin:
There’s more chaos in the head.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, there’s more chaos in her head. Trust me on that. She’s not here to defend herself. She left.

Dr. Beilin:
When we look in certain areas of the jaw and certain areas of the…

Dr. Pompa:
Upper jaw is high, head.

Dr. Beilin:
Uh-huh, so there’s different ways to look at the body. When you go into the doctor, he might send a blood test. He might do a physical exam. He might get a history. He’s trying to get these different angles on things in order to put together a picture. This gives you…

Dr. Pompa:
A good picture of those, yeah.

Dr. Beilin:
…many different angles all at once in one test.

Dr. Pompa:
I mean, here, Doctor, let’s say that she had another—first of all, a mammogram might be another four years before it was even positive. Let’s fast forward. She gets a mammogram, and they say, okay, there’s a problem there. Now they want to do standard treatments. Meanwhile, they never realized what was happening up here. What this test showed, there’s a problem here. There’s a problem here. It’s not draining. That’s the thing. This looks at more causative factors and projection of what could happen in the future.

Dr. Beilin:
Most cases of breast disease are called differential carcinoma in situ where they find microcalcifications in the breast. It was deemed by Laura Esserman, who’s chief of the breast division at UC San Francisco—she’s a radiologist and a breast surgeon. She has said DCIS is not cancer until the very latest stage. Most clinics will actually put clips in, and they’ll take biopsies and irritate the tissue so much that in a year or two there’s a cancer that develops.

Dr. Pompa:
I couldn’t agree more.

Dr. Beilin:
You’re actually pushing the person towards the cancer that could’ve been reversed if you wouldn’t have done anything. We would’ve used a test like this to find out what are the causative elements, whether it’s infections. Also, in Harvard, they’re doing a new study that looks pretty promising that behind some breast cancers is Epstein-Barr virus.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, listen, we just did a show, Episode 263. I interviewed Rafael Gonzalez, and that’s one of his theories is that we’re seeing Epstein-Barr virus is a trigger for cancer, a trigger for many different conditions.

Dr. Beilin:
We can see here in this raw data that—we look at these two points right here and just below your inner canthus on both sides. If these are asymmetrical, that means they’re different temperatures by one degree or more. That’s a virus sign. We even know, okay, we can send for blood tests, even though it’s not definitive, but we can start her on lymphatic remedies by bolstering her lymphatic and immune system specifically, which is also connected to the gut. We can get well on the road, whereas normally, if she just complained of cavitation—she just goes to the dentist, clears this up. She still has this viral thing in the lymph. You wouldn’t have known it.

Dr. Pompa:
It was even coming down into her breast, the blockage, though.

Dr. Beilin:
She has a 53% block on the neck lymph, which is twice as high as it should be.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s a couple other cases. Here’s a multiple myeloma case. You can explain that one.

Dr. Beilin:
This is actually a friend of mine who died in the hands of Kaiser, who overdosed him with so much chemo after they had underdosed him for two years. Then he developed kidney failure and died.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s his scan. You might want to just point it out. How many years before, though, was this?

Dr. Beilin:
This was about two years before he died. He had tumors in…

Dr. Pompa:
Hold it up, yeah.

Dr. Beilin:
He had tumors in these regions here. We’ve also done comparisons of PET scans.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s very obvious that there’s a problem there and down here.

Dr. Beilin:
As they treated him with chemo, we could see whether their chemo was effective. Then I would add in my remedies, and we can see exactly what’s being done. This is noninvasive. This is no radiation, painless, and as a way to—it’s cleared by FDA. It’s adjunct diagnostics.

Dr. Pompa:
Here was another breast. You can see the pathology here. Now, this one, it looked there were some intestinal stuff going on, obviously some lymph stuff happening.

Dr. Beilin:
Oh, this was actually a patient that was—yeah, she refused to take anything. This patient came to me. She said, “Well, the doctors have found this lump in my breast.” I said, “Well, from our scan, it looks suspicious. You have 9 out of 13 criteria coming up, which means that I want you to go and possibly have the tumor removed, and then we’ll work on you too.” She says, “I’m not going to do anything.” This shows her getting worse and worse through the years. She finally needed a mastectomy and some chemo. We could have prevented all that with this, with this 9 out of 13 infrared camera methods that are the fancy image that you see as a pretty picture. They only have two criteria for suspicions. If I only know two things about you, how much am I going to know?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, not much.

Dr. Beilin:
If I know 13 things about you…

Dr. Pompa:
That’s a lot.

Dr. Beilin:
I’m going to have a lot more in my armamentarium to say, okay, I think I’m more confident in my conclusion and what the decisions I’m going to make.

Dr. Pompa:
How does standard medicine now look at this? What would the scientists at Harvard say?

Dr. Beilin:
I could tell you…

Dr. Pompa:
They don’t like regular thermography. What about this technology?

