TruDOSE 240911 Tapley Holland - Host Fred Bloem Transcript

DISCLAIMER: THIS INFORMATION IS FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE TAKEN AS MEDICAL ADVICE. PLEASE DISCUSS THIS INFORMATION WITH DR. BLOEM IN THE CONTEXT OF A PHYSICIAN-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP. THIS IS NOT A WORD-FOR-WORD TRANSCRIPT AND SOME LIBERTY HAS BEEN TAKEN TO ADD, REPLACE, OR ELIMINATE WORDS OR SENTENCES IN AN EFFORT TO MAKE THE CONTENT EASIER TO UNDERSTAND. THIS TRANSCRIPT IS DERIVED FROM THE SEPTEMBER 11, 2024, ZOOM RECORDING AND HAS NOT BEEN REVIEWED OR APPROVED BY TAPLEY HOLLAND.


linkIntroduction

I'm doctor Fred Bloem. I'm a holistic and integrative physician. My office is in Kensington, Maryland. And I've been on a journey to get to the root cause of my patient's health issues starting back in about the year 2000, when I realized that as a family doctor, what was what was I doing for the most part? I was treating symptoms with specific pharmaceuticals. Hypertension, well, there's a matching blood pressure medication. Cholesterol, there's a cholesterol medication, but nothing really getting to the to the root of the problem. So that started my journey more than, I would say almost 25 years ago. I learned about weight loss. I learned about bioidentical hormones. And along the way, there have been there have been milestones that have really caused me to grow tremendously as a practitioner. That includes ozone therapy back in 2012 when I did ozone training with Dr. Frank Shallenberger in Nevada. It includes training with Dr. Dietrich Klinghardt, learning autonomic response testing and learning more about how to treat patients with difficult health conditions such as Lyme disease and autism. It includes the Weberneedle Endolaser, a tremendous device from Germany that I acquired last year with which I can do intravenous laser and intra-articular laser, and that's been very helpful for patients with chronic infections like Lyme. Also for patients with cancer, we can do photodynamic therapy. It's a very versatile device. So just recently, I learned about TruDOSE PRP. I've been familiar with PRP, platelet rich plasma. I've done it for quite a few years, and I recently acquired a more advanced PRP system, a double spin system, which, first of all, separates the red blood cells from plasma. And with the second spin, we concentrate the platelets in the plasma. So that's worked well, but as we all know, nothing is a 100%. Some patients have had great responses, and some haven't. And so when I learned about TruDOSE PRP, it was actually from a prospective patient who was inquiring about doing EBOO (Extracorporeal Blood Ozonation & Oxygenation), ozone therapy, before the TruDOSE treatment. I had never heard about it, and she was talking about intravenous PRP, so I looked it up. And, it caught my attention, so I immediately contacted TruDOSE and got on a call with Tapley. I think it was probably less than a month ago or so. And he answered a lot of my questions, and I said, well, let's go ahead and move forward. I want to do this. Let's schedule a Zoom meeting, and let's schedule some treatment dates. So so here we are, Tapley Holland. I'm actually from Holland so we have that in common. Your last name and my birth country. But, yeah, I'm excited about introducing TruDOSE PRP to my practice, to my patients because my patients are among the sickest patients with chronic infections like Lyme, coinfections, patients with cancer, patients with Parkinson's disease, patients with fluoroquinolone toxicity, patients with autism, chronic pain. I'm very excited about the possibilities. I'd like to introduce it to you, Mr. Tapley Holland.

linkTapley Holland

Doctor Bloem, it's interesting you talked about fluoroquinolone toxicity because I'm now running into that a lot.

So hello, everyone. Thank you for getting on this. Many of you probably seen aspects of this Zoom call already. And if you have, I apologize if some of this is repeat, but many patients jump on here to hear it again and again just because, I guess it's just good information. And so it's about that 7:06 pm mark, which is the time point where everybody is almost getting on. And so we'll just jump right into it. And I've been excited to do this because when you talk about TruDOSE, the technology, and the treatment, we don't let everybody have this. And we only really let, providers who meet a certain profile, I'll call it training, if you will. And Dr. Bloem definitely, meets and exceeds all those criteria considering all the types of things that he treats and that he uses. So it’s lucky that, that we can have him on board doing this. So let me go and get started to share my screen. So what we're going to do, I'm going to give a talk for about 30 minutes. And, really, it's just what we've learned. What we've learned, and really talk about this treatment and then open it up for discussion and really answer any questions that you might have. So talk for about 30 minutes, then open up and make sure that you the goal, for everyone on here to get as much information as they can to make an informed decision. So without further ado so I've given this talk many, many times, not just on Zoom calls, but to many doctor conferences, the Freedom Doctor Conferences, to the Autism Health Summit.

linkReversing inflammation with the TruDOSE therapy

I'll be giving it a couple times, this fall. I'll definitely have to change the material and start incorporating data that we have collected on patients on autism, PANS, and PANDAS. We're just now coming out and really telling the world what we've been observing for the past 7 years. But the title of this talk is reversing inflammation with the TruDOSE therapy. These are my disclosures and I do have a bias on this topic because I did create the technology and I did uncover therapy. But if anybody wants to screenshot right now, here are all the citations and literature that I'm going to be covering or at least referencing throughout my presentation. And what we're going to cover. And just like Dr. Bloem said, the PRP is nothing new and neither are stem cells, but the problem, why do these therapies in general have a 50/50 success rate? Many of you probably heard stories about it, but many of you either experienced it and it didn't work for you. Maybe you heard stories about your friend having it and it worked for them, but then it didn't work for the 2nd, 3rd time, and why is that? And then that problem of that 50/50 success rate led to me creating the TruDOSE technology. And by a proxy of that invention, it led to me uncovering and discovering the benefits of doing the IV therapy. So really one led to the other. And then really, after you see all these benefits, it really goes down to the heart of what we were not taught about what platelets are actually doing in the bloodstream, and then we'll end it with how this treatment is reversing these conditions.

linkPRP is derived from your own blood

So like Dr. Bloem said is that PRP is a treatment that's from you. It's derived from you, your own blood. There's nothing that's added to it. And it's described in the literature as a concentration of platelets given back to you, when compared to a baseline platelet count within your bloodstream. So there's, I would argue that there's nothing more established within the literature domain that has a safety and profile efficacy more than PRP across every application and specialty. And it's primarily historically only been known to be used for site specific applications, meaning if I have a knee problem, inject the knee. If I have maybe a wound application, apply it there. Or many of you have probably experienced it at the med spa with your hair and aesthetic applications. What the world did not know until about 7 years ago is when I uncovered the benefits of what we're going to talk about tonight with the IV application, which I later, patented a couple applications of the IV administration. So how do we create PRP or really any stem cell therapy for that matter? We have to take a volume of blood from your arm, just like doing a regular lab draw, and we put it into a centrifuge to separate the components based on their weight. So your heavier red blood cells fall to the bottom and everything else rises to the top. And then you take everything else and you put it over here and you process it again, and that next processing, part of it separates the next heavier component, which in this case will be your platelets. And that’s how you do stem cell therapies as well.


You have to keep processing until you get really the cell that you want. And so, really, centrifugation is nothing more than a filtration process. And think of it like you have a having orange juice and pulp where pulp represents the cells or the platelets. And, if you have no water added to it, you have a very orangey tasting drink. If you add water to it, then it starts to get diluted. And that's where concentrations come in, and that's really where dosing comes in. So like I was saying, there's nothing more established in the literature. Thousands of articles, thousands. You could find evidence right now that overwhelmingly supports PRP or any other type of therapy for, let's say, osteoarthritis of the knee. But you can also find articles that say, that PRP does not work against saline control for osteoarthritis of the knee. And so why is that? It's because we've never scientifically defined it, understood it to be, really the idea of dosing for using therapies from our own body is just counterintuitive. It’s very intuitive for, say, medication because we have to do dosing studies, to say you need to get 6 to an adult and 2 to a child. But the idea of stem cells from my own body or platelets from my own body, it's just a very counterintuitive idea. So if I don't know the dose to outcome response relationship and really how many platelets are needed for this or that condition, then what you have is an inconsistency and variability problem from patient to patient. So what do I mean by that? And Dr. Bloem is saying that he definitely experienced has experienced this and he's upgraded and but until you really point the problem out into the way I just defined it, which is right here.


Let's pretend that everybody on this call has a knee problem. Let's pretend we have the same knee problem. Well, if you were to go to the orthopedic surgeon's office down the street, and they said, what? You are a PRP candidate. They would take the same amount of blood draw from each one of us. Let's pretend it's 10 milliliters of blood from the guy in the upper left-hand corner of the screen, 10 milliliters for me, 10 from Dr. Bloem. Maybe it's 30 milliliters or maybe it's 60 milliliters. But the point is they're going to take the same amount of blood from each one of us. All 30 of us on this call right now, process it to centrifuge just like I just showed you, and then give it back to us in our knee. So the question becomes, does it make sense that I take biologically different people even if they have the same condition, I draw the same amount of blood from them, process in a centrifuge, should we all have the same results? No, we won't. And that problem led to me creating the technology back in 2018, which was called and is still called TruDOSE. And what TruDOSE is, if you were to walk into, say, Dr. Bloem's office on treatment date, here's how it will be different. When you walk in, we're going to measure a few drops of blood, just about 3 or 4, 5 drops, and it's going to be analyzed in this device over here, which is going to measure your platelets. Now, on the front end, it's just measuring something simple as your platelets, which I'm going to argue are more complex than we've led to believe, but it's just going to be measuring your platelets. Now platelets are one of the things that's going to be used by the intelligence of the software to determine one thing.


