Guest guest Posted August 11, 2004 Report Share Posted August 11, 2004 > Hello family, I've had amazing results from a similar gall bladder cleanse. But the liver should be strengthened before doing a gall bladder cleanse. One simple way to accomplish that is to drink at least 3 full cups of organic unfiltered apple juice each day for 2 weeks before doing the gall bladder cleanse. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2004 Report Share Posted August 11, 2004 Or take malic acid, right? (for non-secretors.) Re: Heidi's Liver/Gall Bladder cleanse > Hello family, I've had amazing results from a similar gall bladder cleanse. But the liver should be strengthened before doing a gall bladder cleanse. One simple way to accomplish that is to drink at least 3 full cups of organic unfiltered apple juice each day for 2 weeks before doing the gall bladder cleanse. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2004 Report Share Posted August 11, 2004 Apple Juice (and apples) are an avoid for me as an O, Non-Secretor. Any other suggestions? _____ From: mamaambota2003 [mailto:mama@...] Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2004 10:25 PM Subject: Re: Heidi's Liver/Gall Bladder cleanse > Hello family, I've had amazing results from a similar gall bladder cleanse. But the liver should be strengthened before doing a gall bladder cleanse. One simple way to accomplish that is to drink at least 3 full cups of organic unfiltered apple juice each day for 2 weeks before doing the gall bladder cleanse. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2004 Report Share Posted August 11, 2004 My understanding of the apple juice is to soften any stones. Does apple juice give you any obvious problems? For short term treatment you would be fine but I would do just 1 gallon spread out over 4-5 days. The milk thisle and lecithin is for the liver regeneration and bile flow and you could do licorice herb also. Kathy Tom <tomwilson64@...> wrote: Apple Juice (and apples) are an avoid for me as an O, Non-Secretor. Any other suggestions? _____ From: mamaambota2003 [mailto:mama@...] Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2004 10:25 PM Subject: Re: Heidi's Liver/Gall Bladder cleanse > Hello family, I've had amazing results from a similar gall bladder cleanse. But the liver should be strengthened before doing a gall bladder cleanse. One simple way to accomplish that is to drink at least 3 full cups of organic unfiltered apple juice each day for 2 weeks before doing the gall bladder cleanse. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2004 Report Share Posted August 11, 2004 Hi all, I just finished my 2nd Gallbladder cleanse outlined in s Moritz's book " The Key to Health and Rejuvenation " . This cleanse is basically the same as Heidi's cleanse described by Tom. From my experience the worst part is dealing with the bitter taste of the Epson salts...yuck! Otherwise, both cleanses have produced numerous stones especially my 1st cleanse 5 weeks ago. From what I've read 6 cleanses or more may be necessary to truly clean the gallbladder & liver. I'm optimistic that in the long run my health will improve from the cleansings. My goal is to dramatically improve my digestive and immune systems. Although the BTD-O diet has helped certain conditions, my digestive system seem more stressed than ever, since I've been on the diet (about1 yr). I believe this is due to the additional stress of digesting more fats and proteins. Anyway enough rambling. I'd also love to hear about other O's experience with the Liver/Gall cleanses and their results. Take care all, Bill K. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2004 Report Share Posted August 11, 2004 > Apple Juice (and apples) are an avoid for me as an O, Non- Secretor. Any > other suggestions? Nope. I'm an O, Non Secretor also. But I used the apple juice with only positive results. ::shrug::: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Tom wrote: > One thing that I keep coming back to is my liver/gallbladder. I have the > characteristic little warning signs of my liver needing cleaning, Hi, I am puzzled by all the talk about liver cleanses on all the blood type diet lists - or at least the two I'm on. What's going on to cause this idea or this need, if indeed it is a need? How does an appropriate diet mess up the liver, and why is it not behaving and doing its detox job properly? And how do you know it is not? Is is really a liver issue or do people just think it is? > Anyway, I keep reading so many good things about Heidi's liver cleanse, What is a liver cleanse? I have this vision of a little bar of soap travelling through hepatic veins with a little brush propeller on board at the back.... In homeopathy we consider the liver can become loaded with toxins, and need to have those drained. Is this what you are talking about perhaps? But if so, what good is a BTD if it accumulates toxins? A healthy liver should drain without help in my view??? I hope someone will be kind enough to explain what this is all about please. I'm new at BTD and not so keen on doing a diet that causes liver toxicity. Is there a problem perhaps because there is poor selection of fats? A high beef diet will be loaded with saturated fat and cause liver problems from that if the eating of lean beef protein is not differentiated from the eating of saturated fat laden pieces of beef. Personally I trim of all the fat - and replace it with olive oil. Saturated fat is a bad deal and needs care on O-type diet I should think. Is that what the problem is? > It would be my first intentional cleanse of any kind so I'm just trying to > get there so I can get it over with and hopefully do it every three months > or so. I'm horrified at the idea of a cleanse needed so regularly - that makes no sense and can