
Pharmaceutical Industry Is Falsifying Medical Results Research
HENRY JENNY M.D. TOM TALCOT "DOW CORNING" Tom Talcot "Down Corning Victim" LE CHAÎNON MANQUANT Une bonne mesure de bon sens et de logique est essentiellement la clef de voûte de la recherche fondamentale. Nul doute, Dow Corning savait dès 1963 que ses implants mammaires remplis de gel perdaient de la silicone liquide. L'objectif immédiat de ses chercheurs aurait dû être de déterminer vers où migrait la silicone liquide et quel effet elle produisait sur les organes vitaux. Au milieu des années 1960, Tom Talcot t, leur propre ingénieur chimique, exprima son inquiétude et les avisa d'initier une recherche spécifique en ce sens. La simple idée qu'une telle recherche puisse exposer les danger réels de la silicone liquide, les a apparemment persuadés d'éliminer Talcott d'une façon tout à fait commode. "Toute la recherche de Dow Corning fut résumée et présentée à la réunion de la FDA , le 6 juillet 1978 D' LeVier Ph.D. en endocrinologie, "Aux autopsies des animaux avait-il cherché des niveaux d'infiltration de la silicone dans différents tissus" " LeVier non nous ne l'avons pas fait". En 1993 M. John O. Naim, Ph.D. le fit. Directeur de la Recherche chirurgicale en laboratoire du Centre Hospitalier général de Rochester. "Les matériaux de l'enveloppe pulvérisée , causèrent une réaction localisée, à corps étranger. La mixture de gel et de silicone liquide, d'autre part entraîna une plus sévère réaction systémique que l'adjuvant de Freund." Dans les années 1963, tout chirurgien plasticien doté de bon sens aurait dû réaliser que les implants mammaires de gel de silicone perdaient des quantitées considérables de silicone liquide dans leurs patientes. CE PRODUIT EST UN DIFFUSEUR DE DROGUE AU SENS VÉRITABLE "HENRY JENNY M.D." THE MISSING LINK
A good measure of common sens and logic is the fundamental keystone to basic research. There is no doubt that Dow Corning knew since 1963 that their gel-filled breast implants were losing liquid silicone. Their scientists' immediate objective should have been to determinate where liquide silicone migrates to and what effect and vital it had on vital organs. In the mid 1960's, Tom Talcot, their own chemical engineer, , expressed concern and advised them to initiate some specific research in this direction. The mere idea that such research could possibility expose the real dangers of liquid silicone apparently persuaded them to conveniencetly eliminate Talcott.
DOW CORNING'S entire research was summarized and presented at the FDA meeting on July 6, 1978, by Dow Corning's top researchers, Mr. Arthur Rathjen, who has a bachelor's degree in English and Dr. LeVier , who has a Ph.D. in Endocrinology . When Dr. Jarrold Abraham, a reputable pathologist, specifically asked LeVier, if in the autopsies on the animals, he had looked for silicone levels in the differents tissues, LeVier's answer was: "No, we did not." LeVier claimed that their research showed only inflammatory reactions to the implants.
In the years following 1963, ANY PLASTIC SURGEON WITH COMMON SENSE should have realized that gel-filled breast implants were losing considerable quantities of liquid silicone in their patients.
In the early 1970, a group of pathalogists of Palm Springs Valley Laboratory examined scar tissues of patients whose intact gel-filled implants I have explanted. Silicone micro-droplets were found to be present throught the pseudocapsule and in the adjacent breast tissue. They also observed a local foreign body reaction around the silicone implants. In some instances they reported the presence of a foreign body granuloma which we eventually referred to as "siliconoma"
"This work was to be presented by me to the FDA on March 24, 1978, and was confirmed by Pathologist Abraham on July 6, 1978.
THIS PRODUCT IS A GRUG DELIVERY SYSTEM IN ITS TRUEST SENSE. "HENRY JENNY M.D."