SF-1019 - another compound to track
Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 2008-04-22 06:50.
A small number of patients in the Secondary Progressive and Chronic stages of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) have benefited (PDF) from being treated with SF1019.
SF-1019 is the platform technology of Argyll Biotechnologies. It was developed from extensive research into Biological Response Modifiers (BRMs) undertaken at: Mississippi State University; St George's, University of London (formerly St George's Hospital Medical School); Ohio University; and Methodist Hospital. Argyll Biotechnologies has transferred to Immunosyn Corporation the world-wide rights to market and distribute SF-1019.


I'm sorry, but I just read
I'm sorry, but I just read the PDF and, frankly, I am stunned. Is this legitimate? I gave up dreaming about this kind of thing over thirty years ago. The recovery of function described in this report sounds too good to be true. And if it is BS, then it doesn't belong on MSNews.
I don't validate the news
I don't validate the news (never have claimed to) - I just bring it to your attention. Feel free to give them a call and let us know what you find, though!
Does sound sorta bogus to me.
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Art Mellor, Accelerated Cure Project for MS, art-msnews -at- acceleratedcure.com
Caprine means it's from
Caprine means it's from goats, I think (I am a Capricorn). Is this another goat serum? Does anyone remember that one? Was it real, a victim of overzealous bureaucracy? There are some veterinarian qualifications, some work on HIV, in their group of scientists. We won't know until it goes through FDA and other approvals. They seem to be saying Canada is working on some kind of compassionate use mechanism, but it's probably only for cases that respond to nothing else.
-Chris Sullivan
I think that "bogus" is the
I think that "bogus" is the perfect word. A quick search for SF-1019 on Google yielded over 2 million hits, most of it worthless. A year-old conversation at http://www.thisisms.com/ftopict-3946.html typifies the vague and unsubstantiated nature of the claim. "Alan Osmond," "Utah," and "a clinic in Mexico" seem to come up a lot, so what does that tell you. (Yes, Chris, caprine means that it is derived from goats.) I defy anyone with a ten-year history of clinical MS (independently-verified by a licensed medical authority) to demonstrate to me personally a permanent reversal of their MS symptoms after treatment with SF-1019, and I'll publish an public apology to them. The rest of us can go back to sleep.
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