How much blood do we draw from you based on the condition that you're complaining about walking in the door? So on the back end, there's all types of intelligence metrics that are built into one thing, the platelet, and that's one of many things that the software used to determine a patient specific blood draw. And that's what we're going to process in the centrifuge. So for this knee example, for the guy in the upper left hand corner, it could be 78 milliliters of blood for him. It might be 178 milliliters of blood for me. It might be 225 for Dr. Bloem and so forth and so on. And then the next question is, we must make sure we have the right dose, the right strength for the knee condition and the software has figured that out. So, the knee dose will be different than the lupus dose. It'll be different than the hair dose. So we'd we have to make sure you get the right amount because if you don't get enough, it won't stimulate a response. If you have too much, it could do the same as, say, pouring too much fertilizer on your yard. You have to have the right ratios. And so everybody's going to get their own therapeutic personalized dose, and the software has demonstrated over 95% accuracy to help us produce that. And the whole process to do this takes about 45 minutes. And so when I got started with this almost 7 years ago, I just wanted to do things that people could understand that were well understood within the literature. In this case, make my knee feel better or in this case, make my hair grow. So many of you who've had this treatment done at the med spa for your hair know that you need to get 4 to 5 treatments and that's how they've sold these packages.


So you have these 4 to 5 treatments, and some of you have zero response. Maybe some of you have some response. But if the right dose, then there's no need to have 3, 4, 5 treatments because the hair does can yield results the first time. And that's really what TruDOSE is, making sure you have a therapeutic response the first time. What changed everything for me and the reason that most of us are on this call is actually a great story, which we can talk about another time, and it's kind of on the Internet now. But how it led to me creating the IV application. Because 8 months into this, I was trying to heal somebody in my family. And I said what would happen if we do this intravenously? Because no one would conceivably say that's a good idea, but to me, it was a great idea. And flash forward close to 15,000 patients and almost 7 years later, that’s how people know us, as the IV therapy. And that's what really TruDOSE has become to be known as. And reversing all of these conditions and symptoms that conventional medicine says is not treatable. And so the question is how? Because doctors and patients alike want to know how is blood from me that was just in me, even though you're doing, the right dose, which totally makes sense, but my blood was just in me. How is this doing this? Well, here is what we were not taught about what platelets actually do. So there's a platelet. And if you were to Google, what do platelets do?

Doctor Bloem, if I said, what do platelets do? What were you taught just through medical school? And you can't say growth factors, but what would the normal response be?

“They're involved in a blood clotting.”

There you go. And that's exactly what you would find is that when you have too many platelets, that you're at risk of clotting, so you have to get some sort of medication. Or if you have too few platelets, you're at risk of bleeding out. And that's really the function that we were all taught. And so when I give this presentation to say a physician conference, I always put this slide up here to really level set the our understanding. And I show them this quote, ask everybody to read it, and then I have the doctors in the audience just guess when this study was published (1915). And the quote says, in many diseases, substances are formed which act as either irritants or poisons to the platelet forming organs, and depending on the intensity of their action, they exert their influence either to increase the count or reduce it. And so there's always a number of responses in the audience, but no one ever guesses this. And so the point I'm trying to drive home is that there's obviously something that we observed over a century ago about what the platelet is actually doing as it relates to disease state more than just clotting. And, I'll go through this pretty quickly so we can get to questions, but you really have to under understand what do platelets actually do. And the only thing I want you to remember is 70,000,000 per minute. Your platelets are being manufactured at a rate of about 70 million per minute.


And they start in your bone marrow from these cells called your hematopoietic stem cells. And so they're created from your bone marrow, and those stem cells travel to your lungs where your lungs turn those stem cells into basically large and small platelets. Why? It's because large and small platelets are related to disease state. So the larger platelets are carrying more repair needs for the cells, and larger platelets are also carrying more viral killing weapons, more bacterial killing weapons, because they are the frontline defense of our bodies, everything. So these larger and small platelets travel down to your spleen where your spleen takes about a third of the large platelet pool and keeps it over here to the side. And this entire population is turned over about every 8 to 10 days during normal times. And depending on what is happening to you, the stressor event, whether it's emotional, whether you get a fracture, whether you have Lyme disease happen to you right away, whatever happens to you, even as we're sitting here on this call, will dynamically change your platelet production rate. It'll change what your platelets are actually carrying on them. So they are really a response in being put all around the body strategically to respond to anything and everything that can happen to us. So kind of like fire stations around a city, they are the first responders and platelets are just that. So really your platelet number, your platelet count, what I've learned from all of our data collection is really a determinant of your real time disease state. And so how does this relate to therapy? Well, if you're going to read any paper, this is a really good one. It's one of my favorite because it can it draws analogies of platelets being analogous to drones.


It's not too deep in the science. It's not too layman. It’s the right balance of explaining how our platelets, functioning as drones, surveilling our entire body, are looking to get what our body needs. And so when you think of drones, you have tracking devices, you have weapons that can deploy, you have repair packages that can drop like a parachute. So let's talk about tracking devices and weapons. So whenever your cells get injured, let's pretend that you get in a car wreck and you hit your head in the windshield. The cells in your brain obviously respond to that damage, but every cell in the body responds proportionally to that damage. And so when a cell becomes stressed or when there is an inflammatory response, your cells send out these status reports called damage assessment molecular patterns (DAMP). And those really are like status reports of this is what happened to me. This is what I need to resume normal function. This is how much I need. Can you get it for me? The individual cells, they close down their cell wall and they shut off communication, and they consume oxygen and they get rid of energy. And so your cells do that as a normal response because they don't know what happened to them. They just know that they are supposed to go into basically a survival mode. Well, guess who is collecting all of these messages of what the cells need and who has the receptor or the tracking device? Everything from heat shock proteins, to energy, to mitochondrial needs, your platelets are continually seeking out the needs of cells, all over the body.


What about tracking devices? So when you think of tracking devices for fungus, bacteria, different types of bacteria, viruses, mold, you have to have what are called pathogen recognition receptors. These are specifically designed to heat seek out every virus, every bacterium. And then when it comes in contact with, let's say, a flu virus, are you a flu virus from this season or last season? Well, that's called pattern recognition receptors. So you have pathogen, what are you? Pattern, what kind are you? And then other types of receptors. So your platelets have these defense mechanisms that are continually seeking out all these things that are invading our body. What else? So here's an example. This is a platelet or a graphic, and these little pictures right here are like the tracking devices. So you can see cytomegalovirus, rotavirus, Epstein Barr, HIV, Coxsackie, herpes is probably in there. I can make an argument that if the goal is to reset our immune intelligence, that our immune system was already built with this intelligence from the day we were born. And this treatment is resetting a lot of the immune system, this treatment should be the “new vaccine schedule” because that's the whole idea. We want to give our immune system an intelligent boost. Well, this intelligence is already built in here. Resetting the immune system with this treatment is doing just that. So what about repair needs? And again, this is not an exhaustive list. It's to give you an appreciation. So I always show this because your platelets carry around 95% of your body's entire production of serotonin. Now you have to ask the question, the platelets don't manufacture serotonin, but it's been chosen to carry it around. For example, detoxing, liver. For the liver to regenerate, it has to have serotonin. And serotonin is needed for other things as well. And your platelets carry other different types of things as well. What about this growth factor, brain derived neurotrophic factor? So if you have a neurological condition, stroke, TBI (traumatic brain injury), dementia, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis, autism, you need this because you need to regrow nerves. And platelets carry around 99% of your body's entire production of it. If you have any type of chronic disease, especially neurologic, you need to grow blood vessels. Platelets carry around the specific growth factor needed for blood vessel formation, vascular endothelial derived growth factor. This is not everything that it does. I'm just trying to give you an appreciation that the platelets are doing more than just clotting.


So to understand how the IV therapy works, you need to understand what inflammation really is. Because we use it just kind of whimsically as a tag word, but what inflammation really is. If you look at this graphic, what this represents is, our repair system and immune system and the sequential order of events of how our body heals anything and everything and also defends ourselves from anything and everything. And you can see that it's an order of events that your body has to go from step 1 right here to step 2. And in order for it to transition from step 1 to step 2, there are certain things that have to be satisfied. And guess who controls all the activities of both of these two systems? The platelet. So your platelets actually initiates your immune system to activate. Your platelet is the one thing that initiates your repair system to activate. And if you can balance those two activities, which it's in charge of doing, then you can live to be 100 years old.


