|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Cochran
Regimen
A
Biochemical Approach for Treating Degenerative Diseases of Aging
by Marjorie
Mazel Hecht
(Full text of article from Summer 2001
21st Century) |
|
|
|
The Biochemical Formula
Cardiovascular Disease Clinical Study
The Biochemical Formula
The Future

Biochemist
Timothy Cochran: A passion for stopping degenerative disease.
|
|
What if you could
provide the human body with the biochemicals amino acids, enzymes,
and so on which are critical for optimal cell functioning, but
which naturally decline 2 percent per year, after the age of 20,
as the body ages? Could you then prolong healthy human life, and
slow down or even stop the process of degenerative diseases? This
is the question that fascinated biochemist Timothy Cochran as an
18-year-old student, sitting in a college biology class about the
cell. Although the teacher and his fellow students laughed at the
idea, Cochran pursued it with passion, making it his mission in
life.
Many years later, established as a therapeutic biochemist, he
succeeded in developing what is called the Cochran Regimen, a
patented mixture of 76 essential amino acids, enzymes, hormones,
minerals, vitamins, and essential fatty acids, to keep cells
optimally functional. It is the product of nearly 30 years of his
research work, which he has supported with his own funds from a
family business. A few years ago, he set up a nonprofit research
foundation (the Cochran Foundation of Medical Research1)
to further his research.
Clinical
trials over the past five years, with cardiovascular and
Parkinson's patients, have shown positive and often remarkable
results. The Cochran Regimen relieves many symptoms of Parkinson's
(especially with those who are not in an advanced stage of the
disease), and has enabled some people to leave their wheelchairs,
to walk without difficulty, to take care of their basic needs
(such as using the toilet or getting dressed without assistance),
and to have less severe tremors. Although patients at an earlier
stage of the disease had considerable relief of symptoms, some
improvement was seen even in those people in later stages of the
disease.
For heart
patients, the Cochran Regimen lowers blood pressure, cholesterol,
pulse rate, and blood sugar and improves cardiac output and energy
levels. It enables patients to progressively lower the doses of
the prescribed drugs they are taking, many of which have known
detrimental side effects. Almost all the patients in the
cardiovascular clinical trial showed improvement (93 percent), and
some showed considerable improvement. (See box and table.)
More recent
treatment of patients with various ailments, including chronic
fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease),
have shown that the Cochran Regimen relieves symptoms. The effect
on ALS in one recent case is remarkable; the patient's symptoms
abated, and he was able to work normally. No other treatment has
been available for this killer disease.
The Cochran
Regimen is relatively inexpensive and simple to use. It is not
toxic. It comes in powdered form, which is mixed with water or
juice and ingested three times a day, before meals. It requires a
doctor's prescription, and is adjusted to the biochemical needs of
each patient, based on information from blood tests and case
histories. The formulation is prepared and supplied by an
FDA-approved pharmaceutical laboratory in central California.
As Cochran
stresses, this is not "alternative" medicine; it is just "good
science."
For an
objective observer, looking at the results of the clinical trials
and individual cases so far, the question is, why aren't there
more and larger trials going on with cardiovascular and
Parkinson's patients? Why isn't there major funding to test the
efficacy of the Cochran Regimen with a host of degenerative
diseases, including cancers? Why aren't we funding pilot projects
to see if the use of this regimen should be routine for all
aging human beings, to prevent the onset of degenerative diseases?
Why don't we have a Manhattan Project approach for basic research
to extend healthy human life? |
|
|
|

Stuart Lewis/EIRNS
Although the average lifespan has increased, there is little basic
research into the degenerative diseases of aging. |
|
|
|
The Biochemical Formula
Cochran's attack on the problem of degenerative diseases and aging
starts with very traditional molecular biological assumptions. He
looked at the body's cells, how they function, and what they
optimally need. As he put it: "All of your cells have a language,
linguistic structure, and command system. All cells obey the laws
of physics and chemistry. The only language that they know and
understand is one of hormones, amino acids, enzymes, minerals, and
fatty acids. If you give them biochemically what they require and
are asking for, the cells respond in a positive fashion, as they
were designed to do."
Cochran looked at
all major cell groups, and what was required to keep them
functioning, rebuilding and repairing themselves when necessary,
and the "command" formats that control the cycles for tissue
regeneration. Then he set about to return to the body the natural
substances that are designed to give and receive those commands.
"Cells talk,"
Cochran says. "Think of your cells as you would a hungry child. If
a child is hungry, you don't give him a dirt clod. . . . If your
body is screaming for help, and you don't understand the language
it is speaking, the result will be only physical degeneration and,
eventually, death."
