Guest guest Posted January 20, 2008 Report Share Posted January 20, 2008 Thats why a some treating Dr's use anti-fungals followed with CMS taken w charcoal tabs or betonite clay. Three steps, Kill, Bind, and Pull out! FYI. Its not an infection, its called colonized. Mold don't enter the blod stream. It uses your body as a host. Than scavedges all of your waste. Short and sweet but thats the jest of it. K <smarshwar@...> wrote: Kim, As I understand it, CSM binds to the bile salts that are deposited in the intestine and carries them out of the body. The bile contains toxins from throughout the body which are recirculated via the liver and gall bladder. If one does not use CSM, those toxins will be reabsorbed from the digestive tract and " re-enter " the body. So, in reality CSM doesn't treat an " infection " per se, but removes mycotoxins. I trust that if I've got any of this wrong someone will correct me. - > > Hello All, > > I am still learning about the mold issue as it relates to human > exposure and also new to the CSM thread. I have a question though and > that I think is important - exactly what kind of mold infections are > we talking about that CSM is supposed to treat? I can understand that > CSM would treat mold infections in the intestinal tract --but in > humans isn't mold infection in the intestinal tract far less common > than in the blood or respiratory tract. . . . > > Thanks, > > Kim --------------------------------- Never miss a thing. Make your homepage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2008 Report Share Posted January 20, 2008 I'll just underscore that infection and mycotoxin issues are both from mold but separate things and have to be treated differently. CSM binds to toxins, but fungal infections require anti-fungal medication. ~Haley a Townsend <kmtown2003@...> wrote: Thats why a some treating Dr's use anti-fungals followed with CMS taken w charcoal tabs or betonite clay. Three steps, Kill, Bind, and Pull out! FYI. Its not an infection, its called colonized. Mold don't enter the blod stream. It uses your body as a host. Than scavedges all of your waste. Short and sweet but thats the jest of it. K <smarshwar@...> wrote: Kim, As I understand it, CSM binds to the bile salts that are deposited in the intestine and carries them out of the body. The bile contains toxins from throughout the body which are recirculated via the liver and gall bladder. If one does not use CSM, those toxins will be reabsorbed from the digestive tract and " re-enter " the body. So, in reality CSM doesn't treat an " infection " per se, but removes mycotoxins. I trust that if I've got any of this wrong someone will correct me. - > > Hello All, > > I am still learning about the mold issue as it relates to human > exposure and also new to the CSM thread. I have a question though and > that I think is important - exactly what kind of mold infections are > we talking about that CSM is supposed to treat? I can understand that > CSM would treat mold infections in the intestinal tract --but in > humans isn't mold infection in the intestinal tract far less common > than in the blood or respiratory tract. . . . > > Thanks, > > Kim --------------------------------- Never miss a thing. Make your homepage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2008 Report Share Posted January 20, 2008 , Thats what I think too. From what I've read, they have tagged mycotoxins with radioisotopes and shown just how a single dose gets circulated over and over. They can stay in the system a very long time, doing damage all the time. Thats really a terrible thing. They are really nasty killers of life. Cholestyramine and drugs like it seem like the only way to interrupt that part of the destructive process. On Jan 20, 2008 6:52 PM, <smarshwar@...> wrote: > > Kim, > As I understand it, CSM binds to the bile salts that are deposited in > the intestine and carries them out of the body. The bile contains > toxins from throughout the body which are recirculated via the liver > and gall bladder. If one does not use CSM, those toxins will be > reabsorbed from the digestive tract and " re-enter " the body. > So, in reality CSM doesn't treat an " infection " per se, but removes > mycotoxins. > I trust that if I've got any of this wrong someone will correct me. > > - > > > > > > > Hello All, > > > > I am still learning about the mold issue as it relates to human > > exposure and also new to the CSM thread. I have a question though and > > that I think is important - exactly what kind of mold infections are > > we talking about that CSM is supposed to treat? I can understand that > > CSM would treat mold infections in the intestinal tract --but in > > humans isn't mold infection in the intestinal tract far less common > > than in the blood or respiratory tract. . . . > > > > > Thanks, > > > > Kim > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2008 Report Share Posted January 20, 2008 I knew there was somthing not right? Thanks Haley Note: forwarded message attached. --------------------------------- Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Mobile. Try it now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.