But what happens is that many of us get stuck at a particular event. Let's just say it's something simple like an ear infection. Well, your body is going through step 1, it goes to step 2, then all of a sudden it gets to step 2 and says, well, I need certain things, but I'm not going to let you go on to step 3. So I'm just going to leave you stuck here until you give me what I need. And so there you are. You're stuck in this feedback loop of inflammation. In this case, it's step 2 with the repair, and the same thing can also happen with your immune system. Basically, you're stuck at a particular point. You can't progress forward, and your body will leave you there until it has what it needs. So this could be something, say, from 30 years ago. It could have happened in your childhood. Let's just walk down the list. Overuse of antibiotics when I was a little baby led to chronic ear infections, led to me getting my tonsils taken out and my adenoids, which led to other issues that required me to be on medications, and now I have all sorts of allergy responses. And then I get into my teenage years, and I'm a girl, and I start having hormone dysfunction. And I get into my early twenties, when I get Crohn's disease. I'm just making something up. But you're going from these the more simple inflammatory conditions to now they've progressed to the more metabolic. So like Raynaud's disease, macular degeneration. Basically, everything in this category too is how the body functions and operates. Adrenal fatigue, the endocrine system, etcetera.


So I have Crohn's disease in my late twenties, and then I'm having problems with getting pregnant in my early thirties, and I don't know why. I have endometriosis and troubles with pregnancies. Then I have chronic fatigue symptoms in my late thirties, early forties, and now I get to my early fifties. And now I'm just in the full blown fine motor loss and gross motor loss, which is beginning stages of MS (multiple sclerosis), Parkinson's, Lyme disease, any type of mental health disorder. So you can see these things are a lifetime of acquisition. It's not just a disease. You can be acquiring this over a lifetime, or you can be suddenly thrusted there by a violent event, like, say, that happened to somebody in my family, my 5th child, perfectly normal at 4:45 pm on a Wednesday, going into pediatrician's office to get his routine shots and checkups, and the next morning, he wasn't the same. So he was suddenly thrusted from inflammatory all the way to neurologic overnight. Here's the other thing. With regards to your emotional state, it's very abstract, but it is there's such emerging evidence, and many of you with these chronic diseases can testify to this, that our emotional state really outranks the physiological body. And what I mean by that is if you overlap the emotional bell curve, what we found to these categories of diseases, while you're in these inflammatory diseases, you can still feel love and connection and groundedness and be present. But as you progress towards category 2, this is where it starts to heighten to where you get over here to Lyme disease and autism and MS and Parkinson's. This is why those diseases are characterized by just blankness, disassociation.


It’s not because the autistic kid cannot say I love you. It's because their body is in a sympathetic state of fight or flight. Emotionally, their body is saying, I cannot afford for you to even experience love because I am worried about self-survival. Every cell in the body is. And you have to shift this sympathetic fight or flight, this emotional state. You have to. Otherwise, there's nothing that what we've seen that can help the physiological body. And if you can shift this, then the physiological health starts to fall like dominoes. So to summarize, you have all these unresolved singular issues that start to stack on top of one another, and as they do, your body coexists with them. Your body tried to address it at the time. It just didn't have the resources. There are a number of reasons as to why it couldn't complete the healing cycle or the immune cycle. So your body starts to coexist with the problem, and over time, that problem forces the body to determine organ importance. So which of the 12 organ systems start to become most important? Brain, heart, and lungs are always going to be the top, and then your body starts turning off, let's say, the thyroid or start shutting down the pancreas. And as this happens, the symptoms and diseases arise. So the point is that your body doesn't recognize disease condition. That's how we communicate in the medical world. Your body recognizes unresolved issues that could have happened years ago. It could have been and many of what we see is a lot of emotional traumas, rape, childhood, just a lot of things, emotional trauma, that you would never think has an impact on your health, but it does, and it just takes a while for it to get there. And there's much literature to support that fact now. The increase of emotional trauma leads to increased heart disease, chronic fatigue all types of conditions. So how do we reverse this? Well, I'm going to give you three ways in how this treatment does this. So when you take blood out of your body, your body immediately starts it recognizes that event, that stressor event, and starts manufacturing new platelets at about 70,000,000 per minute. So, really, your body, by the time you're sitting there 30 minutes later waiting for this treatment to be processed in the centrifuge, your body has already repurposed and replenished that physiological load of platelets that it lost. And so you get this treatment, and so you have the platelets that you already had you didn't lose any, and then you have this excess amount given back to you. And that excess amount is not going to be metabolized. It's going to be sent out to restart the repair system and the immune systems of all these different events to begin and heal again. The second way this is healing you, and I would argue that this is really where the rubber meets the road, has to do with ratios. And this is not a new concept. This goes all the way back to the Greeks in that the Greeks saw that the difference between health and pain, health and disease, is the body's ability to maintain proportional ratios again at the time of these 4 different fluids in the body. It was like blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile. And any time they saw that one of those got out of ratio to one another, their job was to get it back into ratio because if it gets out of ratio, disease would exist. So their goal was to get them back in a ratio. And that's really how our bodies maintain equilibrium or homeostasis by ratios. And I'm talking about the hemodynamic ratios in the bloodstream. And so for example, you have your platelets and you have white blood cells and red blood cells, and you can see that they're all at a numerical ratio to one another. But we didn't know that platelets are actually overseeing the ratios of everything in the bloodstream. So it's constantly telling things to lower, raise, lower, raise, depending on what happens to you. And when you give this treatment back to yourself, what happens, all these ratios start recalibrating. And so, until about 90 days later when you have your new normal. We measure the thyroid, let's say, for example, and we can see that the thyroid is off. It's higher. It's low. So we give a medication to either lower it or raise it. And quite possibly, the thyroid is high because down the line, 5 other things are lower to compensate for it being high, and that's how the body works. But what have we done in conventional medicine for a long time is that we give a medication. We try to bring it down artificially and the body's like, “I know the thyroid is out of whack, but now you just gave me another problem”. So now the body's got, so you have all these things that are artificially retweaking the body's own calibration. And we know this because we've measured lots and lots of blood and you wouldn't be doing yourself a lot of good to measure your blood after this treatment until about the 90-day mark.

So the third way has to do with those unresolved repair loops that I talked about. And again, this could be a fracture that happened to you when you were 6 years old. It could be a dog bite you got when you were in your teenage years. It doesn't matter. While your platelets are in the body, they’re getting all this information from the cells and while blood is waiting to be processed in the centrifuge, the blood and the platelets here are not receiving any information from anything in the bloodstream while they are out of the body. So the second that you put them back into the body, all of that information is reset. It's like the platelets are seeing the entire body for the first time again. And it could be analogous to say booting down your body's computer and then booting it back up and maybe giving it a software update. And so the platelets see the body as, “Well, now I got fresh eyes. Well, what should we fix first? Well, let's go here and fix this event. Let's help you complete the cycle”. And when those cycles are complete by that little event, whatever it is, this green circle represents the circadian rhythm. And that's why we've seen time and time again that patients who don't sleep, their sleep is resumed and they have the best sleep they've had in years. And that's great because if you don't sleep, and even if you're not in pain and you have disease, that's code for “your body has unresolved issues”. So little by little, your body goes around to these issues, and some of them you can see with your own eyes.

Some of them you're not even going to see because they're working on things inside the body. And little by little, each treatment is just going to work you back up the chain. And so I think one of the most powerful things that we found, that when you give this treatment to patients who've had Lyme disease, because you've tried everything or you give it to an autistic kid or someone with Parkinson's, they have this parasympathetic shift. Sometimes it's before they even walk out of the door. And it's powerful. It's emotional. It's a different kind of healing that you have to see to believe it. And let me give you an example. It's the autistic kid spontaneously saying “I love you” to his mom without even being prompted. So what the body is really shifting out of is that fight or flight response. And once that happens, everything in the physiological health starts to fall like dominoes. And so the body goes around and it starts to fix things that are priority. Typically brain, heart, and lungs first. Those are your 3 most important organs. And out of the 12 organs, the 4th organ that it fixes, it might be the thyroid for one person with chronic fatigue. It might be the pancreas as the 4th organ for somebody else. But what I can tell you is, and this will be in a follow-up call if you get the treatment 3 weeks later, is that the 2 least important organ systems out of the entire body, number 11 is basically your musculoskeletal system, like your joints. And number 12 is your skin. So if you have joint pain and you're not an elite athlete, that means that that you have problems upstream in areas of the other organ systems. You're just now walking in the door complaining about joint pain, but it has nothing to do with joint pain. If we get into epigenetics during our questions, I'll go over this one and come back to it, because it’s kind of involved. So as a summary, you're just using your blood, your platelets to reset this intelligence, give yourself a software update to restart and reset your immune system and your repair system. You little by little exit out of these feedback loops, symptoms and things alleviate and start to reverse.

I’ll give it back to you Dr. Bloem to open it up with questions for anybody.

linkQuestion - Does age matter?

