Using DMSO for Sports Injury, Traumatic Limb Injury, Spinal Cord Injury, Pain Control and More...
Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was first isolated as a chemical compound in Russia in 1866. It was identified as a near-perfect solvent that has been used for over a century in various ways in modern medicine. It has one of the broadest medicinal actions of any other FDA approved medicine, yet it is often underused by doctors and misunderstood. Research has tended to focus on the use of DMSO in cryopreservation or as a solvent that is administered in combination with other drugs or substances. DMSO by itself, however, has miraculous healing abilities when it is administered shortly after a wound that involves the nerves or the brain.Click here to read about the use of DMSO for arthritis and other types of chronic pain.
DMSO for Pain Relief Following Injury
For arthritis, DMSO is famous for its ability to overcome joint pain. Click here to read more about the use of DMSO for arthritis and chronic pain. In traumatic injury, DMSO is also a valuable pain killer. It acts as a pain-killing agent that causes C-fiber blockade and a partial blockade of the A-delta fibers as well. C-fibers transmit somatic information such as temperature, light touch, muscle pain information, or joint pain information. A-delta fibers transmit information about acute, sharp pain. DMSO has been successfully used as a non-toxic pain killer for cancer that works by reducing the hyperexcitability of cell membranes. DMSO and frankincense for cancer and other anti-cancer DMSO combinations have been used to cure cancer as well, but as a pain-killing agent, studies have shown that DMSO blocks glutamate buildup that leads to cell membrane hyperexcitability. In traumatic injury, DMSO likely works as a pain killing agent with a mechanism of action that’s similar to how it works to get rid of cancer pain.DMSO also has the ability to reduce inflammation and pain by inhibiting prostaglandin production.

- Increase the speed with which the injury heals
- Reduce the creation of scar tissue that might later cause joint stiffness or pain
- Reduce inflammation
- Reduce the number of inflammatory cytokines
- Increase blood flow to the area that is affected by the injury, thereby ensuring that the tissues receive nutrients and are able to get rid of waste.
- Neutralize free radicals that can cause damage while the injury is healing
- DMSO can be combined with certain antibiotic medicines like Chlorine Dioxide Solution to kill infection.
- DMSO can be combined with nano-silver as a cure for gangrene / necrotizing fasciitis / flesh-eating bacteria disease.

Dimethyl sulfoxide / DMSO is an antioxidant that has the ability to neutralize free radicals. It has been used by doctors for many years to reduce inflammation and joint stiffness after traumatic injury to a limb. DMSO has the ability to inhibit fibroblast formation and diminish the creation of adhesions that can cause additional pain-related issues in the body long after an injury has healed. DMSO can be combined with castor oil and applied topically to the skin to reduce adhesions naturally, but it can also be used in protocols as an alternative treatment for blocked fallopian tubes. Click here to read more about the use of DMSO and castor oil to get rid of adhesions and tissues that have overgrown.

