 Researchers showed that those at high risk for colon cancer could reverse the progression of their disease by taking curcumin, the yellow pigment in the spiced turmeric and curry powder, cutting down on pre-cancerous lesions, and even pre-pre-cancerous lesions. Are there other high-risk lesions we can try spicing up? How about giving turmeric dextracts to people who just had bladder cancer taken out, or have had early-stage squamous cell carcinoma skin cancer caused by arsenic exposure, or early-stage cervical cancer, or pre-cancerous lesions in the mouth or the stomach? In about a quarter of the patients, the lesions started to get better. One out of the two bladder cancer survivors, two out of seven pre-cancerous mouth lesions, one out of six pre-cancerous stomach lesions, one out of the four early-stage cervical cancer cases, and two out of six early-stage skin cancer, all without noticeable side effects. One of the reasons it may work better in some cancers than others, or some people better than others, is differences in bioavailability. Megadoses were given, and just a tiny amount ended up in their bloodstream. If you're treating skin cancer, though, why not just put the curcumin directly on the skin? I've talked about what turmeric compounds can do to cancer cells in a petri dish. Here's some foreign after-picks. These are cervical cancer cells in a petri dish with more and more curcumin. Normal cells are unharmed, but cancer cells are laid to waste. Yeah, but to make it to the cervix, curcumin must be absorbed, unless a vaginal cream was invented. Variety of delivery methods have now been devised. Besides intravaginal, there's also oral, intrebdominal intramuscular under the skin injections, straight into the veins or the arteries on the skin, up the bladder and the nose, breathed in like an inhaler, up where the sun don't shine, or straight into the spinal column bone marrow, the tumor itself, or implanted somehow. Taken orally, some of that does actually get into the tissue. You can measure the amount of curcumin absorbed into the wall of the intestine by examining biopsies and surgical specimens taken after curcumin regimen. It makes sense to take turmeric orally to treat colon cancer, but if we have cancer erupting on our skin, why not just rub it on directly? And that's what these researchers did. Turmeric and curcumin has topical agents in cancer therapy. They just took some turmeric from the store, made a tincture out of it, dried it, put it in Vaseline, and then had cancer patients rub it on their cancer three times a day. What kind of cancer can you get at with a finger? These were folks with cancers in the mouth, breast, skin, vulva, and elsewhere. Isn't breast cancer under the skin? Not always. Advanced breast cancer can ulcerate right through the skin. And these were all people with recurrent ulcerating tumors that had failed to respond to surgery, radiation, and chemo. And these open cancers can stink and itch and ooze. There was nothing else modern medicine had to offer. So let's rub on some turmeric white men and see what happens. It produced remarkable relief. Our reduction in smell was noted in 90% of the cases, even in extensively ulcerated cases of breast cancer, and a reduction in itching in almost all cases as well. For example, relieving the severe itching in two of the vulva cancer patients. Most of the lesions dried up, and in many cases this relief lasted for months. All from just rubbing on some harmless spikes tumor, which they describe as an indigenous drug, highly effective in reducing smell itching and exudate. The effect of the so-called drug is remarkable, and that drug is just some edible spice used in curries for centuries.