Case History: RPB




Patient: Rgee P. Bautista
Age: 17
Hospital: Chong Hua Hospital

(Notice the dates; click on chart for a bigger image)



Date and Time Platelet Count
Jan 4, 2013 10:00 AM 177k
Jan 4, 2013 4:00 PM 147k (continuous decline)
Jan 5, 2013 4:00 AM 111k (patient weak, no appetite)
Jan 6, 2013 4:00 AM 66k (from 177k to 66k?)
Jan 6, 2013 9:00 PM 54k (patient nosebleeding)
Jan 7, 2013 5:00 PM 73k (ADSX started 7pm Jan 7)
Jan 8, 2013 4:00 AM 156k (from 73k to 156k in 9 hours?)
discharged





























Note on case histories: Please note that since writing down case histories is very time consuming, sometimes, I will just, initially, post here a snapshot of the case. The snapshot will show the platelet readings and major text testimonies given by the patient's representative when the patient has fully recovered. Once I have more time, I will add more details. Remember, over the last few years there are close to 200 case histories, and I never had the time to write them down. With this blog I hope to upload them. Remember, these cases are linked to one another due to a referral system. It is somebody personally referring to a new patient.



Notes on accuracy of readings: Platelet counts, and the times they were taken, are based on the reports or texts from the patient's relatives. The actual time taken and exact figure could be mere approximations. For example, a count taken at 7 pm could have been actually taken at 6 pm. A count of 30, could have been 29 but rounded off either by the patient's relatives or the doctors.



Case History

Patient, 17, male. The patient was referred to us via a listener of the ABS-CBN radio program. This listener is a high ranking officer in a bank. While text chatting, the banker realized that the patient's parents are actually very close friends of mine. The patient's father was a very close college friend and is my ad hoc legal consultant.

I immediately sent a order to produce ADSX solution good for three patients that day: 2 dengue cases and 1 cancer case.

When I finally met my lawyer-friend (the father) at the hospital, I had to rush the instructions because my other patients were waiting.

The first thing I did was to reiterate my instructions not to use apple juice, apple tonic, apple fruits, etc.

The patient was 17, and looked very weak with a platelet count of 73k after having been in hospital since Jan 4. The day before, the count had gone to 54k.

After drinking one bottle, overnight, the results came out.

The platelet count based on the sample taken 4 am Jan 8 2013, was very high 156k.

From 73k to 156k, that's a 113% in just 9 hours. Never in the platelet history of the patient since Jan 4 has there been such a dramatic increase in platelet count and a dramatic turnaround in the physical condition of the patient.

Physically, the patient did not look pale anymore, active, not weak, no stomach pains, no fever.

The patient was discharged that morning.


(We don't have time yet to fully write the case history here but look the the charts for each case history.)




This illustrates that indeed ADSX is really effective. There is cause-and-effect. Whenever the patient is left to the care of the doctors, it almost always happens that there is a rapid drop in the platelet count, for example from 200 to 50.



But whenever, the ADSX Solution is used as intervention that early, then the platelet drop is immediately arrested to a level and then oscillates around that level and never drops to say 40k or 20k.



Is this cause-and-effect? Is this mere coincidence?


(We don't have time yet to fully write the case history here but look the the charts for each case history. Does this predictable pattern show the effects of a "cure?" Please come back for updates.)

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