not be healthy. Stones are also mentioned - those only form when the diet is way out of whack in terms of nutrient balance. Are gall stones stones a regular thing on this BTD. If so there is a lot wrong with it that needs work. > A trainer I'm working with has recommended some supplements to boost > the liver's fat-burning functionality. This makes sense - though I'd first make sure I was eating the right kind of fat - it is saturated fat that the body can not use for metabolic systems and that can cause liver problems. > That set off my " hype-alarm) and I'd > rather not use generic gym supplements which would surely have avoids in > them. Fat burning supplements are not big mixes nor are they hype - at least the good ones are not. You can get them individually. Things like CLA - conjugated linoleic acid - and ALCAR - acetyl-L-carnitine are able to unlock saturated and cushing type fat - the kind that accumulates round the middle and overhangs belts - so it can be burned. As we age we do not make enough delta-6-desaturase to convert linoleic acid to conjugated (active) linoleic acid for this job. It helps to add some. ALCAR increases the rate of fat burning. I've looked into fat burning supplements - there are maybe a dozen that do something beneficial - as I have cushing's syndrome which has a lack of ability to burn fat and an increased tendency to turn muscle to sugar and store it as fat. So this is home territory for me - the fat burning stuff. But I do not use gym mixes - those have hype ingredients :-) Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Yes, you are right. Even secretors may prefer to use malic acid to avoid all the sugar of apply juice. Don Re: Heidi's Liver/Gall Bladder cleanse > Hello family, I've had amazing results from a similar gall bladder cleanse. But the liver should be strengthened before doing a gall bladder cleanse. One simple way to accomplish that is to drink at least 3 full cups of organic unfiltered apple juice each day for 2 weeks before doing the gall bladder cleanse. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 The main thing I understand from reading Dr. D's website, Heidi's column and other sources is that the diet of course is good for the liver, but that doesn't mean that the liver came into the diet in good shape. It's quite common for people to have from a few to many stones that need to be cleared and passed. The older you are the higher the likelihood. The more stones the more interference with the liver's function. The stones have no relation to eating a compliant or beneficial blood type diet, but rather were formed during all the time you lived before you stumbled on the blood type diet. The blood type diet is not so efficient as to rid the liver and gallbladder of stones so a cleanse protocol has been a regular discussion topic on Heidi's column on Dr. D's website before she recently retired. There is a protocol she suggests for everyone who feels like they might need to try it. It's quite simple in ingredients. I didn't intend to assume or intend that only thing causing any of this is gallstones, but as I have read a lot on the internet and especially from Heidi's column whom Dr. D recommends, this was quite the common topic. The longer you follow Dr. D'Adamo the more you understand that' his ideas on health and the implications of the blood type genetic sub groups have effects beyond the diet. That's why I read the website! Each day I run into more and more things that help me put together more of the puzzle of the health. The story continues each day in learning :-) _____ From: Irene de Villiers [mailto:furryboots@...] Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 5:56 AM Subject: Re: Heidi's Liver/Gall Bladder cleanse Tom wrote: > One thing that I keep coming back to is my liver/gallbladder. I have the > characteristic little warning signs of my liver needing cleaning, Hi, I am puzzled by all the talk about liver cleanses on all the blood type diet lists - or at least the two I'm on. What's going on to cause this idea or this need, if indeed it is a need? How does an appropriate diet mess up the liver, and why is it not behaving and doing its detox job properly? And how do you know it is not? Is is really a liver issue or do people just think it is? > Anyway, I keep reading so many good things about Heidi's liver cleanse, What is a liver cleanse? I have this vision of a little bar of soap travelling through hepatic veins with a little brush propeller on board at the back.... In homeopathy we consider the liver can become loaded with toxins, and need to have those drained. Is this what you are talking about perhaps? But if so, what good is a BTD if it accumulates toxins? A healthy liver should drain without help in my view??? I hope someone will be kind enough to explain what this is all about please. I'm new at BTD and not so keen on doing a diet that causes liver toxicity. Is there a problem perhaps because there is poor selection of fats? A high beef diet will be loaded with saturated fat and cause liver problems from that if the eating of lean beef protein is not differentiated from the eating of saturated fat laden pieces of beef. Personally I trim of all the fat - and replace it with olive oil. Saturated fat is a bad deal and needs care on O-type diet I should think. Is that what the problem is? > It would be my first intentional cleanse of any kind so I'm just trying to > get there so I can get it over with and hopefully do it every three months > or so. I'm horrified at the idea of a cleanse needed so regularly - that makes no sense and can not be healthy. Stones are also mentioned - those only form when the diet is way out of whack in terms of nutrient balance. Are gall stones stones a regular thing on this BTD. If so there is a lot wrong with it