Everybody has parasites (worms, flukes, protozoa, amoeba) viruses and bacteria. You could assume it. Everybody also has heavy metal problems.


Parasites, the reason they’re called parasites is because they avoid being detected and killed. They’re successful. So you’re not going to find them. They don’t hang out in our stool. They don’t hang out in our colons. An adult form might show up there, or you got some pinworms, they might show up there. But for the most part, in order for them to survive in the longterm, they have to burrow deep into your tissue. So they’ll burrow into the colon, the lining of the colon, lining of the bladder, ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus, spleen, liver, and then lungs, brain.

The eye on the ball is restoring health. Okay. And in order to do that, we have to get rid of the things that are interfering, which are parasites


If people bother to do pathogen cleanses they may do it once or twice a year.
“If you undertreat them, let’s say you only use ivermectin. or you only use fenbendazole. You disturb them, and then they migrate to another organ like the pancreas and go deep in the pancreas, and you wind up with pancreatic cancer. The point is you’ve got to blitz them, and that’s why we use three, four or five antiparasitics three times a day for three weeks on, one week off, three weeks on, one week off.” Dr Lodi.
“People have parasites. The problem is they’re not diagnosed. You can go into the hospital and give them your stool, give them five stool tests, and they won’t find any because they’re all sitting in the lining and deep in the tissues.
They need to have a nice place for them to live, a nest. And that’s where they nest. They don’t nest in your stool. So they’re not easy to find. And I hope you understand that.”
There’s a protozoa called entamoeba that is responsible for amoebic dysentery and things like that. But whenever we’re taking out root canals or we’re cleaning out cavitations in the jaw from a failed extraction or something and they send the pus to a DNA lab, they’re finding it.


Antiparasitics and cancer
One of the side benefits of taking these medicines is that they turn off all the cancer pathways and they kill cancer stem cells. And we all have some amount of what we call chronically fermenting cells going on that they call cancer. We all have some of those going on in our body. We all have it.


Dr Lodi’s Protocols:
What we have found works best is if you use a combination of ivermectin, Praziquantel, and Mabendazole/Fenbendazole.
Niclosamide can take the place of Praziquantel sometimes and it also turns off cancer pathways.
The other thing is that there’s always funguses involved. We add in Nystatin, and or Fluconazole.


Fenbendazole 222 milligrams, three times a day. Ivermectin, 12 milligrams, three times a day Praziquantel 600 milligrams, three times a day. Fluconazole, 100 milligrams, twice a day. Nystatin, 500,000 units, three times a day. Three weeks on, one week off. Three weeks on, one week off. The one week off is to give your liver a break. Now, this is going to be bad for my liver. Indeed, it’s going to be bad for your liver. Your liver enzymes, they’ll go up and then they’ll go down. And then they’ll go up and they’ll go down. However, if you don’t do this and you undertreat them these guys are going to migrate and find them and they burrow in your brain, burrow in your pancreas. You don’t want that. You want to get rid of them. So you do that. Now remember something about the liver. You can cut out two-thirds of it and donate to a sibling and it will grow back.
‘The liver in humans is our lizard tail. It grows back. You pull it off, it grows back. So don’t worry about it. If your liver enzymes go up, they’ll come back down. The only time they don’t is if you have hepatitis, but if you have hepatitis, you already know about it because you’re sick and you’re yellow and you don’t have any energy and all that. So that’s why you need to really work with a doctor just so that you know. You’ve done blood tests, you know what’s going on and all that sort of thing. However, I never let the potential side effects of something that are not deadly get in the way of taking care of a problem we need to take care of. So you don’t take your eye off the ball. So when we’re working with people with cancer and they’re a little bit anemic and they’re a little bit of that, so what, I’m not going to treat them? Just let them deteriorate? No. I’m going to treat them and deal with the side effects and deal with them as we can because we’ve got to keep our eye on the ball. The eye on the ball is restoring health. Okay. And in order to do that, we have to get rid of the things that are interfering, which are parasites, hidden dental things.’

Interview excerpts between Dr Lodi and Dr. William Makis

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