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Re: undoing plaque / Was:Coconut Oil, Best Benefit (s)

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Duncan, have you heard of the cane sugar diet  or something like that to open

arteries where plaque may be formed...

Or do you have a different idea on how to accomplish that?...

Thanks,

d

From: Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...>

Subject: Re: Coconut Oil, Best Benefit (s)

Coconut Oil

Date: Monday, March 21, 2011, 2:03 PM

 

, you'll see a correlation between high cholesterol and plaque

formation only in a population with enough oxidative stress to rancidify their

dietary polyunsaturated oils and/or eating pre-rancidified oils.

Early tests of primitive cultures that ate almost no seed oil but a lot of

saturated fat, so it's a given they also had high cholesterol, revealed no

evidence of heart disease at all. They also had a near-ideal body mass index.

Heart disease examples were exceedingly hard to find even in modern society

until the early 1950's, with the advent of margarine and corn oil.

The reason the seed oil manufacturers push seed oils as healthy is because mice

did well on them in early research and they still extrapolate that shabby flawed

work as if it applied in some way to humans. Unfortunately, non-seed eaters'

health fails on high dietary seed oil intake but the manufacturers now are in

the biz of selling seed oils now so they won't hear of it. The false advertising

problem is compounded by the medical mafia, and high-oxidative people eating

over-processed rancidifying polyunsaturated oils, which will certainly give a

plaque reading very quickly.

The plaque study published in Lancet in 1971 revealed a composition of 74%

polyunsaturated and unsaturated oil; cholesterol, saturated fat, cellular

debris, scar tissue, foam cells, calcium etc together formed the balance.

all good,

Duncan

>

> Maybe. I'm not an expert so I don't know.

>

> When it comes to cholesterol and related issues I listen to Duane Graveline. I

like reading Duane's articles and books because he tells it like it is and gives

you " the good, the bad and the ugly " regardless. He follows current research and

his knowledge is based upon the most recent findings.

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Duncan, have you heard of the cane sugar diet  or something like that to open

arteries where plaque may be formed...

Or do you have a different idea on how to accomplish that?...

Thanks,

d

From: Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...>

Subject: Re: Coconut Oil, Best Benefit (s)

Coconut Oil

Date: Monday, March 21, 2011, 2:03 PM

 

, you'll see a correlation between high cholesterol and plaque

formation only in a population with enough oxidative stress to rancidify their

dietary polyunsaturated oils and/or eating pre-rancidified oils.

Early tests of primitive cultures that ate almost no seed oil but a lot of

saturated fat, so it's a given they also had high cholesterol, revealed no

evidence of heart disease at all. They also had a near-ideal body mass index.

Heart disease examples were exceedingly hard to find even in modern society

until the early 1950's, with the advent of margarine and corn oil.

The reason the seed oil manufacturers push seed oils as healthy is because mice

did well on them in early research and they still extrapolate that shabby flawed

work as if it applied in some way to humans. Unfortunately, non-seed eaters'

health fails on high dietary seed oil intake but the manufacturers now are in

the biz of selling seed oils now so they won't hear of it. The false advertising

problem is compounded by the medical mafia, and high-oxidative people eating

over-processed rancidifying polyunsaturated oils, which will certainly give a

plaque reading very quickly.

The plaque study published in Lancet in 1971 revealed a composition of 74%

polyunsaturated and unsaturated oil; cholesterol, saturated fat, cellular

debris, scar tissue, foam cells, calcium etc together formed the balance.

all good,

Duncan

>

> Maybe. I'm not an expert so I don't know.

>

> When it comes to cholesterol and related issues I listen to Duane Graveline. I

like reading Duane's articles and books because he tells it like it is and gives

you " the good, the bad and the ugly " regardless. He follows current research and

his knowledge is based upon the most recent findings.

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Hi Don; I avoid all high-carb proposals; I think they cause disease and I don't

think high-carb foods should be in the human food chain at all except for the

pitifully small handful of sedge seeds you could gather while naturally foraging

(which would provide almost enough omega-6 too).

