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Re: Flushed last night

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wrote about the stones that she flushed out:

>Good idea to store in the freezer, btw, as the softer ones melt. So far in

>addition to all the sludge and tiny stones, there are about 10 worth

>fishing out, 2 of them are lumpy and appear to have white parts in them -

>calcium?

I wonder, then, if the stones melt when they're outside your body, why

didn't they melt when they were still in your body, where the temperature

is certainly higher than in the room?

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That's a really good question, and I don't have any idea.

All I know is the softer ones melt...I have some harder

ones and haven't let them sit out yet, may do that later, but

want to show my chiropractor first. I always get adjusted

shortly after, really puts the finishing touch on the deal.

>

> I wonder, then, if the stones melt when they're outside your body, why

> didn't they melt when they were still in your body, where the temperature

> is certainly higher than in the room?

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>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

I wonder, then, if the stones melt when they're outside your body, why

didn't they melt when they were still in your body, where the temperature

is certainly higher than in the room?

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

It doesn't have much to do with temperature. It's the air causing it to oxidize.

This is one reason making sure you get lots of exercise helps in dealing with

gallstones.

I have a tool for getting extra rich oxygen to that area much faster than

regular breathing by use of the blood vassals from the colon.

Dale

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> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

>I wonder, then, if the stones melt when they're outside your body, why

>didn't they melt when they were still in your body, where the temperature

>is certainly higher than in the room?

> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

>

>It doesn't have much to do with temperature. It's the air causing it to

>oxidize. This is one reason making sure you get lots of exercise helps in

>dealing with gallstones.

Are you saying that exposing a certain type of stone to air causes it to

undergo a chemical reaction? If so, to which type of stone does this

apply? Cholesterol or pigment?

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>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Are you saying that exposing a certain type of stone to air causes it to

undergo a chemical reaction? If so, to which type of stone does this

apply? Cholesterol or pigment?

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

This works much easier on a cholesterol type of stone because its just a

sticking together of precipitated cholesterol, where a pigmented stone consists

of bonded calcium bilirubinate. There is certainly the possibility of oxidizing

the mineral but It would be very difficult to determine just how long it would

take.

Balancing the bile salt is what we're trying to do by diet and the intake of

EFAs, and it's the bile salts that have to hold the other elements together but

in an emulsified state.

Dale

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I took my " frozen " gallstones with me to the chiropractor

today as I've wanted him to see them after talking to him

about this flush for some time. Sometime in the next day

or so, I plan to take one of the stones that I suspect has

some calcium in it by the way it looks, and another

that appears to be pure fatty/cholesterol and let them

sit out in the air. I'll let you know what happens...maybe

even be crazy enough to take another picture :-)

> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

> Are you saying that exposing a certain type of stone to air causes it to

> undergo a chemical reaction? If so, to which type of stone does this

> apply? Cholesterol or pigment?

> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

>

> This works much easier on a cholesterol type of stone because its just a

sticking together of precipitated cholesterol, where a pigmented stone

consists of bonded calcium bilirubinate. There is certainly the possibility

of oxidizing the mineral but It would be very difficult to determine just

how long it would take.

>

> Balancing the bile salt is what we're trying to do by diet and the intake

of EFAs, and it's the bile salts that have to hold the other elements

together but in an emulsified state.

>

> Dale

>

>

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