AIET is a treatment method
in which some immune cells are taken out of a patient's body which are
cultured and processed to be activated or to acquire additional functions
until their resistance to cancer is strengthened, then the cells are put
back in the body. The cells, antibodies, and organs of the immune system
work to protect and defend the body against not only tumor cells but also
foreign invaders, such as bacteria or viruses. Researchers have found that
the thus activated immune system might also be able to determine the
difference between healthy cells and cancer cells to eliminate the cancer
cells from the body.
Upon encountering a tumor
cell, the activated NK cell attaches to the membrane of the cancer cell
and injects toxic granules that quickly dissolve the target cell. In less
than five minutes, the cancer cell would be dead and the NK cell moves on
to its next target. A single NK cell can destroy up to 27 cancer cells
before it dies.
At present our protocol is
based on reported clinical experiences from Japan and other
developed nations, well accepted by the scientific
community. Peripheral blood of the cancer patients (during remission in
patients who undergo chemotherapy) is drawn and by proven methods, the
peripheral blood mononuclear cells are separated. These cells are expanded
in vitro during which they expand to 25-30 fold. Our processing technology
specifically expands lymphocytes and NK cells to a significantly greater
extent taking around 2-3 weeks. After expansion, the activated lymphocytes
and NK cells are injected into the patient’s body wherein these cells act
against the cancer cells effectively and also repopulate the patient’s
peripheral blood cells thereby recharging the immune system. For
further details contact us at: info@ncrm.org
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