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Re: Re: Has anyone had a successful treatment using cholestyramine?

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where did you get the ozone therapy info at please?

xhannahx24 <xhannahx24@...> wrote: cholestyramine did not help me

at all. i detoxed using an

*alternative medicine* modality called Ozone Therapy using a steam sauna.

i have 2 symptoms left (hoping that the bald areas of my scalp will

regrow and my fingernails will look normal again). i'll gladly take

those 2 symptoms over the 20+ symptoms i once had. i've declared

myself recovered since June 2007, and even i can't say my health is

now like it was pre-mold exposure...and truthfully, I have a sneaking

suspicion that my previous toxicity has decreased my original lifespan

anywhere from 5-10 years. :-(

>

> Hello, to those that have been exposed to toxic mold and been treated

> with cholestyramine. Has anyone had a successful treatment using

> cholestyramine? Or have you had a successful treatment with another

> treatment method? if so which one? thanks

> p.s. By successful i mean able to regain the same health as before

> being exposed to toxic mold

>

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What kind of liver flushes did you do?

--- xhannahx24 <xhannahx24@...> wrote:

<SNIP>

> 3) Doing liver flushes/cleanses - this will detox

> the liver to make

> your it work more efficiently and help minimize the

> Herxheimer effects

> from doing the Ozone Therapy protocols

>

<SNIP>

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,

I'm just curious. Were you living in new houses or old houses or both?

What kinds of mold were found there, and how extensive

was it?

The body stores a lot of bad stuff in the liver. I can see why

effectively cleansing it would help a lot of problems.

Lots of other things surround us and many of those things are also

toxic. Its a big lie thats being told to Americans that

most of what we so enthusiastically consume is safe. A significant

amount of it isn't.

Their effects are very complex.... Mold is one of the very nastiest,

and its also probably a very common one if you include all the

different kinds of inflammatory and toxinogenic molds together, but

its by no means the only toxicant I'd guess most of us have had to

deal with. The list of things we get exposed to is very long and

getting longer every day.

NObody is taking responsibility.

On Feb 5, 2008 1:12 AM, xhannahx24 <xhannahx24@...> wrote:

>

>

> - headaches lasting for extended periods of time

> - runny nose

> - fatigue - it got to be so bad that you couldn't pay me a billion

> dollars to stay awake for more than 4 hours at a time

> - low-grade fevers – this lasted 3+ years

> - occasional respiratory distress

> - weight gain of maybe 5-7 pounds

> - waking up in the middle of the night to a burning sensation in both eyes

> - eye infections

> - forgetfulness/memory loss

> - difficulty concentrating/focusing/thinking

> - a red splotch on my left temple

> - " hives " on face

> - itchy ears

> - green rashes on abdomen & thighs

> - toenail fungus on big toes - the fungus part is growing out!!!

> - itchy scalp, which progressed to hair loss

> - allergy-type symptoms year-round

> - sensitivity to smells, particularly cheap cologne & perfume

> - loss of muscle mass

> - occasional joint pain

> - sporadic sharp stabbing pain in my chest

> - visual sensitivity to light

> - painful showers from the water hitting my skin

> - sneezing fits

> - itchy & puffy face

>

>

> -

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Was this black stuff ON the windowsil? In the windowsill?

What was it growing on, or was it a streak of black material around the edges?

Did you do any testing, and if so what kind and what were the results?

Also, FYI, the amino acid Taurine, which is very inexpensive, can be

used as an antioxidant,

with neuroprotective properties, but it also increases bile flow

dramatically, naturally.

It also tastes a little " bitter " . If you go to PubMed and do a search

on " Taurine " you will see what

I mean. But its probably a much different thing than what you are

describing, clearly.

Do you know exactly what is in " Chinese Bitters " ? The names of the herbs/oils?

- There is a Chinese vegetable called " bitter melon " that is

definitely an aquired taste.

The closest I could find was this. This actually looks pretty

interesting for me, I am going to try to find out more:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11694755

Forsch Komplementarmed Klass Naturheilkd. 2001 Oct;8(5):263-73.

[Dyspeptic pain and phytotherapy--a review of traditional and

modern herbal drugs]

[Article in German]

Saller R, Iten F, Reichling J.

Abteilung Naturheilkunde, Departement Innere Medizin,

Universitätsspital Zürich, Schweiz. reinhard.saller@...

Gastrointestinal complaints rank among the most frequently reasons

why people asking for medical advice. About 15-30% of the adult

patients suffer from different various functional dyspeptic

conditions. The therapy of functional gastrointestinal disorders is

one of the domains of phytotherapeutic treatments. From ancient times

on, bitter herbal drugs played a very important role in the therapy of

patients with dyspeptic symptoms. The mechanisms of action of the

bitters are not completely understood. But there are indications that

they sensorially stimulate at even very small concentrations

sensorially the secretion of the stomach as well as the digestive

glands and strengthen the smooth musculature of the digestive tract

(via the gustatory system, N. vagus and the enteric nervous system).

Across the enteral nervous system the strengthened digestive tract

seems to stimulate the CNS, leading to a general tonification. At

higher dosages bitters probably directly affect the mucous membranes

of the stomach and the bowel. Bitters often are combined with

essential oils (some volatile oils as aromatic bitters, drug

combinations of a volatile oil with a bitter). Essential oils act

primarily as spasmolytics, carminatives and local anesthetics. In the

last years several controlled studies were carried out with

phytotherapeutic combinations (e.g. with Iberis amara, caraway oil,

peppermint oil, curcuma extract, ginger extract) in which the herbal

drugs proved to be superior compared to placebo and were as effective

as prokinetics (studies according to evidence-based medicine). The

traditional phytotherapeutic approach is based upon the illness- as

well as the patient-related investigations referring to the

effectiveness of bitter, acrid- and essential-oil drugs. Such a

treatment is supported by a rich amount of various of kinds of

individual empirical experience (experience-based phytotherapy).

Important traditional medical systems like the Traditional Chinese

Medicine, the Ayurvedic Medicine as well as the European 'Humoral

Medicine' consider different aspects of the sick human being, like the

constitution of the patient (holistic approach), and take qualities of

herbal drugs, vegetarian food, and spices into account for therapeutic

purposes. Copyright 2001 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg

PMID: 11694755 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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