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Whey, Coconut Oil and Coronary Artery Disease

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We have been making trips to another town to get raw milk for 5 or so

families. Sometimes we ask the farm to separate the excess milk so we

can have the whey for pickling and fermenting - one family likes it to

drink. The owner of the farm's mother has coronary artery disease and

they were wondering if whey would be beneficial. They said that the

mother has a hard time eating and that when she does she gets dizzy

and wobbly because they think the blood is rushing from her brain to

her stomach - she's 20lbs. underweight at about 100 lbs. I guess they

were thinking whey would help with energy, muscle mass.

I know sometimes there are discussion about whey going on in here.

Anyone have any ideas?

If her arteries are full of plaque, wouldn't it be beneficial for her

to look into chelating that?

-vanessa

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If the mom is on drugs like statins, she will never get well. Perhaps

her family might want to try Serrapeptase? Its an enzyme that

dissolves plaque and blood clots. I would stay away from chelating.

phine

>

> We have been making trips to another town to get raw milk for 5 or so

> families. Sometimes we ask the farm to separate the excess milk so we

> can have the whey for pickling and fermenting - one family likes it to

> drink. The owner of the farm's mother has coronary artery disease and

> they were wondering if whey would be beneficial. They said that the

> mother has a hard time eating and that when she does she gets dizzy

> and wobbly because they think the blood is rushing from her brain to

> her stomach - she's 20lbs. underweight at about 100 lbs. I guess they

> were thinking whey would help with energy, muscle mass.

>

> I know sometimes there are discussion about whey going on in here.

> Anyone have any ideas?

>

> If her arteries are full of plaque, wouldn't it be beneficial for her

> to look into chelating that?

>

> -vanessa

>

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, I think the arterial blockages are best approached with

blockbuster all clear:

http://www.goodhealth.nu/us/1400

I often discuss the use of undenatured whey for lean tissue mass and

also recovery; yes, it can be a core product, with selenium. That

said, we pretty well have to use it in more concentrated form because

a single dose of raw whey would be around 5 gallons, and she'll need

2-4 doses daily.

Duncan Crow ( a wholistic consultant in Canada)

>

> We have been making trips to another town to get raw milk for 5 or

so

> families. Sometimes we ask the farm to separate the excess milk so

we

> can have the whey for pickling and fermenting - one family likes it

to

> drink. The owner of the farm's mother has coronary artery disease

and

> they were wondering if whey would be beneficial. They said that the

> mother has a hard time eating and that when she does she gets dizzy

> and wobbly because they think the blood is rushing from her brain to

> her stomach - she's 20lbs. underweight at about 100 lbs. I guess

they

> were thinking whey would help with energy, muscle mass.

>

> I know sometimes there are discussion about whey going on in here.

> Anyone have any ideas?

>

> If her arteries are full of plaque, wouldn't it be beneficial for

her

> to look into chelating that?

>

> -vanessa

>

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Guest guest

phine, actually enzymes perform specific actions; serrapeptase is

a fibrinolytic that will digest fibrin if it exists in the plaque,

but won't dissolve the rancid unsaturated oils plaque is made of.

BlockBuster All clear will because it also has lipase in it, which is

specifically for oils, and also contains serrapeptase, nattokinase

and Seaprose-S, the three major fibrinolytic enzymes.

Duncan

> >

> > We have been making trips to another town to get raw milk for 5

or so

> > families. Sometimes we ask the farm to separate the excess milk

so we

> > can have the whey for pickling and fermenting - one family likes

it to

> > drink. The owner of the farm's mother has coronary artery

disease and

> > they were wondering if whey would be beneficial. They said that

the

> > mother has a hard time eating and that when she does she gets

dizzy

> > and wobbly because they think the blood is rushing from her brain

to

> > her stomach - she's 20lbs. underweight at about 100 lbs. I guess

they

> > were thinking whey would help with energy, muscle mass.

> >

> > I know sometimes there are discussion about whey going on in

here.

> > Anyone have any ideas?

> >

> > If her arteries are full of plaque, wouldn't it be beneficial for

her

> > to look into chelating that?

> >

> > -vanessa

> >

>

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