Does age matter? I mean, we're talking stem cells. We're talking about cells. I understand when you're young, you’re a child, everything's new. But when you're older and you have more diseased cells or mutated cells, is that an issue?

linkAnswer

No, it does not. As you age, your body starts to shut down organ systems, your body will also shut down your cells and basically put them into, I'm going to call it hypersleep, so it's easy to understand. And so putting your cells into basically the bullpen of a baseball game. And so that's the idea that as we get older, we lose more cells that are playing in the game. But those rules don't apply to platelets because they're the ones who oversee this the entire process. Whereas cells are needed at these last two stages of healing, and this is called biomass replacement. What this means is that if you're stuck right here, which is where most of us are, this is the body's inflammation process, and you're stuck in this feedback loop right here at step 2, and you've gone to Panama or somewhere and received stem cells, then basically, you skipped over step 3, skipped over parts of step 4, and gone right into steps 5. So this is the reason why stem cell treatments, even though we know they work and there's nobody who is a bigger proponent of stem cells than me. It's not that they don't work, we give them at the wrong time. Stem cells are not needed until the end of the process. So what this treatment will do is it will actually pull those cells that are in the bullpen back in the game and there's actually evidence on that.

linkQuestion - What if someone has multiple health problems?

If someone has multiple things going on. Because you were just saying, you're insinuating that they probably do, especially if it's been a long-term process. Let's say they have autoimmune and they have psychosis and they have all these different things. Have you treated anybody like that with this process where it resolved those issues? Like encephalitis?

linkAnswer

All the time. That's primarily the only thing that we treat, mystery disease and, multiple things. And how you tackle that is, you really have to deal with what your problem is at that time. For example, you might have Lyme disease, but are you showing symptoms and flares of the Lyme at that time? Or are you showing at that particular time, depression and anxiety for example? So you would tackle the anxiety and depression at that time as the way to peel back the layers. And then the next time you come in for the treatment, your symptoms will change. So you're really dealing with symptoms that you presented with at that given moment.

linkQuestion - Is this for someone who has cancer or lymphoma?

Someone has cancer. I have a friend who has his wife has lymphoma, and they have that p53 gene mutation. Is this for that? Do you have any experience with that?

linkAnswer

Yes. There is experience with lots of cancer. Lots of patients who've had cancer, active, dormant, lymphoma, metastatic, brain, bone, the nine yards. The way that I always answer cancer is as follows. I just walked through the presentation talking about the viral killing capabilities of platelets. If you look at a lot of the evidence that is available today and goes back 100 years, that the connection between viruses and cancer or pathogens and infectious disease and cancer is a direct link. And so I'm trying to help people understand that if you can see that cancer, is an uncontrollably mutating cell, what do viruses do? They basically try to hijack a cell and make it mutate. So you can see how those two dots connect. And I can tell you that the patients who've been treated with cancer, what they've routinely respond with is that their quality of life and their pain is greatly diminished. Quality of life improves if pain is diminished. And but I've never followed cancer patients out to see the long term, what it did to the cancer. I just never wanted to have that knowledge.

linkQuestion - Would it help someone with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis)?

How about something like ALS?

linkAnswer

So depending on how advanced the ALS is. If we're talking about somebody who is midline with trouble swallowing and eating and they're wheelchair bound. If they're that advanced, then, we might have to go to the TruDOSE bone marrow option. But if they're not there yet, then the short answer is yes. But the thing is about ALS and Parkinson's and dementia is that they're typically whether their affect is very stoic. They're not even associated with everybody. And so there's an emotional component, not necessarily childhood trauma, but it's acquired. The emotional state is tough to pull them out. And little by little, it does pull them out. What typically comes back right away, after the first treatment is who they are. Their gait usually improves. Some fine motor definitely improves. A lot of times memory and just cognition, but you're also talking about something that has to deal with the gut, and so there are a lot of metabolic problems. And so each treatment you may have a great outcome and a lot of neurological response out of the first treatment because you're in that category 3. The second, third treatment, the treatment is most likely going to be working on things that are internal, that are metabolic, how the body works, and you're not going to really visually see those changes as evident as you did after the first treatment. So just I'm just trying to give an expectation. I can show you video after video that if you stick with it, it slowly peels the onion back.

linkQuestion - Would it help someone with Parkinson's disease?

My husband has Parkinson's, and he had a deep brain stimulus implanted and during the surgery he had a stroke. And so the stroke wasn't attended to so the result may have been different if it had been. But I was just wondering if something like this would help him and what the cost might be.

linkAnswer

The short answer to your question is will it help? Yes. It will.

linkQuestion - COPD, RSV, Parkinson's disease

He also had COPD, and he was recently in the hospital for RSV. (respiratory syncytial virus) He was in the step-down unit from the ICU. And when you have a severe illness like that on top of what you already have, it can make the Parkinson's to get worse. So we've noticed a little bit of advancement with his illness just recently. His balance is off more and that type of thing.

linkAnswer - Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, gait, stroke

Parkinson's and MS (multiple sclerosis), you'll start to see, their gait improve and their balance. They're going from toe to heel, walking to heel toe, like, almost sometimes immediately, almost before they even walk out of the door. You just named off brain, and then you went to lungs, and maybe a little bit of the heart. So you named off the three things that the treatment really targets first as far as organ priority. Lots of stroke patients have been treated, and they respond fantastically, actually. Obviously, this is a little bit more complex with the Parkinson's, but the short answer is yes. This fits all the criteria of somebody who you would presume to respond very positively and do it on the first treatment.

linkQuestion - What does the TruDOSE procedure look like?

And another thing, what, I know there's, a chamber that people go into, like, before they will have, like, a procedure. Like, my brother-in-law had, had mouth cancer. And so he had to have all his teeth removed. And before he did that, he went into this chamber. So is the concept kind of the same there?

linkAnswer

No. This is a lot simpler than that. What you really should know is that doing this with, say, doctor Bloem, he has other modalities to basically prep your body for this treatment. Nothing as crazy as the hyperbaric oxygen chamber or something that you're describing. But the prep and then also the follow-up modalities of what you need to follow that up with. For example, it sounds like ozone and other oxygen related therapies would be a great adjunct to this. And, because you talked about RSV. I know doctor Bloem is going to probably put you on a protocol that has this plus a couple things around it before and after to get you ready for the treatment and also to keep the effects prolonged.

linkQuestion - Would this be effective for someone who has missing organs?

Would this treatment be effective for someone who doesn't have all of their organs? Like they had a hysterectomy or they've had their thyroid removed due to thyroid cancer. Could this still help them if they have some other things going on as well? Like Lyme disease or some other infections, sleep issues. Would this treatment still be effective if someone has some missing organs?

linkAnswer

Do you have Lyme disease?

linkQuestion - Lyme disease

I was diagnosed with it. Supposedly the last time I tested, it showed that it was gone, but I mean, does it ever go?

linkAnswer

So I asked someone to be on and she's on a lot of these calls with me and because she had Lyme disease, many of you will appreciate her story. But before I cue her up, the short answer, with regard to your question about missing organs. If you think about it, your body is kind of like Bermuda grass. You can try to kill it, but it's going to find a way to keep thriving. Even after taking the thyroid out, your other organs are going to compensate. Your other bodily functions are going to compensate for the loss. So the short answer to your question, will it still benefit you? Yes. It it would. As far as Lyme disease, because many of you are going to have chronic disease in general, Elena, if you don't mind telling everybody because you're still a patient. You were a patient, even though you now work for the company.

linkHelena - Testimonial: Lyme disease, mast cell disease, POTS, MOG, viral infections, limbic encephalitis, parasites, dyslexia, mold sensitivity

Hi, everyone. I found TruDOSE two years ago, and I had suffered from Lyme disease for 20 something years, most of it undiagnosed. Systemic mast cell disease, POTS (postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome). I have mold illness. I have something that mimics MS called MOG (myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody associated disease). I had all the viruses, coinfections, Hashimoto's, Epstein Barr. I'm not even quite sure what I'm missing, but I had limbic encephalitis. And when I found this, I was dying. I had written my kids letters, and I was done. I needed an EpiPen everywhere I went, and my pain was off the charts, bone, joints, you name it. And I had tried all sorts of treatments and various things throughout the course. I also have had a hysterectomy, so the question of organs missing, and I've had numerous surgeries. So here I am 53. After my first treatment, I have not had a mast cell flare since. My Lyme bands are now gone, and this is the only therapy that I have truly done in the last 2 years. Maybe an IV here and there. My schedule is pretty intense. I travel usually 5 days a week, some weeks. I'm home for 10 hours before I catch the next flight. So energy wise, I got my energy back. I got my brain back. I'm no longer dyslexic at 53. I did say my Lyme bands are gone. I'm dealing with one last coinfection, but it's not taken me out. I have a great doc, and she does all kinds of Dietrich Klinghardt’s ART testing. So I know today I have no spike protein in my blood, and I've had COVID a couple of times. I no longer have the parasites that I was dealing with for 6 months, and this is really all we did for it. So for me, this really did save my life. It's a process. Not every treatment is easy. My second treatment, it's like I took an 8 week nap. And then after my 3rd treatment, 6 months into this, I went from essentially being in bed for 4 years to working full time. So that's kind of it in a nutshell.

linkQuestion

When you say when you say your second treatment, you took an 8 week nap. What do you mean? It made you tired?