that needs work. > A trainer I'm working with has recommended some supplements to boost > the liver's fat-burning functionality. This makes sense - though I'd first make sure I was eating the right kind of fat - it is saturated fat that the body can not use for metabolic systems and that can cause liver problems. > That set off my " hype-alarm) and I'd > rather not use generic gym supplements which would surely have avoids in > them. Fat burning supplements are not big mixes nor are they hype - at least the good ones are not. You can get them individually. Things like CLA - conjugated linoleic acid - and ALCAR - acetyl-L-carnitine are able to unlock saturated and cushing type fat - the kind that accumulates round the middle and overhangs belts - so it can be burned. As we age we do not make enough delta-6-desaturase to convert linoleic acid to conjugated (active) linoleic acid for this job. It helps to add some. ALCAR increases the rate of fat burning. I've looked into fat burning supplements - there are maybe a dozen that do something beneficial - as I have cushing's syndrome which has a lack of ability to burn fat and an increased tendency to turn muscle to sugar and store it as fat. So this is home territory for me - the fat burning stuff. But I do not use gym mixes - those have hype ingredients :-) Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 I have been on the BTD for less then 3 years that means I ate a lot of avoids and was exposed to a lot of toxins in the previous 46 years or so and to add to that I started to have hypothyroidism and other problems before I started the BTD. With hypothyroidism cholesterol is typically elevated, In fact, cholesterol levels may be used in the initial finding to leading to the diagnosis of hypothyroidism. I mention cholesterol because that is what most stones that are flushed out of the gallbadder and liver are made of. I did 12 flushes over a period of about 6 months with the last flush I did in March. By the end of the 12 flush I was not getting any more big stones, but was still getting some small stones and I plan to do more flushes in future to finish the cleaning process and to check to see if any more have formed. The biggest stone I passed was almost 2 " x1 " and that was during the 7th or 8th flush. I didn't know what I was going to discover when I did my first flush. I was amazed and excited when I did it and discovered all of the stones that I passed that previously were in my liver and/or gallbadder. At that point I had to continue, because I wanted to get all of that junk out! I was very hopeful that doing the flushes was going to greatly help my health. I couldn't imagine how my liver and gallbadder were working properly with all of those stones plugging up the works. I felt much better for a few days after each flush especially while I as still passing a lot of stones each time. You are probably wondering what specific benefit I got from doing this. In detail I can't tell you, but I have to believe it was very good for me to unplug my liver and gallbadder and flush out the toxins behind them. I can say that my sinuses are much better now. My sinuses problems are a long and terrible chapter of my life. As it turned out I discovered after getting on the BTD that eating many types of grains caused the worst of my sinus symptoms. Now after spending much of the last 9 months focused on cleaning up my liver I find that I can now eat those grains that caused me trouble without sinus problem any more. This is a major breakthrough for me. Although I can't say for sure that it was related to the liver flushes and supplements I took for my liver. You can find a lot more information about doing a wide variety of cleanse and other health issues at http://curezone.com/ <http://curezone.com/> . I also highly recommend Chang's website http://www.sensiblehealth.com/. Her information and products are highly regarded in the forums at CureZone. Don Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 In a message dated 8/12/2004 7:03:58 AM Eastern Daylight Time, furryboots@... writes: But if so, what good is a BTD if it accumulates toxins? My understanding of the BTD is that it does detox us. People in heavy metal environments or with organ specific problems is one thing but I question people doing cleanses " just because " . I got talked into one epsin salt/olive oil liver cleanse in my life and didn't have the 100s of " stones " they said I'd have. Everytime I get next to a naturopath, they want to sell me a cleanse (one was enough to convince me that having a rectal system that is an open sore was not for me). I was told I couldn't live without a colon cleanse and they tried to sell me this Spanish Inquisition device. I may be speaking against conventional wisdom here but I think maybe people are doing more damage than good with all of these cleanses. You could always swallow that cleansing knotted yoga rope until it comes out the other end. I'm sure that going to church or company meetings with coiled rope next to your mouth would be interesting. Max Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Being one of the " oldtimers " I can remember Dr. D. mentioning the diet would be taking care of those probs if you are fairly compliant and there not being a need for the cleanses.That's what I still go by. I do not relish the thought of having to go thru those cleanses for no reason. I guess if you started with a lot of congestion it might be a good thing. And all the talk of older people needing to do this makes me uneasy. I AM probably the oldest person on this list and NOT doing one of those. Blech.