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A Moneychanger Interview:
Dr. John Dommissee
What You Don’t Know About Vitamin B12 CAN Hurt You
Unfortunately I didn’t know about Dr. John Dommisse until I began
preparing to attend the Weston A. Price Conference this November.
When I went to his website,
www.JohnDommisseMD.com,
what I found astonished me. Was it really possible that Alzheimer’s
and other mental illnesses could really be a vitamin deficiency?
Could chronic pain really be treated effectively? Was it actually
possible to rebuild cartilage in arthritis sufferers? I wrote him
asking for an interview, and he very kindly made time for me at the
conference, on November 11, 2005. I took my grown son and daughter,
Justin and
Liberty,
along with me and they got a little peeved with me for stopping so
soon. They said they could have kept on listening all night. Truth
to tell, I could have, too.
John Vlok Dommisse, MD, MBChB, FRCP(C) received his medical
training at the
University
of
Cape
Town Medical School
(home of the world's first human heart transplant). He completed
specialty training in psychiatry at the
University
of
Toronto's
prestigious Clarke Institute of Psychiatry (where he became deputy
chief resident) and other teaching hospitals. He has Canadian board
certification in psychiatry, recognized in
Arizona
and other states. Dr. Dommisse spent one year on faculty at the
University of Toronto, then 18 years in hospital and private
practice in Portsmouth, Virginia. There he studied nutritional and
metabolic medicine through literature searches of the medical
journal databank of the National Library of Medicine. He now
practices Nutritional & Metabolic TeleMedicine, as well as local,
in-person medicine, in
Tucson,
Arizona.
His address is
1840
East River Road, Suite 210,
Tucson,
Arizona
85718-5892.
His phone number is (520) 577-1940 and fax is 520-577-1743.
PUBLISHER’S WARNING & DISCLAIMER: By publishing this material,
neither The Moneychanger nor Dr. Dommisse recommends nor
endorses any specific treatment or therapy for your particular
physical condition or disease. This interview is offered for
information & research purposes only, & the reader should receive it
as such. Neither The Moneychanger nor Dr. Dommisse
guarantees or warrants any results from any treatment discussed.
Neither The Moneychanger nor Dr. Dommisse assumes any express
or implied liability for any use to which this information is put.
By this interview Dr. Dommisse does not prescribe any treatment
whatsoever for anyone who is not his patient.
Moneychanger
What caught my attention on your website were the amazing things
that you had to say about Vitamin B12. I had never heard that what
is diagnosed as Alzheimer’s might be a B12 deficiency.
Dommisse
Yes. Just this week I became aware of a new book because a patient
of mine in the mid-west alerted me to it and I got it sent to me.
[In the mid 1990s I helped her get on to B12, so she thought I
should look at this new book called, Could It be B12?[1]]
They are saying the same thing, that 25% of the American population
is B12 deficient, and probably most of the Alzheimer’s and many
other problems (depression, bipolar disorder, paranoid psychoses,
hallucinatory psychoses and a lot of other things) are caused by
that deficiency.
Moneychanger
Severe mental illness is nothing more than a B12 deficiency?
Dommisse
No, schizophrenia, if it’s really schizophrenia, is a separate
condition. That may be due to a B12 deficiency in the womb, but by
the time the person is born and develops the schizophrenia, usually
in their teens, it’s too late to turn it around with anything. But
it may have been a developmental thing ‘in utero’. There are
certain psychoses, like paranoia or hallucinatory psychoses, which
could be a B12 deficiency, if they don’t have what’s is known in
psychiatry as the “glass barrier”, which schizophrenics have. [Of
course, B12 deficiency and schizophrenia are not the only causes of
psychoses.]
Moneychanger
I assume that you treat people with B12, for instance, Alzheimer’s,
and …
Dommisse
It becomes a matter of semantics. Once they actually develop
Alzheimer’s, it is irreversible. But I catch them in their early
stage, when they come to me and say, “I am really worried about my
memory. Both of my parents had Alzheimer’s and I am afraid I am
going the same way.” I have turned every one of them around. Not
one of them has gone into full blown Alzheimer’s.