linkHelena

Well, after my first treatment, I felt great. By week 3, I was 80% out of pain. At week 4, I was on the treadmill. And mind you, I had days, weeks where I couldn't even walk up the stairs in my house. Many days I wasn't able to drive and getting from one end of the house to the other, it was too much. So after the first treatment, it was like my body recognized hope for the first time. And then the next treatment, it really wasn't a Herxheimer reaction so much as it's like my body literally needed to sleep in a different way. And I was very fortunate. I was able to do that and take that time when I just about had enough and thought, oh no, maybe this wasn't the case. I had an MOG flare and it was around the right time for my 3rd treatment. I had the treatment within 24 hours. All of those symptoms were, kind of put to rest, if you will, and my energy came back. So when I say it's a process the body healing is a process. I had been sick for decades. So I knew going into this, the doctor I first saw said, listen, you're so sick. You're going to need at least 7 or 8 of these treatments before we can even put you in the category of fully recovering. So it was after my 3rd treatment that everything really, really shifted.

linkQuestion - Insomnia

I also have the terrible sleep problems. I actually saw doctor Bloem today about it. We're thinking maybe it's hormonal because of the hysterectomy. But now I don't know. This is really interesting. So I'm just thankful for this presentation. And, I mean, I definitely want to look more into this because I need some help here.

linkHelena

And I have to say I really didn't sleep until after my 3rd treatment. I mean, I slept, but I didn't get that sleep. Now I can travel anywhere I go. I can sleep in a hotel. I’m not susceptible to mold anymore, which is even crazier, because I have all the MTHFR variants and my body detoxes it

linkQuestion - Premature menopause, Hashimoto's thyroiditis

You mentioned about hormones. Let’s say they have premature menopause or they have Hashimoto's. Will this reverse that or does it depend really on the cause?

linkAnswer

It has. I can show you blood work and it shows the thyroid is this or that. The thyroid, it's sometimes the first, sometimes it's the third. But eventually, the thyroid usually becomes back to normal pretty early on. The thyroid test could be normal.

linkQuestion - Stroke, blindness after vaccination injury - Effectiveness in dark skinned individuals

My question is, after the vaccination, I had 3 strokes, 2 in the brain, 1 in the eye, which left me blind. And in listening to your presentation, I would like to know how effective is the detoxing to the body as well as how effective has this treatment been, to melanated persons, knowing and being aware that it's not the same with everyone and everyone's body is different? Have you had any success with persons who were blind due to vaccination or vaccination injury or glaucoma or diabetes? And what are the protocols for that if you have any?

linkAnswer - Macular degeneration, Sjogren's, diabetes

The answer to that question is yes. Macular degeneration, Sjogren's. I didn't think it was possible. And even with somebody for glaucoma, there's now a couple of type 1 diabetes, lots of type 2 diabetes. A lot of people with just, normal vision getting bad. And then you have COVID, long hauler vision. As a matter of fact, Elena who just talked, her mother had horrible vision. All types of conditions surrounding vision. And, I can show you people's testimonies and talking about how not only their vision … Even an autistic kid who was 2 years old and legally blind, and you have to hear his mom's report and what she did in front of the eye doctor, and how much his eyes have changed. It's kind of crazy. The short answer is yes. It helps, and we have seen it, like, completely reverse. And when you talk about stroke, it just signals a lot of loss of vascularity, vascular disruption. And luckily, the platelets are the one thing that actually give rise to new blood vessels. So that's why conditions like cerebral palsy, autism, lots of mental health conditions. Obviously, things like macular degeneration. The physiological kind of thing that connects all of those is vascular disruption and a loss of vascularity so the body is constantly trying to lay down new blood vessels, but the architecture looks like a diseased tree.

And so what this will do is basically remove a lot of the inflammatory stuff probably from if it was from a shot that you had to kind of remove a lot of those fires. And so your body is going to remove a lot of those things that are inhibiting it. And then, obviously, if it needs to lay down new blood vessels, it will. How do I know that? Well, take someone with cerebral palsy. There's nothing more brain injured and loss of vascularity that you can get. Elena can tell you because she's seen this person with her own eyes. He's 20 years old. His whole life has spent literally in a ball. He's never walked or spoken since birth. He's been in a ball. Now he walks with a cane, and he verbalizes too so his whole life is different after 3 or 4 treatments. And so the only thing I would say is that, luckily, this doesn't sound like you based on your voice is that typically what we see with adult patients who have had complications as a result of the shots are typically they're in such an emotional state they're hard to pull out. But this doesn't sound like you, so I would imagine your responses should be very, very dramatic on the first treatment instead of a gradual improvement. It’s totally possible.

linkQuestion - Effectiveness in dark skinned individuals

And speaking from the perspective of the diverseness, I would say the effectiveness on non melanated versus melanated people. What are the differences that you have discovered?

linkAnswer

Well, the good thing, that brain derived neurotrophic factor is specifically responsible for remyelination. So if there's one thing that you can have in a treatment, if you have a demyelinating disease and you need to have some myelin restored, then you picked the right treatment. That one slide where it showed 99% of brain derived neurotrophic factor is inside the platelets. Brain derived neurotrophic factor is responsible for remyelination.

linkQuestion - Does age affect the effectiveness of the treatment?

How does age factor into this?

linkAnswer

It doesn't. As young as 2 years old and as old as 98 that I'm aware of. Again, if we're talking stem cells, different story. We're talking platelets, not affected, so you're in luck.

linkQuestion - Software

Software

linkAnswer

The software is the key to this whole thing. It’s almost refined now, but it's unless we come across something that is a disease condition that has never been treated before. But the software has learned so much, and there are so many data points. We’re continuously feeding it so that the accuracy of it is pretty refined. It needs to have your input to know where to start.

linkQuestion - Autism

Autism

linkAnswer

If there's one thing that I can say, and people always ask, is there one treatment that has tremendous success? I mean, there's going to be lots of treatments in the back of my head that are going to be that I could say that have tremendous success. But there's one thing I can say, and I can't say it loud enough is autism and childhood related neurological diseases. I would say autism, these kids respond consistently and positively to each treatment. Each treatment. You’d have to see it to believe it. We have data on it now. Does it cure the autism? It has. Sure has. Elena, you can speak to one of our clinics down in Houston. Doctor Angelina Farella is her name. She's got many patients who had severe autism, as measured on the scales. And, Elena, you keep in contact with her more frequently than I do.

linkElena

I was just with her last weekend and she's got four kids who have had 3 or 4 treatments who are no longer on the spectrum. You have to know what to tell it (the software), basically. But if you've got all these things going on, you start with what's the most obvious, and then you work backwards from there. You’ve got all these things going on, and the end result is, like, an encephalitis or psychosis.

linkQuestion

Is that what you start with?

linkAnswer

Because that's the one you keep going to, that's the one I would start with the mental health under that drop down menu in the software and start there. Because the fact that you're bringing up, just mental health in general, and a few slides ago, I say, you have to shift that. So you don't you don't worry about what the underlying cause is. It'll figure it out.

linkQuestion - Effectiveness in dark skinned individuals

Could you clarify for me again on my question? Because black bodies and white bodies are different. And could you clarify how this technology works differently on black versus white bodies? The makeup of the bodies, that is important to me. Our bodies are different. Like, say, for instance, a 60 year old black woman goes into the doctor, and automatically, we get high blood pressure pills, but we do not have black high blood pressure. That's automatic. We are not taken seriously in regards to our health and with regards to us advocating for ourselves. What is the effectiveness in this research and technology on black bodies as opposed to white bodies? A woman, 60 year old, going in for a hysterectomy is totally different from a woman, 60 black woman, 60 year old, going in for hysterectomy.

linkAnswer

Here is how I would answer you. We’re using a treatment that's using your own blood. And that's how we were designed and that's what was given to us. If you can follow me there. And we were all created with blind eyes in the eyes of the creator. And the blood is literally the stuff that we're using that really knows how your body operates, literally. So your body, despite what you're saying, is going to know the intelligence of how it chose to shut your body down. It will. And so using your own intelligence, your own, and putting it back in there, there's nothing that I've seen and this treatment actually works. There's 3 ways in how the body actually heals you. They're called Hering’s laws of cure. And to make a long story short, when you use a homeopathic remedy, and, and basically something that was given to us from God and using it to allow the body to heal itself, there's 3 ways in how it heals your body. Law of reversal, law of top down, and the law of greater to lesser. So to make a long story short, your body with this treatment, it could be considered homeopathic. It's from you. It's by you. We’re going to give it right back to you. It's going to know exactly what to do with you. The trick, knowing the ratio of stuff to put back in you, and that's really going to be determined. Like, we keep talking about what's going on with you at that given moment. So it's based off of what's going on metabolically within you, not associated with anybody else.

linkQuestion - Bladder issues, interstitial cystitis, chronic pain

Just curious if you have any experience treating individuals with severe bladder issues, such as interstitial cystitis, chronic pain, chronic, UTI bacterial infections to the point where an individual's on antibiotics for an extended period of time that may have caused dysbiosis, anemia, celiac disease Crohn's. I mean, just a cascade of issues similar to the first gentleman. But just wondering the efficacy with regard to kind of bladder issues potentially.

linkAnswer

I don't want to give you any false hope, but I would say in the first treatment, it might just knock it out.