Many of the
biochemicals in Cochran's formulation have been well studied
individually, and their effects on some diseases are known. For
example, co-enzyme Q-10, melatonin, and DHEA have been found to
have some partial effects on cardiovascular disease. But, Cochran
points out, there have been "no concerted efforts to combine
various biochemical compounds as a regimen, and to observe the
effects when given in a therapeutic dose that aims to match the
levels of early adulthood."
It is
important to understand, Cochran stresses, that the natural
compounds have to be administered in the proper quantities. It's
not simply a case of throwing in one of this for the heart, two of
that for the liver, and so on. He has devised specific ratios of
the compounds to ensure that they work together to improve the
cells of the body as a whole.
The first goal
of the treatment, according to Cochran, is to activate dormant
neurons, so that they can begin "communicating" again. Next, the
objective is to re-activate the damaged neuron tracks, by
fostering sprouting and growth of the neurons, so that they can
spread out and connect with other neurons, bypassing the damaged
areas of the neuron track and thus restoring normal functioning.
The key,
Cochran says, is to get back into the body those particular
biochemicals that will properly interface with the cellular
membranes and gain transport to the neural cells, and, at the same
time, to get other biochemicals to the right cellular place for
repair work. He has studied the intricacies of the workings of
each biochemical in such detail, that he refers to them as his
"friends and buddies," as he explains what each component can and
cannot do.
Cochran chose
to begin the therapeutic application of his theory to
cardiovascular disease, because it is so prevalent as a disease of
aging—up to 60 million people in the United States, he estimates,
have some form of cardiovascular disease—hypertension or elevated
pulse, for example. He enjoys working in cardiology, he says,
because it involves a host of different physiological systems, and
the benchmark physiology is well known.
He was
encouraged to take on Parkinson's Disease by a Columbia
University-trained neurologist from
India,
who saw the data for a cardiology patient from Stanford University
Hospital who had been treated with the Cochran Regimen. The
neurologist, who heads the largest neurology hospital in Asia,
then convinced Cochran to apply his Regimen to Parkinson's. The
first Parkinson's patient Cochran treated was a pharmacologist who
had early-stage Parkinson's and who had retired to
India
from a career at the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Initially,
Cochran tackled the problem of Parkinson's by studying the
biomarkers for the disease, and evaluating what particular
biochemicals might affect these biomarkers. For example, he was
the first to see the association of Parkinson's with injury to the
respiration mechanism in the mitochondria of neural cells, and he
tried using coenzyme Q-10 and taurine to help overcome this. He
also noticed a reduced level of glutathion in Parkinson's neural
cells, and was the first to try glutathion-building nutrients,
such as lipoic acid, as a remedy.
Another of his
ideas was to increase the amount of taurine, which influences the
movement of calcium ions in the brain, and helps stabilize the
neural cell membranes. By increasing taurine levels over those
normally produced by the liver, he hypothesized, two other amino
acids, methionine and cysteine, would be freed up for better use
in other biochemical pathways.
About 50
percent of the Parkinson's patients treated with the Cochran
Regimen show dramatic improvement, and another 25 percent show
moderate improvement, while the remaining 25 percent show little
or no improvement. Cochran is continuing to work on the
Parkinson's problem, trying to determine why patients with the
same level of symptoms have such different responses to the
Regimen, some recovering substantially, and others partially or
not at all. |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cardiovascular Disease Clinical Study
In a
clinical trial, conducted in 1997-1998 in India, there were 23
cardiovascular patients, 21 male and 2 female, with a mean age of
64.5. The patients took no medication for blood pressure,
cholesterol, and so on during the trial, only the Cochran Regimen.
Here are some
of the results (see table):
Pulse rate.
Pulse decreased promptly and then stabilized.
Blood pressure.
Blood pressure
fell quickly, going from an average of 154/104 to an average of
128/88 after one month, and an average of 111/79 after three
months.
Cholesterol.
There was an
average 17 percent reduction in cholesterol.
Quality of life.
After six months,
only one patient was nonresponsive, while the average patient went
from "a severely restricted life to one in which normal activities
are now possible with minimum fatigue."
This study was
undertaken by U.S.-trained physicians, who worked in India, after
they saw the results of a "pilot patient" at Stanford University
Hospital. This patient, who had been near death, showed dramatic
improvement after taking the Cochran Regimen. The patient had been
treated for heart disease for 10 years at the Stanford hospital.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Biochemical Formula
In
shorthand, Cochran's biochemistry formula is:

Here is how
Cochran describes the formulation:
(1) The first
ingredient is hormones, (H). When processed and secreted into the
body fluids by a hormone production cell or groups of cells,
hormones exercise massive physiological control, activating a wide
range of physiological processes. Cochran aimed to keep the
hormone level at that which it is when the body is at its
biological prime.