My constructive advice is that BlockBuster AllClear is guaranteed to improve

microcirculation and inflammation and reduce blockages regardless of whether

they are plaque, or blood coagulation and clots, or you get your money back.

http://tinyurl.com/enzyme-therapy

This isn't a cure for bad diet though, and high omega-6 and carbs is a bad diet.

all good,

Duncan

>

> Duncan, have you heard of the cane sugar diet  or something like that to open

arteries where plaque may be formed...

> Or do you have a different idea on how to accomplish that?...

> Thanks,

> d

>

>

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BlockBuster AllClear should replace warfarin/coumadin as the supplement method

of choice for people with coagulopathy for several reasons.

While warfarin carries a bleeding risk and resulting poor prognosis in the event

of a hemorragic stroke, even within its tiny therapeutic window, enzymes do not

carry a bleeding risk and prognosis is very good on enzymes.

While warfarin/coumadin actually prevents the first clotting of the natural

healing process, which produces that bleeding risk, metabolic enzymes allow the

natural healing/clotting process, which stops the bleeding, and then eradicates

any excess clotting (and spontaneous blood coagulopathy).

Metabolic enzymes act like and with, and also improve the secretion of, natural

plasmin, the body's only fibrinolytic enzyme, while warfarin doesn't even

address that the reason for the excessive coagulation is plasmin secretion

falling with age in the first place.

BB AllClear is a godsend even compared to the older enzyme blends, which don't

contain much or any fibrinolytic enzymes; a diabetic's toes can go from purple

to pink in 24-48 hours with BB AllClear; it also excels at eroding existing

clots and reducing systemic inflammation that impairs microcirculation, while

warfarin doesn't reduce inflammation or erode clots at all. In fact, while

metabolic enzymes erode excessive scarring and organ fibrosis, the leading

killer of the elderly through renal failure, warfarin does not do that either.

Goodhealth Naturally encourages comparison between their BlockBuster AllClear

and any other blend or single fibrinolytic enzyme on the market; other companies

hide their inferior formulas and/or charge twice as much for an obviously

inferior product. Neprinol and Wobenzym don't hold a candle to a real

fibrinolytic enzyme blend for example.

Make sure you fully understand the huge difference between proteolytic enzymes

and fibrinolytic enzymes, and the diff between digestive (food) and

empty-stomach (metabolic) enzymes when you try to copy or souce another product.

I've done my homework and I think this is the best there is as well as the least

expensive, something we don't run into very often.

And it's guraanteed, even the four-month program. I suggest every adult should

do a couple of cleanout programs at around 40 and 55 years of age, then go on a

low dose to support the falling plasmin levels after around 65 years of age. The

low dose would be OK permanently for anyone, especially anyone who wants better

microcirculation even in the brain.

While the doctor would advise you against eating certain essential vitamins and

foods because they would confict with his rat poison, fish oil, vitamin E, and

garlic all work well with BB AllClear; this is reflected in one of the

researcher's comments on my metabolic enzymes page; this page also contains

references:

http://tinyurl.com/enzyme0

BlockBuster AllClear link:

http://tinyurl.com/BB-Allclear

all good,

Duncan

> > My BlockBuster AllClear link

> >><http://tinyurl.com/BB-Allclear>

>

> Hi Duncan,

>

> This stuff looks very interesting... would you say it could replace any

> other heart/circulatory supplements one was taking?

>

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On 2011-03-22 5:07 PM, Duncan Crow wrote:

> Make sure you fully understand the huge difference between proteolytic

> enzymes and fibrinolytic enzymes, and the diff between digestive (food)

> and empty-stomach (metabolic) enzymes when you try to copy or souce

> another product. I've done my homework and I think this is the best

> there is as well as the least expensive, something we don't run into

> very often.

Ok, I admit I don't know much about enzymes (aside from the fact that

they are very important) - can you elaborate (or point to a web page

that does)?

And are you saying this formula contains all of them, maybe even in a

synergistic blend?

Thanks again...

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