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Re: Re: Vitamin D, Lithocholic Acid and Colon Cancer

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And the scientific evidence for your statements is............?????

on 6/28/2004 6:29 PM, beneathremains at beneathremains@... wrote:

>> Calcium.

>

> I would point out this is likely an effect of inorganic calcium that

> is unassimilated in the bowel, not organic.

>

>> Coffee.

>

> I think you should search up the negative effects of coffee on the

> bowel mucoidal lining.

>

>> Copper.

>> Folic acid.

>> Exercise.

>> Avoid red meats.

>> Cruciferous vegetables.

>> CR.

>> Colonoscopies.

>

> None of the above is as effective as bowel detoxification in terms of

> inducing peristalisis and vacuuming out fecal matter (with fiber-like

> blends of drawing substances) and healing up any polyphs and

> diverticulosis. Once every season is a good preventive measure.

>

> Logan

>

>

>

>

>

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Well, first I think I and another significant member of this group are not going to give up our coffee, LE or not.

I guess I see you meaning of inorganic calcium versus organic, but that implies the Ca ion is not separated in solution?

I recall Ca absorption is about 20% regardless of what it came from - milk, plants, CaCO3 (although it's been argued plenty). I kinda think the body just doesn;t absorb any more than it needs, OR it may absorb it and kick it back into the gut, ie, Ca+. In any case there must be a lot of Ca+ for "protective effect", right?

I don't understand "colon vacuum" quotes or not. Maybe motility? Or are you saying the colon "sucks" out bad stuff from the system? Part of that "emerging field"? I guess I need some biochem instruction. Please tell me how that happens in a chemical sense.

Regards.

----- Original Message -----

From: beneathremains

Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2004 1:13 AM

Subject: [ ] Re: Vitamin D, Lithocholic Acid and Colon Cancer

I couldn't find the calcium study I had in mind. However, I believe the study concluded or theorized that the unabsorbed inorganic calcium from dietary supplementation acted as a protective effect in the colon.The coffee studies seem to be contradictory. I've ***emphasized*** in two references below. There are many substances that can act both as a "colon vacuum" and pathology inhibitor, not just the unique substance referenced below. As it says in the reference, this is an "emerging field" -- at least when it comes to published science!Rodney, here are other substances (with published science backing) to add to your list:Green Tea Selenium Resveratrol EPA and DHA Vitamins AVitamins DTocotrienols Modified Citrus PectinLogan

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