Moneychanger
I’m wondering if I’m in that same case. My father is dead, but my
mother is in a nursing home. My father’s father had what they
called senile dementia, but he lived in the country and their diet
was pretty much what
Sally Fallon
describes as a “primitive diet”. How much is required to turn it
around?
Dommisse
Well, most cases of B12 deficiency can be treated with very high
doses in lozenges or pills by mouth. But you have to use a very
high dose. The only people who have to get it by injection are the
ones with Crohn’s Disease or those have had the terminal ileum (the
last twelve inches of the 22-foot small bowel) cut out. Why?
Because that is the only place where the B12 is finally absorbed,
after it has been treated in the stomach with intrinsic factor, an
enzyme which the stomach cells secrete to make it more absorbable
lower down. If you lack intrinsic factor or hydrochloric acid in
the stomach (as many people do, from middle age on), you can’t get
the B12. Only 1% of it is absorbed and that’s not enough, unless
you take very high doses.
Moneychanger
How high is high?
Dommisse
Have you heard anything about doses?
Moneychanger
I read what your articles on your website. For instance, what is
the US government’s recommended daily allowance (RDA)?
Dommisse
Six micrograms. To give that a little perspective, most B12 shots
given are 1,000 micrograms (mcg). But now they have come out with
10 milligram shots, which equals 10,000 mcg. Methyl-B12,
methylcobalamin shots are more powerful and flood the tissues with
this very penetrating form of B12. It goes through ‘the
blood-brain-barrier’, the choroid plexus, into the cerebrospinal
fluid without having to be processed in the liver. Liver processing
can be a problem in cases of a damaged liver, or alcoholism, or zinc
deficiency, or copper excess. All these prevent B12 conversion to
methyl-B12. By taking it as methylcobalamin (methyl-B12), it goes
straight to the brain and you’ve got it.
Moneychanger
You take that by intramuscular injection or…?
Dommisse
Well, if the level is very low in the blood, even below the lab
normal range. First of all there is the U.S. lab normal range, and
the Japanese. The low end of the Japanese lab normal range is 2½
times higher than the American - and they have hardly any
Alzheimer’s in Japan. That should tell you something.
Moneychanger
What could be causing a deficiency so widespread?
Dommisse
Well, it’s not just a dietary deficiency. Vitamin B12 only comes in
animal protein foods like meat, poultry, fish, seafood, eggs, and
dairy. That’s it. But most people who are B12 deficient are not
vegetarian. Vegetarians, especially vegans,[2]
are at great risk for B12 deficiency if they don’t take B12
supplements.
Most
cases of B12 deficiency are people who eat steak and eggs and
everything, but have an absorption problem. An autoimmune disease
attacks the stomach lining cells, leaving them unable to produce the
intrinsic factor which acts like a catalyst or enzyme to make B12
absorbable lower down in the intestines. This is the commonest form
of B12 deficiency. For this form you could do the shots in the
beginning, maybe, if the level is really low and you want to flood
the tissues fast, but, within two months of the high dose lozenges,
there is no difference in the blood level or the effects of
treatment.
Moneychanger
What would be a maintenance dose for these people?
Dommisse
That depends on how bad their deficiency is. Let’s use the U.S.
normal range. Usually that’s 200 at the bottom end (180-230) and up
to 900-1100 at the top end. In Japan it’s 500-1300. So anyone
testing below the
U.S.
range is very, very bad. They had better get the 10 milligram shot,
two or three times a week for several weeks, then once a week for a
time, and then once a month. The custom is that they get the 1000
mcg shot maybe three times a week for a few weeks, then once a week
for one month, and then once a month forever - and that’s supposed
to be the full treatment. However, in this neurological/ brain
form of B12 deficiency, it is usually NOT enough, once again
“proving” to the physician that B12 deficiency is not the cause of
the patient’s dementia/Alzheimer’s!
B12
deficiency has a two-fold effect; haematological and neurological.
