Guest guest Posted October 10, 2010 Report Share Posted October 10, 2010 Friggin' killer Steve! What I expected. Again, as I have said many times before, this does not invalidate the value of the flushes in any way. Eventually people Eliminate far less of none of the " green stones " And they feel better. So who cares what they are? And while this particular individual may not have submitted or passed real stones, there are plenty who do. Curezone has a photo gallery with plenty of path photos of resected gallbladders and livers with stones identical to some that are passed by doing the flushes. The presence of green blobs does not negate the function of eliminating stones. -D Re:2nd Flush with a Friend Success A 40-year-old woman was referred to the outpatient clinic with a 3-month history of recurrent severe right hypochondrial pain after fatty food. [Note: Here " hypochondrial " means " below the ribcage,' not " hypochondriac. " ] Abdominal ultrasound showed multiple 1-2 mm gallstones in the gallbladder. She had recently followed a " liver cleansing " regime on the advice of a herbalist. This regime consisted of free intake of apple and vegetable juice until 1800 h, but no food, followed by the consumption of 600 mL of olive oil and 300 mL of lemon juice over several hours. This activity resulted in the painless passage of multiple semisolid green " stones " per rectum in the early hours of the next morning. She collected them, stored them in the freezer, and presented them in the clinic. Microscopic examination of our patient's stones revealed that they lacked any crystalline structure, melted to an oily green liquid after 10 min at 40°C, and contained no cholesterol, bilirubin, or calcium by established wet chemical methods. Traditional faecal fat extraction techniques indicated that the stones contained fatty acids that required acid hydrolysis to give free fatty acids before extraction into ether. These fatty acids accounted for 75% of the original material. Experimentation revealed that mixing equal volumes of oleic acid (the major component of olive oil) and lemon juice produced several semi solid white balls after the addition of a small volume of a potassium hydroxide solution. On air drying at room temperature, these balls became quite solid and hard. We conclude, therefore, that these green " stones " resulted from the action of gastric lipases on the simple and mixed triacylglycerols that make up olive oil, yielding long chain carboxylic acids (mainly oleic acid). This process was followed by saponification into large insoluble micelles of potassium carboxylates (lemon juice contains a high concentration of potassium) or " soap stones " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2010 Report Share Posted October 10, 2010 I did the liver cleanse 9 times and I got out 1,000's of stones, all sizes, shapes and colors (the green ones are the newest ones) after the 9th cleanse I did not get out any more stones even though I still took the olive oil on the 10th cleanse, so the proof is that you can still take the olive oil/lemon as many times as you want after you no longer have stones and you will not get the olive oil blogs out, Judy On Oct 10, 2010, at 8:45 AM, Steve wrote: > A 40-year-old woman was referred to the outpatient clinic with a 3-month > history of recurrent severe right hypochondrial pain after fatty food. > [Note: Here " hypochondrial " means " below the ribcage,' not " hypochondriac. " ] > Abdominal ultrasound showed multiple 1-2 mm gallstones in the gallbladder. > > She had recently followed a “liver cleansing” regime on the advice of a > herbalist. This regime consisted of free intake of apple and vegetable juice > until 1800 h, but no food, followed by the consumption of 600 mL of olive > oil and 300 mL of lemon juice over several hours. This activity resulted in > the painless passage of multiple semisolid green “stones” per rectum in the > early hours of the next morning. She collected them, stored them in the > freezer, and presented them in the clinic. > > Microscopic examination of our patient’s stones revealed that they lacked > any crystalline structure, melted to an oily green liquid after 10 min at > 40°C, and contained no cholesterol, bilirubin, or calcium by established wet > chemical methods. Traditional faecal fat extraction techniques indicated > that the stones contained fatty acids that required acid hydrolysis to give > free fatty acids before extraction into ether. These fatty acids accounted > for 75% of the original material. > > Experimentation revealed that mixing equal volumes of oleic acid (the major > component of olive oil) and lemon juice produced several semi solid white > balls after the addition of a small volume of a potassium hydroxide > solution. On air drying at room temperature, these balls became quite solid > and hard. > > We conclude, therefore, that these green “stones” resulted from the action > of gastric lipases on the simple and mixed triacylglycerols that make up > olive oil, yielding long chain carboxylic acids (mainly oleic acid). This > process was followed by saponification into large insoluble micelles of > potassium carboxylates (lemon juice contains a high concentration of > potassium) or “soap stones”. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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