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DMSO for Spinal Cord Injury
DMSO has been used with miraculous effects to treat spinal cord injury. Experimental studies have confirmed that DMSO has a protective effect on spinal cord ischemia-reperfusion injuries. At a dose of 0.1 mL per kilogram body weight, malondialdehyde and myeloperoxidase levels can be decreased following spinal cord injury. Nitrite-nitrate levels are also reduced by the administration of DMSO for spinal cord injury.
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DMSO for Broken Bones / Bone Fracture Remedies
DMSO and Methylsulfonylmethane / MSM (a nutrient supplement) both provide the body with sulfur that is essential in the healing process for the connective tissues like ligaments and tendons. If you decide to work with DMSO for broken bones, do not attempt to combine DMSO with comfrey. Use the DMSO orally or administer it SEPARATELY FROM THE COMFREY for bone fractures. If you have suffered a broken bone, DMSO can be used as a treatment to speed healing, reduce issues with the bone and affects joints as it heals, and to reduce pain. DMSO will help with soft-tissue healing and connective tissue healing specifically.Click here to learn more and subscribe to the Living Database now.
Comfrey: Herbal Remedy for Bone Fracture
Comfrey is an herbal remedy for broken bones. Combine several tablespoons of comfrey with water to make a paste and then apply it to the skin overlying the broken bone. DO NOT USE DMSO IN THE PASTE! Apply comfrey as a separate and distinct treatment from the DMSO to enhance bone healing. Administer DMSO orally to enhance soft tissue healing and promote the healing of the connective tissues. Comfrey should NOT be administered in combination with DMSO.
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Vitamin K2 / Menaquinone-7 / MK-7 for Bones That Won’t Heal
If you have a bone that won’t heal after being broken, chances are, you’re deficient in vitamin K2 / Menaquinone-7. This nutrient used to be nearly ubiquitous in staple foods like corn, wheat, and soy, but today, GMO food no longer produce vitamin K2. As a result, people are severely deficient in vitamin K2. Anyone who has recently been in a car accident or who has had a major injury involving broken bones can benefit from taking 400-600 mcg of vitamin K2 daily to heal the bones more quickly. Click here to learn more about vitamin K2 / MK-7 as a nutrient that speeds healing of broken bones. Vitamin K2 is also used to heal dental cavities without a dentist. If you have a broken bone that won’t heal, be sure to learn about vitamin K2 and its relationship to vitamin D3. Note that you need to check your vitamin K2 product to make sure that you’re getting Menaquinone-7 / MK-7 and not the MK-4 form (which is synthetic).
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Note that there is a relationship between bone fractures that won’t heal or bones that break easily and exposure to organophosphate insecticides (usually as a result of crop spraying or via residues on foods, including so-called “organic fruits and vegetable”). Click here to read more about organophosphates and vitamin K2 in our book, Root Cause: Common Environmental Toxins and How to Protect Yourself from Them. Many children and adults are prescribed bisphonsphonate drugs to treat osteoporosis. Children who develop osteoporosis often do so as a result of prolonged exposure to steroids like dexamethasone. Click here to read about how bisphosphonate drugs impede bone fracture healing and cause bones to break more easily. If you’ve taken bisphonsphonate drugs, which are organophosphates and you’ve suffered a bone fracture that won’t heal, consider doing intravenous EDTA chelation therapy to remove organophosphates (and heavy metals) from the body in order to heal the bones. If you have amalgam mercury dental fillings, these may need to be removed from the body first, before doing EDTA chelation therapy along with special mineral supplementation and vitamin K2 supplementation to rebuild bones.
Click here to buy Root Cause: Common Environmental Toxins and How to Protect Yourself from Them.
Pulsed Electromagnetic Frequencies / PEMF for Broken Bones
PEMF is the miracle-healer for broken bones. Bones are basically tiny little ionic magnets. The entire skeleton and this super-strong structure of the human body is made out of electromagnetic energy that holds calcium and phosphorus together. If you want to heal a broken bone more quickly or if you want to heal a broken bone that’s resistant to healing, PEMF is the medicine that you’ll want to work with. While DMSO will help the soft tissues around the bones heal quickly and properly, PEMF can heal a broken bone more quickly. Dr. Robert Beck was an orthopedic surgeon who studied the use of PEMF to make bones heal more quickly in his book The Body Electric.
Click here to buy a PEMF machine to heal bones more quickly.
How to Administer DMSO for Traumatic Injury: Dosing
In animal studies of DMSO for injury, animals like rabbits would be purposely injured for an experiment. Both of their legs would be broken, for example. In the beginning, before scientists understood DMSO and its tendency to work systemically by easily passing through cell membranes, the results of these studies were surprising. Scientists would apply DMSO to one side of the animals body, yet both sides would heal more quickly than the same injuries in animals that were not treated with DMSO.As such, it is possible to administer DMSO in a variety of ways. DMSO easily passes through the skin, it can be administered intravenously, or it can be taken orally. DMSO should generally NOT be administered via an enema because it enhances the absorption of toxins when administered directly into the rectum and the last section of the large intestine.
Olympic athletes who have suffered injury during competition but who still wished to compete would receive hours and hours of topical massage treatment with DMSO to heal their injury. Click here to read about how to use DMSO safely when administering it topically. Note that DMSO is extremely drying to the skin. It is often best to administer DMSO at a concentration of 25% or less to avoid extreme drying of the skin.
DMSO can be administered in very high doses. Start with 100 drops of DMSO at 99% concentration in 8 ounces of water that has been primed with 1 teaspoon of Himalayan Sea Salt administered orally. Administer this dose every hour or every 2 hours. Drink at least 1 additional glass of water every hour without Himalayan Sea Salt while administering DMSO. If the DMSO begins to upset your stomach, take doses every 2-4 hours instead. DMSO has a drying effect on tissues and when given orally, it’s important to allow the stomach lining to rehydrate between doses.
DMSO can be injected intramuscularly as long as you have a sterile, injectable form of DMSO which is not widely available in many countries.
Intravenous administration of DMSO with saline should be done by a qualified health practitioner.
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