So, around 1850, when Addison first described “pernicious anaemia”,
he was focusing on the anaemia. But he also noted that this
condition produces strange neurological and mental effects. He
didn’t know what the deficiency was, he just described the clinical
condition of the patients. Then, about 1920, Ripple and Menoe and
another person discovered that if you gave a dog or a human a lot of
liver to eat, especially raw liver, their pernicious anaemia was
cured. (One of them was a veterinarian and the other two were
doctors.) So it became known as the “liver factor,” or something
like that. Then in 1948 Castle isolated the actual vitamin in the
tissues. The reagent that he used to extract this vitamin from
animal protein foods contained cyanide and it formed cyanocobalamin
or cyano-B12 with the natural version of B12, hydroxycobalamin
(hydroxy-B12). Ever since then Americans have thought that
cyanocobalamin is B12 but that’s a misnomer and it doesn’t occur in
nature. The natural form is hydroxocobalamin and the most active
forms in the body are adenosylcobalamin (5-deoxyadenosylcobalamin)
and methylcobalamin. But methyl is the one that goes to the brain,
the spinal cord, and the spinal fluid.
Before you develop the anaemia and the enlargement of the red blood
cells (called macrocytic anaemia) B12 deficiency can give you the
mental and neurological effects. That was described in 1905 by J.W.
Langdon in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Yet to this day in the year 2005, most physicians in the U.S. think
that to have the B12 deficiency you have to be anaemic and you have
to have enlarged red blood cells.
Moneychanger
Although the onset of the neurological damage, or the B12
deficiency, may be evidenced before the anaemia ever shows up?
Dommisse
Right, and since the American lab normal range is set low, by the
time the level goes under 200 and by the time the patient reaches
the large blood cells of macrocytic/‘pernicious’ anaemia, he is
gone. Then they are full blown Alzheimer’s, and that’s an
irreversible condition. Once they have totally lost their memory,
and their personalities change and they can’t even care for
themselves, then it’s irreversible.
Moneychanger
I have a friend with Alzheimer’s who lost her sight.
Dommisse
That can be a symptom of B12 deficiency too!
Moneychanger
It wouldn’t help her now, would it?
Dommisse
Well, how long has she been that way?
Moneychanger
Well, two years, I think.
Dommisse
It’s too late. You must catch it in the first 6 –12 months and you
can turn it around. Again, it is a matter of degree. If it’s not
that severe, maybe up to two years, max. But three to four years,
it’s too late. But I would still give B12 to her if she is low
(below 1000 pg/ml in the serum). There could still be improvement
in some aspects of the condition, such as social behavior, etc.
Moneychanger
If someone thought they might have B12 deficiency, what sort of test
would he ask his doctor to perform?
Dommisse
Serum B12 level, but you have to interpret the test according to the
Japanese standards. Mature adults ought to have a level of at least
600 to 2000, in my opinion. In young people I use a level of 1000
to 2000.
Moneychanger
What is the measuring unit?
Dommisse
Picograms per milliliter (pg/ml). Another unit sometimes used is
picomoles per liter. 1.3 picograms per milliliter equals one
picomole per liter, in the case of B12. In some countries they use
picomoles so you have to be prepared for that. Another measure,
used in
San
Francisco,
is nanograms per microliter (or per liter, I’m not sure, but the
units are the same size as the pg/ml units).
Moneychanger
You have published a professional paper about this, have you not?
Dommisse
Yes; it is available on my website for $1.75.
Moneychanger
Does B12 help in chronic pain?
Dommisse
Yes. You can have strange back pain, pain in the limbs,
unexplained. You can even have electric shock-like sensations
(described by the German psychiatrist Lehrmitte) which are linked to
B12 deficiency. In fact my bookkeeper told me she was having
electric shock feelings, and I told here she had a B12 deficiency.
She just took it without even having any lab work done. But she did
lose the electric shocks! [This is a very bad idea: You should
always get the lab work done first. It’s relatively inexpensive (I
get it for my patients thru the lab for about $20) and then you know
whether you have the deficiency or not - using the higher range, as
I have explained.]
Remember that all mammals - sheep, dogs, horses, humans, all
mammals - are born with a 2000 micrograms level, which is the ideal
level. That’s what God made you with. Then it slides down through
life, depending on toxicity, deficiencies, diet, autoimmune disease,
poor absorption, bowel resection, alcoholism, and Crohn’s disease,
among other causes.
Moneychanger
You are primarily a psychiatrist?
Dommisse
Primarily in the sense that that is where I started, but not in the
sense of how I spend most of my day now. Most of it is spent in
nutrition and metabolism, and only about 10-15% in psychiatry. But
boy! do I help those psychiatric patients, and without
medication, often!
