Discussion
Clinical observation was conducted on the condition of a patient of Cedars-Sinai Comprehensive Cancer Center, Los Angeles, USA undergoing chemotherapy treatment for metastasized nasopharyngeal cancer. The observation showed that the ingestion of MRET water compensated the usual side effects of chemotherapy treatments such as long-term decrease of White Blood Cell counts (WBC), weakness, headache, nausea, etc.
On a regular basis, WBC counts usually decrease to a very low level. The rebounding of WBC from this low range takes about 3-5 weeks. The ingestion of MRET water prevented the decrease of WBC counts to their lowest level and helped to regain the pre-chemotherapy level within an unusually short period of time of 3 days.
Thus, the clinical observation revealed that on the 10th day after the beginning of chemotherapy (in 3 days after WBC counts dropped to 10% of pre-chemotherapy level) WBC counts rebounded to 93% of their pre-chemotherapy level. In compliance with Student’s Distribution criteria, the rebounding of WBC was higher than 70% of the pre-chemotherapy level with p=0.05.