linkComment

That would be that would be me. I've had chronic bladder issues all my life and a couple of bladder surgeries, bladder infections and chronic antibiotics.

linkAnswer

Interstitial cystitis following COVID, interstitial cystitis following mystery causation, frequent UTI. It’s very common for this to just knock it out or almost knock it all the way out to where you could function, go back to work, resume quality of life that it's robbed you of, typically within the first treatment.

linkQuestion - Prostate cancer

What about prostate cancer?

linkAnswer

Lots of people have done it for that. I know that it's helped the prostate as far as size and swelling and, and urination. I can't speak and give you definitive answers on complete resolution, things like that

linkQuestion - Treatment frequency

Is it one treatment every 90 days, or is it based on what's happening with you?

linkAnswer

That's about what you need to expect about every 8 to 12 weeks. And especially with the conditions that we're talking about tonight, it is every 8 to 12 weeks. And you really need to prepare yourself for a minimum of 4. I would not do this if your sole purpose was just to try it out because it will impact you and it will start healing you. You want to put enough healing distance between your condition and whatever you're dealing with. And that mark, what we found over lots and lots of patients is about 4 treatments. And then you will be at a different point. Your medical monthly spend, it's radically different. To the people who are talking about the UTIs and the antibiotics, this is something where you have to work with doctor Bloem and start maybe wean yourself off of those. And what we see with people who are on habitual antibiotics, if you keep resuming those after the treatment, they counteract, and your body will start yelling at you because you don't need them anymore. That's typical. I don't want to say it’s absolute, but there's a lot of things you need to come off of. You can work with doctor Bloem on that, to try to put the body in the best place to where it doesn't have any interference, if you will.

linkQuestion - Thyroid medication for patients without a thyroid gland

But what if someone's on Synthroid medication? Because they don't have a thyroid like me. I can't come off my thyroid medication. Or can I?

linkAnswer

Well, again, I don't want to give you false hope, but my mom is 85, and I had to get her off of Levothyroxine because she took it for 30 something years, and there was no point. The side effects of it. She met, like, 55 of the of the 87 that it could exist. We're getting you off this medication.

linkQuestion

Even with no thyroid, you can come off the medication?

linkAnswer

If you have no thyroid, then you have to supplement.

linkQuestion - Stem cell therapies

I tried stem cell therapies multiple times.

linkAnswer

Stem cell therapies will not work because many of us on this call are talking about conditions that we're stuck in these inflammatory loops way earlier in the process. So in other words, the more that your body is in any inflammatory state, stem cells are going to have minimal effects. When your body is in an inflammatory state, there are no cells in the body talking to one another. You put stem cells in the body with no cells talking to it when it comes inside your body. These new stem cells are going to be looking around going, “so what do we do? Where's the problem?” Because they're looking to those other cells to educate them, to make them up to speed to the problem at hand so they can do their job. And that's how stem cells work. But if you have stem cells in your body that are currently in a state of not talking to one another, that's why stem cells don't work.

linkQuestion - Low platelets

Low platelets

linkAnswer

As far as your low platelets, you're good to go, because there are supplements that you can take to basically boost your platelet count up.

linkQuestion - Stopping medications

Would it work faster if you're not taking medications? I fired my doctors and refused all medications. There were too many side effects. And I saw them within the 2nd week and I refused all medications.

linkAnswer

If you don't have a thyroid, you need a thyroid medication probably. But if they're as needed, I can tell you that many people just say, I'm going to go cold turkey and see what happens. And many of them just don't need them again. One of those things that needs a doctor's supervision. But the more you take, the more it's going to interfere. And if you keep taking it, your body's going to yell at you because it's like, “hey. I don't need this medication anymore because I'm making this hormone now. So stop it.
Question

So would you say there would be a faster response to homeostasis, getting your body back to homeostasis without the medication?

Response

Theoretically, yes. Because it's not having to mess around with things that are currently going to get in its way.

linkQuestion - Testimonials

Are you collecting testimonials

linkAnswer - Importance of journaling your progress

All the time. That has been the source of my data since the beginning. Thousands and thousands of testimonial and journal entries. And if you do this treatment, I would say, if you're a guy, use your iPhone. If you're a woman, you write it down mostly. But you need to be journaling your progress because that's literally how I figured a lot of this out. Because when you live with a chronic disease that nobody can understand, there's no measurement scale that can measure you. And the only way that you can really observe progress is through your own eyes. And a journal is not going to lie. You're going to put down things. So even if it's like, I think I'm seeing better, write it down. I think I'm happier, write it down. So if you think it's happening, write it down. And what you'll see is over a month, a week, 3 months, you will observe radical change. And those are the context clues that someone like doctor Bloem will need to see and need to hear from you as to what's happening in your body because it's going to start changing things. And you can't do that from memory. You can't. So the biggest voice you can have in your expeditious health is writing this down as it's happening, and those become the investigative clues that someone like doctor Bloem will use to say, “Oh, wow. We had you on the supplement, but turns out you don't need it anymore. Let's give you this one because it turns out that now your liver is able to work again. Let's help it out even more.” And that's how you tweak and refine your protocol. We got tons of videos on our website. A lot of this stuff is just people always ask you'll probably never see us ever publish any of this. I mean, we could maybe we will. There’s about 20 things right now we could publish that would be landmark. But that’s not how everybody found out about this. It's people telling people who can identify with people that are in your circle, who keep telling patients. That's how I would like for this to keep thriving, because it needs to live beyond me. And I don't need to give myself any more reason to not sleep at night by publishing any data.

linkQuestion - Will it help neurological issues regardless the cause?

There's a question about the neurological issues have different causes. Do you seem to have success no matter what the cause?

linkAnswer - Acute versus metabolic neurological

Pretty much. If it's acute so let me distinguish. If it's acute stroke, most autisms, cerebral palsy. I'll call it things that are acute, maybe blunt force injury, those things respond dramatically and very quickly. If you have what I call metabolic neurological, you become neurologic because of dysfunction of the gut, neurologic because you've gotten dysfunctional because of, say, the woman talking about post vaccinations. Those shut a lot of things down before you became neurologic. So those are the two different distinctions. The metabolic neurologic still have great improvements. It's just, some will have dramatic responses. Some will need to pull themselves out of this emotional distress response, and it takes a little bit to pull them out, like Parkinson's and dementia.

So, again, that's why journaling becomes important because for the acute brain injury person, they'll typically see just evident changes each treatment, whereas the metabolic neurological person will bounce back and forth between one treatment they see dramatic gains and say fine motor brain memory. The next treatment, they don't see that. But what they don't realize is that anxiety is lessened. Their emotional demeanor is much better. They're happier, which is way more important. They're having better bowel movements. Maybe their walking gets better and their tremors go down. So the expectations is what I'm trying to set for the two different types of categories, but really, neurological is the heart of what this does. Macular degeneration, vision, I would say the glaucoma, there's only one person that I know of, and theirs was dramatic. Macular degeneration, again, I can show you video after video of people that after one treatment, it's complete resolution. I can show you other videos, that's the second and third treatment. It finally comes around. It's because the macular degeneration was maybe, not a priority at the time, and it did have to wait until the second or third treatment.

linkQuestion - How long has TruDOSE been around?

So, and there's a question about how long we've been doing this.

linkAnswer

2018, since October of 2018, well, this will actually since March of 2018.

linkQuestion - Does it ever not work?

Does it ever not work? I know it's kind of it's hard for you to say that.

linkAnswer

I would say that people's expectations that they want to get better going into a treatment are typically one thing. And if they haven't been educated that the body's going to heal itself and that the body can heal itself, then they're probably not going to be aware that there's an orderly process in how the body is going to determine how to do that. But if the person's expectations are, let's say, from Parkinson's and they want the tremors to go away. We heard many reports that people say I came in for Parkinson's and my tumors went away for a little bit, and now they're back. The treatment didn't work. But then you look at them, and say, “do you realize you're not taking your anxiety medication anymore? Do you realize that you're not taking your tramadol or your lithium? What do you mean you're not using your sleep medicine anymore?” So all these other benefits are just not noticeable. So to the degree that people say that it doesn't work, I would say that's why. The expectation that what they want to heal is that's what they're looking for. But if you take a step back, you will find that each treatment is going to do something to you positively. It just might not be what you're expecting. In the case of Parkinson's, they want tremors gone. Is that like an eventual thing that if they keep treating, eventually, it will go? Yes. Parkinson's pretty consistent where it'll dampen the tremors, right out of the gate. And it typically comes right back a few weeks later during the first treatment, but everything else starts happening. It takes Parkinson's patients about maybe 3 to 4 treatments for that tremor to finally go away, but other things are happening to them along the way.

Tremors are different than seizures, but I'm going to throw it in there with seizures. I was telling doctor Bloem, in Carson City about 3 weeks ago, maybe a month ago now. And this woman, I think she was in her late thirties. If you shined an iPhone light in her eyes, it would have sent her into shock. She was rolled in there with a wheelchair. She was having 65 seizures a week, and it was nothing abnormal for her to walk in to the office. And this was at a place that has every advanced therapy around. And she was having seizures every 30 minutes, literally on the half hour mark. To make a long story short, she got the treatment, and it definitely caused a response in her body. And they had to keep her over there for observation for a couple hours, and she only had one seizure within that 2-hour period. Then we followed up with her about 5 days later, and the office reported that she had she'd only had one in that 5-day period.