Moneychanger
That was one of the things that startled me about your website.
When I hear “psychiatrist” I bristle at once because I expect to
hear about the need for psychotropic drugs, and I don’t like them at
all. They are prescribed like candy for everything.
Dommisse
Kids are being put on drugs also, especially for AD(H)D,
Attention-Deficit (Hyperactivity) Disorder, another condition that
can often be corrected with nutritional or anti-toxicity approaches.
Moneychanger
Right, and that was another reason I was very interested.
Dommisse
Now, you said that your situation was very similar. Were you
worried about your parents or were you referring to yourself
starting to be worried about your memory?
Moneychanger
I am starting to worry about it. My short-term memory is a problem.
Dommisse
Well that’s what it affects, the short term memory. You can
remember things from 20-30 years ago, but yesterday, no. Right? So
now is the time to do something about it, before it gets worse.
Because once it gets worse, it’s harder to do. I have a patient
now, one of the day-trader guys hooked up to a computer with a
satellite, and he has never had a health concern in his life. But
now all of a sudden he is losing his short term memory and he has
moved to Tucson so I can treat him. I am going to have him
psychologically tested in order to document the exact areas of
deficiency he has right now so that we can document the reversal or
the non-reversal if we are too late I don’t know if he can find the
psychologist’s office because he struggled to find mine and was
about half an hour late!
Moneychanger
Well, my short term memory is not that bad - yet. Is there an
average age where the B12 deficiency manifests?
Dommisse
Well, it‘s more common from middle age onward, but it can happen
even in a newborn child. It can happen to a baby in the womb and by
the time it’s born it already has developmental problems. Those are
usually missed. Pediatricians are not much into it. I have a woman
in Tasmania who emails me about the horror story of her child who is
now twelve and is actually improving some on high-dose continuous
B12 supplementation. She had to diagnose it herself on the
Internet, not the doctors.
Moneychanger
Let me shift gears and talk about chronic pain because you seem to
offer some hope for people with chronic pain.
I
have a friend who is basically out of business. He is in good
physical shape, nearly 60 years old, and suffers from chronic pain
in his neck that they think resulted from whiplash years ago. But
only in the last five years has it affected him this way. He is on
the maximum morphine patch.
Dommisse
I’ve got about eight natural things that I do for arthritis and it’s
virtually sure that you are going to get out of it.
Moneychanger
You mean the pain of arthritis?
Dommisse
Yes, and the whole condition. You are going to build new cartilage.
Moneychanger
That was the thing that amazed me in one of your articles. You said
you knew a 63 year old man who had bone-on-bone knees ...
Dommisse
They were going to put new (prosthetic) knees in.
Moneychanger
Which is another big industry, joint replacement -- and his
chiropractor put him on four 500 mg Glucosamine Sulfate capsules and
8 omega-3 1000 mg capsules daily, in divided doses …
Dommisse
Yes, within three months he had no pain. By the time I saw him,
five years later, he was playing tennis (on his own, original
knees)!
Moneychanger
But I thought cartilage would not regenerate.
Dommisse
But it does. See, the orthopedists don’t know anything about this -
except those who are injecting hyaluronic acid into joints to build
the cartilage. There are some of them now that are starting to
inject hyaluronic acid, which is one of these natural things, into
the joint because it’s dramatic and they can do their procedure and
they are helping some people. They don’t believe in glucosamine.
However, some of them are actually starting to realize its benefits,
and the omega 3 oils. Then you can also add cetylmyristoleate,
which is a fatty acid. Dr. Diehl, in the 1970s, discovered that it
is the substance that mice have a lot of in their bodies - keeps
mice from ever getting arthritis! They are high in this fatty
acid. So he started to manufacture it and now there is a Dr.
Cochran who is continuing his process. Now there are a couple of
companies selling it. It is wonderful.
If
they are mild, I usually start people on the glucosamine sulfate,
but it has to be four capsules, not three, at 500 milligrams each,
two in the morning and two in the evening. Two of the 1000 mg fish
oil capsules twice a day, 1000 of borage oil twice a day, and 1000
of flax oil, twice a day. This is if they are mild. I start them
just on these things, oils and glucosamine. In three months, if
they are not pain free, I then add the cetylmyrostoleate. Give them
another month or two and if that hasn’t done it, I add the
hyaluronic acid, then I add the inflammatory enzymes. I’ve got a
protocol of seven things that I use - guaranteed, if you are not
cured using some or all of these seven things, you are a freak!