Dr. Beilin:
No, they’ve long thrown out infrared cameras, as well as FDA says they’ll never clear another infrared camera, but they cleared our device. Because it’s mathematical in the computations and we’re looking at signatures, it correlates to the whole future of radiology, which is computer assisted diagnostics. It’s using computers to help us to find things. The radiologist’s eyes are pretty good. The problem with radiology now is most of the decisions are made by residents. They’re inexperienced. They’re so overwhelmed with so much to do and so many images. They’re in black rooms for15 hours a day. They’re new at this, and then the supervisors just come and sign them off.

I think the latest statistic that one doctor, radiologist told me that goes around hospitals to try to fix them is 50% accuracy of mammograms. It was 70% until they had these administrative problems, so it depends where you go. It should be about 70 to 73%. Our system is about 83% accurate, but we’re not looking at an image. We’re looking at physiology. Physiology happens before pathology. In other words, if my chemistry is sick and I go in for a blood test, it might not show any abnormality because the blood tests were designed only to see things at an end stage.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right.

Dr. Beilin:
How do you define how the body is going in the time before it has something positive?

Dr. Pompa:
With this test, you’re assessing organ health. You’re assessing general immune health. We talked a lot about cancer. Who else wants this test? What other conditions is it really good for evaluating?

Dr. Beilin:
Oh, we have a Lyme disease signature. Lyme has become one of the greatest attacks on our civilization. Even in Asia, they don’t even know that there’s Lyme. I go to Asia every few months, Philippians, Malaysia, Singapore, and China, and they are having more and more Lyme disease. You can see a signature of the brain points going colder instead of getting warmer.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I saw that on here in the descriptions where it says, okay, you may have some type of infection. However, it looks more Lyme induced, or it looks more viral, or it looks more fungus.

Dr. Beilin:
We can distinguish between virus, bacteria, a Lyme and Lyme co-related infections.

Dr. Pompa:
Even fungus.

Dr. Beilin:
Gut dysbiosis, fungal from the gut. We have these patterns. I didn’t make them up. These were over the last 50 years defined by MDs sitting in rooms in Europe and corroborating with the lab results as they got their normal lab.

Dr. Pompa:
People have to understand the technology. I don’t want to get beyond this too much because people won’t understand it. I mean, every organ has—and we learned them. There are these neurological patterns and connections.

Dr. Beilin:
They’re projected episodes.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, projections, right, it’s neurological, actually.

Dr. Beilin:
It was a famous neurologist, Henry Head. That was his name, so they call these Head zones.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s the areas that you’re measuring. Show that other thing you had. I want to show just how these point. The points that they’re measuring, these 120 points…

Dr. Beilin:
This is the actual computer that we use. It’s a medical grade special computer, and so it guides the nurse to know where to do the next point.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s the head points. Then show the body points. These are the points. They correlate.

Dr. Beilin:
These are all the body points.

Dr. Pompa:
These are the points that are correlating with different organs, different nerve variance. .

Dr. Beilin:
In men, there are 90 points. In women, there are 120 points because we do the breast. There is no normal parameters that we’ve developed or that have been developed for the men with the breast, so it’s a little bit different for men and women. The whole test takes 20 minutes. It has the five minutes of the first measurement, ten minute cooldown. That’s your stress response time. You come to a new level of homeostasis. Then your readings plateau, and then you do a second reading. The whole test takes 20 minutes.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re measuring how the body adapts or doesn’t adapt, or I should say the tissues, how the tissues adapt.

Dr. Beilin:
It’s really how the transmission of the tissues and organs are being conveyed through the nervous system. The nervous system acts as a transmitter line of the information that’s coming through the organs.

Dr. Pompa:
It could be as simple as stating this. The tissues that aren’t adapting, then that’s a potentially diseased tissue.

Dr. Beilin:
Right.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s what they’re looking for, which adaptations, something that I—what is the state of health?

Dr. Beilin:
You can’t underestimate the value.

Dr. Pompa:
A state of health is a body that finds homeostasis and adapts. A state of dis-health is a body that’s not adapting.

Dr. Beilin:
I mean, it goes back to the classic, [00:22:49], [00:22:50] all of this physiological studies of stress.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, so we’re taking the whole principle of humans. Healthy people adapt and have homeostasis, meaning balance. Unhealthy people don’t. We’re doing that with the tissue. These particular tissues aren’t adapting.

Dr. Beilin:
And organs.

Dr. Pompa:
Organs and, therefore, there’s a problem there potentially.

Dr. Beilin:
We have structural points, like for chiropractors. We have the mastoid process, which tells us about the upper spinal, and we have the sacroiliac, which tells us about the lower spinal as well. Our company is about six years old. I founded it then.

Dr. Pompa:
His technology is far older than that, however.

