Hello Yannick,
First of all, thank you for taking the time to answer our questions.
Do you think that someone who has cancer and maintains a GKI below 2, as Thomas Seyfried recommends, could do 3 to 5 days of dry fasting per month, followed by 25 days keeping the GKI below 2.0 — basically eating one meal a day consisting of sardines, butter, and garlic.
During that month, they would also take many compounds such as methylene blue, mebendazole, etc. Doing workout every day etc…
(Regarding ivermectin, it’s said that some people with a certain gene may experience neurological side effects.)
Dry fast 3 to 5 days everymonth?
Re: Dry fast 3 to 5 days everymonth?
Yes, I've seen some people get slight neural ticks on too high of ivermectin doses, but I think it's important you find the amount that you can handle. I think it is safer to mix ivermectin with mebendazole as they have different MoAs and seem to complement each other.Marius1793 wrote: Wed Nov 12, 2025 8:35 pm Hello Yannick,
First of all, thank you for taking the time to answer our questions.
Do you think that someone who has cancer and maintains a GKI below 2, as Thomas Seyfried recommends, could do 3 to 5 days of dry fasting per month, followed by 25 days keeping the GKI below 2.0 — basically eating one meal a day consisting of sardines, butter, and garlic.
During that month, they would also take many compounds such as methylene blue, mebendazole, etc. Doing a workout every day, etc…
(Regarding ivermectin, it’s said that some people with a certain gene may experience neurological side effects.)
My goal for cancer is to fix the insulin resistance. This requires carbs. This requires you to refeed with carbs. If you stick to keto and low GKI and keep fasting, you are stacking a hypothyroid state deeper and deeper each month; eventually, the body will have to give. Yes, low GKI keeps cancer suppressed, but if you stay in that state for too long, eventually the cancer learns how to feed on ketones (in a weird, simplified explanation type of way - but really what probably happens is the immune system gets weaker and weaker due to energy constraints). What to do with cancer? Well, I would recommend a dry fast as a sort of reset tool, but then you need to very gradually refeed carbs without overly spiking insulin, while also taking things like ivermectin and meben/fenben (especially in the first 2-4 weeks of refeed when you are in a vulnerable state post-fast). Plus other key things for insulin sensitivity. You can maintain a ketosis-like state through meditation while doing these therapies. (Both meditation and ketosis appear to affect the brain and body in ways that promote similar states of well-being, calmness, and mental clarity, though through different primary mechanisms) I would also make sure you track your oral temperature to see if you are already in a hypothyroid state and adjust therapy accordingly. While going up in carbs, the guardrails can also include CBD, aspirin, and even cyproheptadine to lower serotonin production (Serotonin generally promotes cancer progression in many types of cancer). I would also consider using Ethyl Acetoacetate and Ethyl Pyruvate but that's a deeper discussion. In general, if you decide to stay in low GKI and ketosis as per Seyfried, then I do not recommend dry fasting, and if some fasting must be done, then I would recommend water fasting instead, as dry fasting is too aggressive and hypothyroid-inducing.