(2) The second
ingredient is amino acids (A). These are doubled. The formula
includes both the essential and non-essential amino acids, which
the body requires for proper synthesis of proteins in cells.
(3) The third
ingredient is enzymes (E). These are enhanced three times, in
order to offset the degeneration that naturally comes with age.
Inside the cell, enzymes initiate and increase the rate of
required biochemical reactions.
(4) The fourth
ingredient is mineral ions (M), naturally occurring inorganic
chemical compounds, which are required for proper cellular
operations. These maintain a state of dynamic equilibrium, not
only at the molecular and cellular levels, but for the entire
physiological mechanism.
(5) The fifth
ingredient is the essential fatty acids.
(6) DNA – RNAr
refers to the regulation and control of the transcription and
translation processes in the production of new and improved
cellular protein. According to Cochran, even aged cells retain
their blueprint for functioning, but they no longer are being
given the "instructions or resources to perform the required task
of normal cellular function."
(7) The point
of the Regimen is to lead to a situation where the above
ingredients, and the reactivated DNA/RNA functioning, enable
tissue regeneration. By allowing the rebuilding and repair cycles
to continue, along with protection of the cellular structure, the
cells can follow the same patterns of functioning that they did
when the body was 23 years old.
By
biochemically invoking the "laws" of the body's cellular
functioning, Cochran reasons, not only do you reach the "control
cycles for tissue regeneration," but also you destroy "the
biochemical deterioration state or medium that allows the disease
to exist and grow." Thus, you "take away the medium that the
disease must have to exist, and by doing so, you therefore destroy
the disease's ability to survive." |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Future
The
next step, according to Cochran, is to test the formulation in
much wider clinical trials, with a variety of patients, which
would provide a broader basis on which to assess when the Cochran
Regimen works best, and perhaps gain some insight into exactly why
it has been successful. But this requires large-scale clinical
trials, and large-scale clinical trials require major funding,
which right now, is not there.
Cochran's
foundation has had some funding offers, but with strings attached
that were unacceptable. And so, he is continuing to use his own
funds to pursue the research. He recalls the words of one of his
professors: " ‘If those are your ideas and you have the money to
prove it, then that's fine, but you aren't going to get that kind
of grant money from somebody else to prove it.' " "So," he
says, "I put my money where my thoughts were."
Besides, he
says, sometimes grant money can limit your research, and "we
wanted to have the intellectual freedom to be able to pursue
whatever lead comes up."
The word,
however, is getting out on how the Cochran Regimen has helped many
individuals with a variety of incurable diseases, and some major
institutions are beginning to take notice. A cardiovascular study
with 100 to 200 patients in southern California is in the works.
Cochran also
works regularly with hospitals in California and physicians around
the country. His outlook for the future is a philosophical one:
"The Cochran Regimen is more effective, nontoxic, and relatively
cheap, and it is an idea whose time will come," he says, "and the
sooner the better for millions of people whose lives could be
improved."
How has the
medical community responded? In some individual cases, with
enthusiasm. William Regelson, M.D., for example, a professor
emeritus at the Medical College of Virginia, who specializes in
aging (and who alerted this writer to Cochran's work), sees the
regimen as having great promise and the medical community as being
too narrow-minded to understand something new. Richard Passwater,
Ph.D., a researcher who works on nutrition, has investigated and
publicized the Cochran Regimen in his monthly newsletter, urging
cardiovascular and Parkinson's patients to have their physicians
enroll them in the regimen.
Again Cochran
takes a philosophical approach. He has seen the amazement of many
physicians when their supposedly incurably ill patients improve,
and yet, he says, those same physicians remain unwilling to expand
the use of the treatment to other patients. "They just don't want
to rock the professional boat," he says. "Medicine is a
self-serving business. And, many physicians don't want to
understand that biochemicals instead of costly drugs can be a
solution."
Ultimately,
however, Cochran is certain that the proven success of his
treatment will prevail, and that someday, its use in fighting and
curing degenerative diseases, including ordinary aging, will be
commonplace.
Note
1. The
Cochran Foundation of Medical Research, specializing in
cardiovascular and neurological diseases, is a 501 (3)C nonprofit
foundation, P.O. Box 9060 Cedarpines Park, Calif. 92322. Phone:
(909) 338-7012; Fax: (909) 338-4010; e mail: Cochran-Foundation@worldnet.att.net. |
|
|
|
|