Dr. Beilin:
Yeah, I mean, 25 years ago came out with one of the later computerized versions, and then I took [00:23:42]. I founded the company. It’s called Alfa Thermodiagnostics. The name of the machine is the AlfaSight 9000, and we’re at www.alfathermo, A-L-F-A, like the Italian sports care, alfathermo.com.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and that’s important. Many of you right now are probably asking, well, where can I get the test?

Dr. Beilin:
Where can I get the machine?

Dr. Pompa:
Where can I get the machine? If any doctors out there watching, where can I get the machine? Those of you who say I want the test, you can go to the website.

Dr. Beilin:
We have leaders that have endorsed it, so Joe Mercola came out after he saw it.

Dr. Pompa:
Joe’s a good friend of ours, yeah.

Dr. Beilin:
Yeah, he interviewed me. He got up in front of 300 doctors and said that everyone has to have this, which is true. Then we have Thomas Rau in Switzerland who has a big hospital. He has two of these. He’s running about 100 per month, about 100 tests per month. We have Dietrich Klinghardt, who is one of my old friends from Germany.

Dr. Pompa:
You have a list of places where they can get this testing, correct?

Dr. Beilin:
Yeah, if you go on alfathermo.com, there’s a map that’s available.

Dr. Pompa:
Alfathermo.com.

Dr. Beilin:
Correct.

Dr. Pompa:
Got it, okay. That’s for you all. All right, how much is the testing? What’s typically the test?

Dr. Beilin:
Doctors usually charge…

Dr. Pompa:
They have different charges, I’m sure.

Dr. Beilin:
Yeah, between 250 and it depends on their license. We have a radiologist doing it in Texas that charges about 650. It’s a revenue enhancer. You can do up to 8 tests a day, and if you’re charging 250, you’re paying for the machine in…

Dr. Pompa:
It’s inexpensive. I mean, that’s the best part about it, right?

Dr. Beilin:
About 17,000.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s fantastic. Okay, this is something that I would say, okay, great, we’re identifying these weaknesses, etc. Every doctor is going to have different methods of what to do after the fact. The key here, what is the biggest benefit of this? Is it early detection, or is it knowing where the cause is?

Dr. Beilin:
Both.

Dr. Pompa:
Both, okay.

Dr. Beilin:
If you have a known disease—say you have colitis. You don’t know is that from long-term dysbiosis only? Is it from an infection and a tooth that slowly leaked down and created havoc in the gut? Is it from the lymph? Where is it originally from? If we just keep chasing after diseases in the particular organs they express themselves in, we very well might be never catching up to it, and it’s going to reproduce itself.

Dr. Pompa:
Then let me ask you this. For example, my wife, okay, now we’re going to get this done. We’re going to get some other things done.

Dr. Beilin:
She needed lymphatic remedies that—which you wouldn’t have known if she would’ve just had the dental work done.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely. Then we follow up in how long? When do you typically recommend follow up?

Dr. Beilin:
With her, I would do a month to six weeks. With patients that are fairly healthy, we do about every four months, but in cancer patients, we will do once a month because we need to see what we’re doing.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, what’s working and what’s not?

Dr. Beilin:
If I’m choosing a good liver remedy that works on most of my patients but not on this one, I’ll be able to see it.

Dr. Pompa:
One of the things I always ask because I’m always very skeptical about machine diagnostics, etc. is the reproducibility. Meaning if we did the test on my wife and then half hour later we did it again, what would the result be?

Dr. Beilin:
We’ve done many studies. Mostly the Germans did the studies with doing this test every day. You couldn’t do it right after you’ve done one because the person has already exhibited their adrenal reserves into the response, so they’ve used up some. We do it the next day at around the same time, and it’s completely reproducible.

Dr. Pompa:
See, I like that.

Dr. Beilin:
We have patients that do every year, and we can see their general personality. It’s like a fingerprint. Every patient you get when you’re—when you see a patient, you have this fingerprint character of the patient, and you know how to look at them.

Dr. Pompa:
If they have a new pathology or stress, you’re going to see it clearly.

Dr. Beilin:
Then you start to ask them questions based upon your result. They said, well, how do you know that I get up at night to urinate all the time? I didn’t tell you that. How do you that you have—that I have this one kidney infection because I don’t tell anybody about that? That happens daily.

Dr. Pompa:
What are some of the really—I don’t want to say cool things that you’ve seen but shocking things? I don’t know.

Dr. Beilin:
I can tell you a shocking thing. We have a patient who is treating at our clinic in Malaysia, who is doing some advanced immunology. They’re treating a Hodgkin’s case, cancer, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and they get successive PET scans. In counties like that, you can actually order more stuff. They’re more open to do whatever you want as doctors, so we order successive PET scans. We saw that, as she got better, the PET scans became negative. On our tests, we could see remnants of the old infections in the lymph from the Hodgkin’s that they now were saying were clear.

