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Re: question: gall bladder

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On 2011-03-01 2:17 PM, J Trettel wrote:

> Our nephew was told he should have his gall bladder removed, as a

> recent test had the count at 21, which should be 30 (I'm thinking

> this would be white cell count)??. He is 44 years old. He does not

> want to have surgery, and I wondered if there is an alternative, or

> would one need more information. He does not have a good diet;

> hamburgers and fries are a good part of that.

A series of liver/gall bladder flushes would probably work (lots of

variations, google is your friend in this case), but if he doesn't

change his diet, the problem will just return, sooner rather than later...

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I just have one for you to start. If his diet is bad, that is where he should

start. There is no quick fix for this or any health issue, really. That is why

we are all on this group and the group has been around for so long. :-)

So on the line of diet, check into knowthecause.com. I think this will open up

his understanding to what is going on along with prescribing a plan of action.

________________________________

From: J Trettel <gnp222@...>

Coconut Oil

Sent: Tue, March 1, 2011 2:17:52 PM

Subject: question: gall bladder

Our nephew was told he should have his gall bladder removed, as a recent

test had the count at 21, which should be 30 (I'm thinking this would be

white cell count)??. He is 44 years old. He does not want to have surgery,

and I wondered if there is an alternative, or would one need more

information. He does not have a good diet; hamburgers and fries are a good

part of that.

I don't like how they handled this; he got a call from the clinic stating he

should have surgery, and a letter saying where to go for same. Seems to me

that doctors are pretty impersonal these days.

At any rate, any ideas out there?? Or any sites where one could get more

information?? Thanks for anything.

Judy

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Thank you, Lyn. I also believe diet is the key here, and will send him that

website to look into this further. I've located a book that I'd forgotten

about called 'The Liver cleansing Diet', by Dr. Cabot, and am

referring him to her site.

Without knowing what exact tests he had, it is hard to guess just where the

problem really stems from; I am going to have him get a print-out from the

doctor so we know just what was done, and exact results.

I am also wondering why he is asking me about this, as he has a sister and

an aunt who are both nurses. Hmm....

On Tue, Mar 1, 2011 at 1:46 PM, Lyn K <godisbest4me@...> wrote:

>

>

> I just have one for you to start. If his diet is bad, that is where he

> should

> start. There is no quick fix for this or any health issue, really. That is

> why

> we are all on this group and the group has been around for so long. :-)

>

> So on the line of diet, check into knowthecause.com. I think this will

> open up

> his understanding to what is going on along with prescribing a plan of

> action.

>

> ________________________________

> From: J Trettel <gnp222@...>

> Coconut Oil

> Sent: Tue, March 1, 2011 2:17:52 PM

> Subject: question: gall bladder

>

>

> Our nephew was told he should have his gall bladder removed, as a recent

> test had the count at 21, which should be 30 (I'm thinking this would be

> white cell count)??. He is 44 years old. He does not want to have surgery,

> and I wondered if there is an alternative, or would one need more

> information. He does not have a good diet; hamburgers and fries are a good

> part of that.

> I don't like how they handled this; he got a call from the clinic stating

> he

> should have surgery, and a letter saying where to go for same. Seems to me

> that doctors are pretty impersonal these days.

>

> At any rate, any ideas out there?? Or any sites where one could get more

> information?? Thanks for anything.

> Judy

>

>

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On Tue, Mar 1, 2011 at 1:22 PM, Tanstaafl <tanstaafl@...> wrote:

> On 2011-03-01 2:17 PM, J Trettel wrote:

> > Our nephew was told he should have his gall bladder removed, as a

> > recent test had the count at 21, which should be 30 (I'm thinking

> > this would be white cell count)??. He is 44 years old. He does not

> > want to have surgery, and I wondered if there is an alternative, or

> > would one need more information. He does not have a good diet;

> > hamburgers and fries are a good part of that.

>

> A series of liver/gall bladder flushes would probably work (lots of

> variations, google is your friend in this case), but if he doesn't

> change his diet, the problem will just return, sooner rather than later...

>

Thank you for that suggestion - I am a bit leery about flushes/cleanses, as

I've heard some people get terribly

ill as a result of them, but I will add that as a suggestion, nonetheless,

and let him decide what he wants to do.

I'm sure that, like other treatments, it works very well for some people.

>

>

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>>Without knowing what exact tests he had, it is hard to guess just where the

problem really stems from; I am going to have him get a print-out from the

doctor so we know just what was done, and exact results.

I am also wondering why he is asking me about this, as he has a sister and

an aunt who are both nurses. Hmm....<<

I am smiling at your last line. I am pleased he is asking someone who does not

think drugs and surgery. This is for his benefit. As for cleansing, yes, I

completely believe in that. He should do that at the start, coupled with

changing his diet. Both together are a power house. I would look first in the

direction of a colon cleanse. Get the plumbing cleaned out first so that the

toxins being flushed from the rest of the body will not get plugged up in an

already diseased colon. Tho, what cleanse you do is your and his choice. Get

him involved as much as you can, though. Getting him proactive in his own health

will allow him to learn about what is really going on, which is what he needs.

This world teaches us so much wrong stuff.

On Tue, Mar 1, 2011 at 1:46 PM, Lyn K <godisbest4me@...> wrote:

>

>

> I just have one for you to start. If his diet is bad, that is where he

> should

> start. There is no quick fix for this or any health issue, really. That is

> why

> we are all on this group and the group has been around for so long. :-)

>

> So on the line of diet, check into knowthecause.com. I think this will

> open up

> his understanding to what is going on along with prescribing a plan of

> action.

>

> ________________________________

> From: J Trettel <gnp222@...>

> Coconut Oil

> Sent: Tue, March 1, 2011 2:17:52 PM

> Subject: question: gall bladder

>

>

> Our nephew was told he should have his gall bladder removed, as a recent

> test had the count at 21, which should be 30 (I'm thinking this would be

> white cell count)??. He is 44 years old. He does not want to have surgery,

> and I wondered if there is an alternative, or would one need more

> information. He does not have a good diet; hamburgers and fries are a good

> part of that.

> I don't like how they handled this; he got a call from the clinic stating

> he

> should have surgery, and a letter saying where to go for same. Seems to me

> that doctors are pretty impersonal these days.

>

> At any rate, any ideas out there?? Or any sites where one could get more

> information?? Thanks for anything.

> Judy

>

>

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Judy for the record I agree with gallbladder/liver flushes. The one I use is Dr.

Kelley's.

Many have avoided an operation with them. If the flushes aren't done, or don't

work, which is unusual, or a stone gets stuck, which is very rare when the

directions are followed, the outcome in all these cases is the operation anyway.

all good,

Duncan

> > > Our nephew was told he should have his gall bladder removed, as a

> > > recent test had the count at 21, which should be 30 (I'm thinking

> > > this would be white cell count)??. He is 44 years old. He does not

> > > want to have surgery, and I wondered if there is an alternative, or

> > > would one need more information. He does not have a good diet;

> > > hamburgers and fries are a good part of that.

> >

> > A series of liver/gall bladder flushes would probably work (lots of

> > variations, google is your friend in this case), but if he doesn't

> > change his diet, the problem will just return, sooner rather than later...

> >

>

> Thank you for that suggestion - I am a bit leery about flushes/cleanses, as

> I've heard some people get terribly

> ill as a result of them, but I will add that as a suggestion, nonetheless,

> and let him decide what he wants to do.

> I'm sure that, like other treatments, it works very well for some people.

>

>

> >

> >

>

>

>

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