So would that person's seizures probably come back? I'm going to say probably a little bit, but not as the same number of them and definitely not as dramatic because these were grand mal seizures. The kind that is uncomfortable to watch. They're violent and you don't want to see anybody go through that. Will her seizures start to kind of slide back? I would say maybe a little bit, but not as violent and not as often. The next treatment, it'll keep knocking it down. And so Parkinson's is kind of the same way.

linkQuestion - Tremors

And my husband's pretty tolerable, but when you start getting the tremors, like, it'll start in one hand then the arm and then the other hand, the other arm. And then even in your face, like your lips. And so, like I said, he was always really tolerable of things, but those tremors really bothered him.

linkAnswer

When you're dealing with neurological things, again, kind of like the woman who talked about the thyroid, your body will rewire itself. And after collecting thousands of pieces of data from patients who can't articulate what this treatment is doing to them, the most common response was it feels like it's rewiring my brain. So it led to me understanding that you have an injury in the brain and your body will create a workaround, for lack of a better word, cheat code or a hack. And that hack is not as good as the original connection. And so when you get this treatment, you'll have these gains, and there could be the second or third treatment where it might look like out of the gate that the treatment is making you go backwards, but that backwards is actually the reset.

My child was very uncoordinated and then we got him to where he's kind of coordinated. And then when he got the treatment, then he got really uncoordinated. And then we waited a couple more weeks, and then he was very coordinated. So it’s during that neurological reset and rewiring that during that downtime is where the body looks like it's getting worse, but that's taking step two steps back to go to one, two steps forward.

linkQuestion - Antiaging

There’s a question about antiaging.

linkAnswer

When you look at what age-related diseases are, your cells are going out into the bullpen and going out of the game. That is what age-related diseases are. And there's plenty of evidence to support now that your platelets can actually pull these cells out of the bullpen and back in the game. And that's why people keep doing it. And patients who typically are sick for a long time after that fourth treatment, they continue to keep doing this for those reasons.

linkQuestion - Arthritis

There's a question about arthritis and rheumatoid artritis

linkAnswer

You're talking about the one of the least important organ systems of the body. It's very, very common for people with just arthritis all over to have just greatly reduced joint pain, fewer medications, but the arthritis typically not the real underlying problem.

linkQuestion - Autism

The question is saying, you're saying your own child had autism and you treated him.

linkAnswer

My son was like the lady who spoke up earlier talking about how, how she became blind and, all these other problems post getting the shots. That happened to my 5th child. So, yeah, I'm definitely a dad of autism. He was as bad as you can get. I was just telling my wife this morning that we're so lucky because we see a lot of kids that are just really bad and we're lucky. And I tell people that he is about 95% normal. I'm maybe being a little hypercritical, but he was definitely part of the story as to why I did all this. And, how old was he? It was right after his 2-year-old checkup. It maybe took us 6 months or so to figure it out, but luckily, we got right on it. And just thank goodness he's well. Someone's asking me what we attribute my son's autism to. Again, if you heard the woman speak earlier about what happened to her after she got the vaccinations, then that's exactly what happened to our son. He was perfectly normal. Next morning, he wasn't. He screamed through the night, and the next morning, he was banging his head into our brick fireplace. Then by the afternoon, he didn’t even know who we were. So it's fixable.

linkQuestion - Lung disease and COPD

The question about COPD, is there a question about COPD?

linkAnswer

Yes, lots of lung things. And, again, the way this is going to heal the body is going to be brain, heart, lungs. So you'll typically see people with COPD respond pretty quickly. It's one of the top 3 most important organs.

linkQuestion - Treatments to avoid

Are there certain treatments that patients should avoid that might impair the function of platelets like nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, steroids, prednisone chemotherapy. Any pharmaceutical like that?

linkAnswer

Yes, you really want to, if its primary property is anti-inflammatory. Right? You really want to work with the physician, wherever you're logging in from to, try to get you down off the anti-inflammatory drugs, simply because it's going to interrupt the healing process of what this is going to do. So even if it's Advil. You really have to work with the provider because some of these things you can't just come off of right away. So the provider and you are going to be the key as far as determining how to minimize whatever it is you're taking. So would you say stop if you're on any of those medications, stop them at least, like, 7, maybe 14 days before the TruDOSE? If you can. I mean, the ideal window is at least the 3 day mark. Most of those half-lives and most things can be out of your system if it's 3 days before the treatment. If you can quit it sooner. I know a lot of people that have pain and joint pain, and it's just hard to do that.

So really that 3 day window, if you can and hopefully white knuckle it. And then let therapy do what it does after treatment, and you really don't want to resume anything for about 10 days. You really don't want to do anything other than maybe IV nutrition and, say, Epsom salt baths. You don't want to go do squats. You don't want to hit the hyperbaric chamber, the infrared. You really don't want to do anything to the body for about 10 days because your body is going to be going through a lot.

linkQuestion - How to enhance TruDOSE treatment?

Are there certain types of treatments either intravenously or, there's orally that patients can take before the treatment to enhance the TruDOSE?

linkAnswer

Typically, many of the patients with these viral things and these, bacterial things are probably going to need a mix of stuff, I'll call it a prep treatment with the cleansing and maybe some high dose vitamin c the day before. And then, what we've also found is that, to reduce the likelihood of the Herxheimer reaction, glutathione at the time of treatment. It’s just going to make post treatment just that much more enjoyable. Especially if you have Lyme and chronic infection, and mystery disease. And then obviously, the antidote, if you will, is going to be the glutathione and IV nutrition. But what we're finding is that doing it the day of because there’s some things you just don't want to mix with this. But we're finding that glutathione actually, really reducing, almost eliminating that that 3-day brick wall. And so it's just healing. It just keeps continuing.

linkQuestion - Hyperbaric oxygen therapy

You mentioned hyperbaric treatment. What would be the issue with hyperbaric treatment, in conjunction with TruDOSE? Just doing it in that 10-day window.

linkAnswer

Nothing's actually wrong with it at all. You really want to wait 10 days because your body is going to be going through such a metabolic shift. Literally going from not working to working. And you really don't want to do anything to what hyperbaric does, to create micro injury. Anybody's ever looked at a golf course. Hyperbaric would be the equivalent of aerating a lawn. Even though it's a great treatment, if you do this, which is going to put the gas pedal on the floorboard, and then you give yourself basically a treatment like hyperbaric, which in its right is very good. It's just going to be too much for the body to handle.

linkQuestion

So you're saying avoid it 10 days prior, 10 days after kind of thing?

linkAnswer

Yes. Hyperbaric is one of those things where if you have a metabolic neurological, like Lyme and all and Vax, you don't want to do hyperbaric. Hyperbaric is really good for the TBIs (traumatic brain injury) and the strokes and the acute types of things. Until you get all the metabolic stuff with your neurological injury under control, and then do the hyperbaric. So if you have a metabolic type of condition, really, your recipe is at a high level detoxing, replacing the gas tank with IV nutrition, detoxing therapies, next week, replacing. And then you're just kind of alternating stresses. And then at some point, again, I'm saying if you have Lyme induced neurological. And then maybe a month or two down the road, then do hyperbaric.

linkQuestion - Herxheimer reactions

What if you have somebody who's tried herbs for Lyme disease and then about a week later, they have a Herxheimer reaction and go into deep psychosis. It's horrible. So they had to stop treatment. But will this do the same kind of thing? Will it have the same kind of effect? If they tried detoxing with glutathione, whatever. They tried different things, binders, whatever, to get it out, but, no, it wasn't that easy. What would someone like that do in that case?

linkAnswer

You usually won't see that because what you're describing is that your body dumps things in an order. Your brain to your lymphatic, to your gallbladder, to your liver, to your kidney, to your colon. Typically, what happens, that one of those drains gets clogged up. And if it does, everything above it gets jammed. So just ask yourself, are you constipated? If the answer is no, then go right to the top. Do you have brain fog? Well, you mentioned psychosis.

