By Dr. Benjamin P. Sandler and Dr. R. Berke
Summary: Dr. Sandler, a former United States naval surgeon, studied for decades two of his era's most devastating infectious diseases: polio (a viral infection) and tuberculosis (a bacterial one). In both cases he found that a low-carbohydrate diet was the best treatment and prevention for the disease. In this brief, Sandler reports that in ten tuberculosis patients treated with a low-carb diet, "digestive, cardiac, respiratory, nervous and mental symptoms were rapidly relieved and relief was sustained" in each subject. Sandler's findings have been echoed in recent years in diet trials testing low-carbohydrate diets, in which subjects invariably exhibit improvement in biomarkers such as triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, and blood pressure. From American Revue of Tuberculosis, 1942.
View PDF: Treatment of Tuberculosis with a Low-Carbohydrate Diet







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