We can know to keep treating the patient in the same way and what the timing should be, whether there’s true resolution. If we can see physiology, we can see, hey, this person’s going to get a recurrence in six months, and you’re telling them that they’re clear. This is a way that we can say, no, we still see that there is an infection. We can see the teeth. It’s an incredible view. We’ve compared it to successive PET scans, and we see the same patterning of what the PET hot cells show with our thermographic method.

Dr. Pompa:
For me, just as a person who wants to stay healthy, I get it. It’s like we have to be ahead of things, at least four years ahead of a disease process by…

Dr. Beilin:
With the breast, that’s right.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, but maybe more—I mean, maybe the same with some of the other organs.

Dr. Beilin:
Sure, the prostate.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s something I feel why wouldn’t you want to get this technology done? It’s affordable. It’s accurate. It’s reproducible.

Dr. Beilin:
I’m a scientist at heart. I was a research physiologist in gastroenterology and neurology, so I did some of the original stroke research actually at UC Davis with neurosurgeons. We were creating strokes, and then we were putting dogs down with barbiturates, which is a way that you induce a semi-coma, which it re-establishes the circulation to the areas of the brain which would normally die from a stroke. We were the first to actually determine that if you put someone into a near coma state for a period of days or hours then you can help the blood vessels of the brain to regrow and establish collateral circulation. I come from a science background, and I want everything I do to be scientific.

Dr. Pompa:
I can tell that about you, no doubt. My whole thing is I come from that place of we want to look for the cause. It’s like, in other words—and that’s what this does. You’re looking for cause, okay, great.

Dr. Beilin:
What a concept, huh?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, right, it’s like you have a set of symptoms, okay great. So what? This is showing where some of the pathologies are, the causative factors.

Dr. Beilin:
I don’t know what they do in hospitals nowadays.

Dr. Pompa:
They’re chasing the symptom, meaning that, oh, you have a lump in your breast now. Let’s just take that out.

Dr. Beilin:
Medicine was designed, this so-called modern medicine of our country at least, to keep people from dying, and it’s pretty good at that.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s so true. Yeah, no, this is great technology. I hope most people—make sure our folks—in the notes, we’ll have the links.

Dr. Beilin:
It’s Alfa, but don’t forget you spell it like the Italian sports car, alfathermo.com. My name is Dr. Dan Beilin. That’s B-E-I-L-I-N. I’m D-R-B-E-I-L-I-N@alfathermo.com.

Dr. Pompa:
Here in California.

Dr. Beilin:
Yeah, northern California.

Dr. Pompa:
Came a long way to see the technology. Actually, I came a longer way the first time. I actually went all the way to Cancun. We have a three-part series that we did on things that they’re doing in Mexico, treatments that people need to know about that they don’t know about.

Dr. Beilin:
Asia is coming up and selling like crazy.

Dr. Pompa:
Coming up, I’ll be heading there. I will be heading there.

Dr. Beilin:
We have Malaysia as one of the leaders; Philippines with Dr. [00:32:56], if you know her. She’s starting to work with Tony, which is a friend of mine. Her mother died of cancer, and so she decided to make one of the leading cancer centers in Manila. She’s almost up and running. Then Taiwan, they’re developing one in Taiwan. I mean, the Chinese are giving billions of dollars into the development of alternative medicine.

Dr. Pompa:
Folks, I’ll be going there, and you’re going to point me in some great directions of they have to hear about this treatment or this testing device. No, it was great. Yeah, we saw this technology when I was there, and I said, my gosh, I got to do a whole show just on that. Awesome, thank you for being here.

Dr. Beilin:
Yeah, thanks for having me.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely, we appreciate it. I’m going to get tested now. All right, folks, see you on the next one.

Dr. Beilin:
Okay.

Dr. Pompa:
I want to give thanks to one of our sponsors, CytoDefend. Look, in a time like this, I think that our immune system and keeping our immune system up right now is more important than ever. I can also tell you that I pay attention to the things that keep my immune system on par and healthy so so glad that CytoDefend is one of our sponsors here on Cell TV. It’s a product that I use, my family uses, and hopefully, you’ll check it out. By the way, you can check it out with the link right here below. If you want to try a free bottle, you can actually get a free bottle. Just pay the shipping. I think you’ll reorder after that, but check it out.

Ashley:
If you’re listening to this podcast and want to access the amazing CytoDefend product Dr. Pompa just mentioned, please visit freeimmunity.com. Again, that’s freeimmunity.com.

That’s it for this week. The materials and content within this podcast are intended as general information only and are not to be considered as substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you would like to purchase some of the supplements mentioned on this show, please visit the site asseenonchtv.com and use the code CHTV15 for 15% off. Again, that’s asseenonchtv.com. Use the code CHTV15 for 15% off. As always, thanks for listening.