So the problem's probably in your lymphatic. So, you could be doing all the liver support you want, but nothing's making it to the liver because it's being jammed up in the lymphatic and causing a backup in the brain. So what this is going to do is basically open up a lot of those, that detoxing pathway, and it's going to do it in a great way. And so that's why the nutrition becomes important because you're going to be now moving stuff out and the glutathione and all the supplements will probably start working now. There's a way that they should. And also, it'll be a much more targeted approach because it may open up the lymphatics, but now your next drain is clogged is probably then it makes it to the liver, now it's to the kidney. But this treatment would reveal that. And so then you'd take herbs and stuff, maybe your supplements for the kidney now, which is before you weren't.

linkQuestion - Exercise after TruDOSE

Are you allowed to exercise after this? You said no hyperbaric. I just want to make sure.

linkAnswer

I'm trying to reduce anybody from going crazy. Just definitely go out there and just take it easy because you're going to feel great and you're going to feel the urge to go and crank it out. Just don't. Because at the end of the day, you don't want to do anything that's going to potentially cause any type of stress or injury to your body to cause that treatment to basically lose focus and start going over there. So no water skiing. Don't go in there and start maxing out squats on leg day. Go in there and give yourself a couple of days and then do a light circuit and whatever and to keep the maintenance, but don't go in there and start doing a max bench.

linkQuestion - How to find a TruDOSE specialist

How do I find a, TruDOSE specialist near me?

linkAnswer

www.trudose.com. You go to providers. We get a lot of inquiries. We just don't give this to everybody. We are going to choose to whom we give it.

linkQuestion - Benefits for athletes

There's a question about athletes.

linkAnswer

I wish I could do a study on what it does for athletic game because I give this to my kids before each spring season because I know they're going to get ready to go into soccer and baseball. Well, if you throw 81 miles an hour, start throwing 86. Yeah. Enhanced vision and cognition and just reflexes. So it's almost like it just heightens senses if you play athletic ability or athletic sports. Or academics. If you have a kid who's going through school, I have yet to come across a kid who does not have the best academic year that they've ever had.

linkQuestion - ADHD since birth

What about somebody who has ADHD? ADHD and it's from birth, And she is concerned that this wouldn't work for her because she's missing something from birth. It's not something that happened after birth, such as autism. Can it help her?

linkAnswer

Well, has it helped people with ADHD? I caution you not to go in there with the expectation that it's going to fix ADHD. Because you just said it right there. There are many reasons as to why this ADHD exists. And, if you walk in, what will it make this person you're talking about have better focus and clarity? Like taking the medication, but without all the side effects? Yes. Do we typically see it get rid of the medication? Sure. I just don't want you to go in with that expectation that it's going to do that.

linkQuestion - Arthritis of spine, mechanical back pain

My husband is due for a spinal ablation because he has severe pain from arthritis in his spine. How could this help him with that issue? He can barely walk. Basically, it's been collapsing down and it's pinching something. It's a constant pain. He can he can't walk without this severe pain. And so that's why they're going to do the ablation.

linkAnswer

Whenever people ask about mechanical back pain because you're talking about something that basically things are just becoming just collapsed, does it help all kinds of nerve thing. When you're in that much pain, the body tries to turn off the pain so you don't feel it. And so when you get this treatment, it'll turn it back on. And when you get it turned back on, it’s probably not what you want to feel, but it's actually the body turning on the nervous system again. The reason that people's backs become compressed like that is because their long muscles in their back become fatty. So the support muscles, they're no longer there. And what you can do is get this treatment injected into the long muscles of the back, and there's evidence to support that it will turn that fat into muscle again. So you can strengthen the stabilizing muscles, the long muscles of the back that might resolve your problem of the compression.

linkQuestion - Nerve and tendon damage, coffee enemas

There’s a question about some nerve tendon damage. There's some questions about another types of nerve damage. And it looks like this person is taking a couple of medications because the pain is just that unbearable. And they're also saying they do coffee enemas.

linkAnswer

If you have nerve damage, pain's a good thing. That’s one of the body's life survival skills. But too much pain, the body will shut it off so you don't feel it. So there's lots of evidence on that as well. It might resolve your nerve damage or it might start making your nerves grow and fix your nerves, but it might turn your nerves back on, and the pain might become more intense. And then it'll probably get less intense and then go away at some point. Because when you have nerve damage, think of, like, sitting on your foot. You do it for 30 minutes and you get back off of it and it’s an incredible pain. When you turn the nervous system back on when it's in your head, your wrist, your lower limbs, that's what it feels like. There’s just no way around that. If there's some herbal or some homeopathic kind of pain remedies that doctor Bloem can work with you with instead of the stuff that you're taking. Now as far as the coffee enemas, if they're not working and the fact that you keep having to do it, again, that goes to what I was saying is that you keep doing the coffee enemas. It's not the colon that's the problem. It's something upstream. So if you start doing liver support and kidney support, chances are you won't have to need the coffee enemas anymore because everything's just starts working. But you don't need to stop the coffee enemas. I would recommend doing some sort of other type of cleanse, parasite intestinal cleanse though. I would recommend that as a prep and doctor Bloem and I have already talked about all these different protocols and he's already got this in his toolbox. So I would recommend some other types of cleansing things as a prep.

linkQuestion - Low platelet count, using someone else's platelets?

There was a question about low platelets. Somebody who has low platelets, can the treatment be done? Would it be beneficial to use someone else's blood for the platelets?

linkAnswer - Papaya leaf extract

You don't want to do that one simply because when you're talking about epigenetics and genetics and resetting your intelligence, you don't want to put somebody else's intelligence in there.

As far as low platelets, get a high-quality papaya leaf extract. That's going to increase your platelets. I would recommend everybody do it. They have used it for years for treating dengue fever. So it's going to be immune support, but it's also going to jack your platelet count up.

linkQuestion - Fresh papaya leaves

What about fresh papaya leaves?

linkAnswer

I might have to go back and look at some of those studies and see if just eating the whole leaf itself. I'll go back and look at some of those studies and give them to doctor Bloem and pass them to you. Hopefully, you could just turn into a powder and put it in some water and make a tea or a smoothie or something.

linkQuestion - Lymphoma

I was just talking to somebody about lymphoma. They said that they can't do the PRP because it causes the cells to proliferate the cancer cells.

linkAnswer

We've never seen that. Well, there's actually evidence. If you just go look up platelets and will they cause cancer? It doesn't.

linkQuestion - High platelet count

I have a cousin who said that she has too many platelets or a high level of platelets, and she was concerned that this technology would not work with her.

linkAnswer

No. It’s not that it won't work. It’s more that her body is stressed and it's working overtime. So how could this help her or would it? You’d have to give me an idea of what she's dealing with so I can give you a ballpark of what it might do.

linkQuestion - Gallstones, weak heart

Recently she just had gallstones diagnosed and then she was told she has a weak heart, and they haven't figured out what's happening yet. She has appointments, and it seems to be taking a long time for them to diagnose her. She fainted at a restaurant several times.

linkAnswer

I found the site. The heart is one of those three organs that it works on first, and, I'll send this to everybody in the meeting. Here's the article.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9470624/

The heart one of the organs that it works on first, brain, heart, lungs. So, we've even had people that need a heart transplant. Elena she had a condition called POTS tachycardia and all kinds of stuff, which is a bad condition. We see it all the time and we see it resolve POTS all the time. When it comes to the heart it's kind of like cancer. You always want to get the buy in from the cardiologist and you definitely don't want to be the one selling you what to do.

linkQuestion - Sticky blood

So I have many of the same conditions as Elaine does, and one extra that I have, well, one of many, is sticky blood. Would adding platelets be a problem? I have too much clotting in my blood. I'm low on antibodies as well. I'm deficient, So I don't know if that's connected

linkAnswer

I'm probably going to say that we've seen the most abnormal blood results from people even with active blood cancers and they've had successful outcomes. This is one of those questions I'm probably going to defer to doctor Bloem. Let's look at the medications you're taking. Based on what you're taking, is this the right time for you to do it or not? There are very few things that will inhibit you from taking from doing this. Everybody's always going to have a question of uniqueness. And my answer is I don't mean to answer it like this, but it’s almost always going to be the same is that it's your own body healing your body, and there's deficiencies in the body for certain reasons. Or there's things that are off, like antibodies and blood counts and things like that.

linkQuestion - Red light therapy

There's a question about red light therapy, doing it every day, multiple times.

linkAnswer

That's a great therapy. I would stop it for 10 days. Here’s the thing with any therapy. To really get it to continually keep working, you want to pulse any therapy. It’s like doing bench press. Eventually, you just keep doing bench press, and that's all you do to grow your chest. Your body will stop responding to it. Then you do pec deck, and then you come back a couple months later and bench works again. Therapies in your body responds the same way. So, in regards to this question, I would not do it in that 10-day window. And then when you do decide to start doing it again, because you're saying you do it multiple times and you probably do a lot, I would start off slow. If this was a medication, I would start off with a low dose and then work your way back up to the high dose over about a 2-month period to work yourself back up to what you're doing now. Don't go right into, the high dose of infrared, or sauna, or detoxing or anything out of the gate simply because your body is going to be going through a lot of shifts.

linkConcluding remarks from Tapley Holland

Healing is possible. Just allow the body to do it, and then you have to support it with the other therapies. It doesn't take the place of that. So this is the first step. So, I appreciate everybody, and thanks for having me.


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DISCLAIMER: THIS INFORMATION IS FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE TAKEN AS MEDICAL ADVICE. PLEASE DISCUSS THIS INFORMATION WITH DR. BLOEM IN THE CONTEXT OF A PHYSICIAN-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP. THIS IS NOT A WORD-FOR-WORD TRANSCRIPT AND SOME LIBERTY HAS BEEN TAKEN TO ADD, REPLACE, OR ELIMINATE WORDS OR SENTENCES IN AN EFFORT TO MAKE THE CONTENT EASIER TO UNDERSTAND. THIS TRANSCRIPT IS DERIVED FROM THE SEPTEMBER 11, 2024, ZOOM RECORDING AND HAS NOT BEEN REVIEWED OR APPROVED BY TAPLEY HOLLAND.