Moneychanger
You are talking about people with bone-on-bone pain?
Dommisse
Bone-on-bone! That crunching sound! The story I told you is a true
story, personally witnessed by me, including the original
bone-on-bone original x-rays, and one-quarter-inch of cartilage
between those bones in the follow-up x-ray!
Moneychanger
All of this is for arthritis pain?
Dommisse
It ultimately helps the pain, but it helps it by getting to the root
of the pain, not covering it up and making the root cause worse. It
builds new cartilage. All these things build new cartilage.
Moneychanger
I had no idea that vitamin B12 could do so much.
Dommisse
Most natural practitioners are out west. A lot of my patients are
from the South and there is hardly anyone in that region doing this
therapy.
Moneychanger
If they are doing it, they are always looking over their shoulder
because they are afraid that someone from the government is going to
shut them down.
Dommisse
Right, and I’ve had to do that and the government has come after
me. It has cost me $250,000 just to stay in practice. $250,000
just in legal fees, and finally they seem to understand what’s going
on - that, yes, I am practicing outside of THEIR box (although not
outside of the box within which nutritional practitioners practice)
- and I am getting results that they don’t even fully believe!
I
understand what the issue is. The people who drew up the charges
knew nothing about nutritional medicine, but first, nutritional
medicine is allowed by the Allopathic Board in Arizona. Secondly
they have a rule that, if they are going to review or censure him
or use an expert witness against him in court, the physician doing
the reviewing doesn’t have to be the same speciality in nutritional
medicine, but he does have to have a working knowledge of that
practice area. I have exposed them because they persecuted me with
no peer review whatsoever. They can’t do that. So now they are
backing off. They must get a nutritional guy to tell me I am doing
wrong. These people who are coming after me can’t even imagine the
results that I get. They can’t even imagine that it could be true.
They are that far behind, yet they have the nerve to say that I am
‘outside the box’ and need to be censured, or possibly, eventually,
even put out of practice.
Moneychanger
It is criminal that they refuse to accept the results. Even if I
didn’t know what you were doing, based on my own knowledge, I would
still be forced to say, “It looks crazy to me, but it works, so how
can I argue with it?” It apparently doesn’t hurt anyone. What’s
the overdose on vitamin B12?
Dommisse
The only side effect that some people get - now, mind you, this is
from massive doses - is that it can exacerbate acne. That’s it.
Moneychanger
The heartbreak of acne?
Dommisse
Right, and that’s only in some people. If you use the right kind of
vitamin E, the gamma-tocopherol fraction of it, and you correct any
zinc deficiency they might have, the acne would probably go away.
Moneychanger
You mentioned glucosamine sulfate. That’s available without a
prescription, isn’t it?
Dommisse
Yes, it is, and all the cetylmyrostoliate, borage, inflammatory
enzymes and hyaluronic acid is now available by mouth, the
last-mentioned one by Pure Encapsulations, the company that has
patented the orally-absorbable version. All of these are
over-the-counter.
Moneychanger
That may be part of the reason they have been persecuting you. I
truly appreciate your time.
Dommisse
Yes, I believe the pharmaceutical industry is behind much of the
persecution of nutritional and other naturally-practicing physicians
- if we flourish and cure more and more illnesses, where will that
leave the profits of the pharmaceutical companies?! [End of
interview.]
[1]
Pascholok, Sally M., R.N. and Stuart, Jeffrey J., D.O. Could
it be B12? An Epidemic of Misdiagnoses, Quill
Driver Books, $14.95.
[2]
“Vegans” are vegetarians who neither nor use anything that comes
from an animal, including eggs, dairy, and honey. They won’t
even wear leather. Like vegetarians, vegans risk severe
nutritional deficiencies. – FS
© 2005, Reprinted
from the November, 2005
The Moneychanger
P.O. Box 178
Westpoint, Tenn. 38486
(888) 218-9226
www.the-moneychanger.com
Permission to reprint granted
provided no changes
or additions made
and full source credit given.
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