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 And honestly I'm looking for any advantages. I'm trying to find things that might help me expedite the weight loss I am trying to achieve and this is one place I see a possible advantage since the liver digesting fats efficiently is important. I don't think it will kill me or harm me too much since its natural ingredients so I just assume it can't hurt too much and with all the positive reports I would always hear from Heidi's website I began to feel better about trying it. _____ From: E. Andersen [mailto:meand@...] Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 9:53 AM Subject: Re: Heidi's Liver/Gall Bladder cleanse Being one of the " oldtimers " I can remember Dr. D. mentioning the diet would be taking care of those probs if you are fairly compliant and there not being a need for the cleanses.That's what I still go by. I do not relish the thought of having to go thru those cleanses for no reason. I guess if you started with a lot of congestion it might be a good thing. And all the talk of older people needing to do this makes me uneasy. I AM probably the oldest person on this list and NOT doing one of those. Blech.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Irene, thank you for this comment. The cleanses are not an official part of BTD. I'm assuming any problems are from environmental toxins or from habits pre-BTD. Dr. D'Adamo does have protocols for various problems, none as extreme as these cleanses. The first liver protocol supplement for O's is milk thistle extract. Green tea and L- glutathione are listed as supplements beneficial to all blood types for liver support. I'd have to check the encyclopedia to see which protocol to use for gall bladder issues, but not a problem for me. Cheryl O+ secretor Texas > > One thing that I keep coming back to is my liver/gallbladder. I have the > > characteristic little warning signs of my liver needing cleaning, > > Hi, > I am puzzled by all the talk about liver cleanses on all the blood > type diet lists - or at least the two I'm on. What's going on to cause > this idea or this need, if indeed it is a need? > How does an appropriate diet mess up the liver, and why is it not > behaving and doing its detox job properly? > And how do you know it is not? > Is is really a liver issue or do people just think it is? > > > Anyway, I keep reading so many good things about Heidi's liver cleanse, > > What is a liver cleanse? > I have this vision of a little bar of soap travelling through hepatic > veins with a little brush propeller on board at the back.... > > In homeopathy we consider the liver can become loaded with toxins, and > need to have those drained. Is this what you are talking about perhaps? > But if so, what good is a BTD if it accumulates toxins? > A healthy liver should drain without help in my view??? > > I hope someone will be kind enough to explain what this is all about > please. I'm new at BTD and not so keen on doing a diet that causes liver > toxicity. > > Is there a problem perhaps because there is poor selection of fats? A > high beef diet will be loaded with saturated fat and cause liver > problems from that if the eating of lean beef protein is not > differentiated from the eating of saturated fat laden pieces of beef. > Personally I trim of all the fat - and replace it with olive oil. > Saturated fat is a bad deal and needs care on O-type diet I should think. > > Is that what the problem is? > > > It would be my first intentional cleanse of any kind so I'm just trying to > > get there so I can get it over with and hopefully do it every three months > > or so. > > I'm horrified at the idea of a cleanse needed so regularly - that makes > no sense and can not be healthy. > Stones are also mentioned - those only form when the diet is way out of > whack in terms of nutrient balance. Are gall stones stones a regular > thing on this BTD. If so there is a lot wrong with it that needs work. > > > A trainer I'm working with has recommended some supplements to boost > > the liver's fat-burning functionality. > > This makes sense - though I'd first make sure I was eating the right > kind of fat - it is saturated fat that the body can not use for > metabolic systems and that can cause liver problems. > > > That set off my " hype-alarm) and I'd > > rather not use generic gym supplements which would surely have avoids in > > them. > > Fat burning supplements are not big mixes nor are they hype - at least > the good ones are not. You can get them individually. Things like CLA - > conjugated linoleic acid - and ALCAR - acetyl-L-carnitine are able to > unlock saturated and cushing type fat - the kind that accumulates round > the middle and overhangs belts - so it can be burned. > As we age we do not make enough delta-6-desaturase to convert > linoleic acid to conjugated (active) linoleic acid for this job. It > helps to add some. ALCAR increases the rate of fat burning. > I've looked into fat burning supplements - there are maybe a dozen that > do something beneficial - as I have cushing's syndrome which has a lack > of ability to burn fat and an increased tendency to turn muscle to sugar > and store it as fat. So this is home territory for me - the fat burning > stuff. But I do not use gym mixes - those have hype ingredients :-) > > Namaste, > Irene > -- > Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. > P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. > http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html > Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Adkins diet within O limits and exercise and you WILL lose. I promise. --- Tom <tomwilson64@...> wrote: > And honestly I'm looking for any advantages. I'm > trying to find things that > might help me expedite the weight loss I am trying > to achieve and this is > one place I see a possible advantage since the liver > digesting fats > efficiently is important. I don't think it will > kill me or harm me too much > since its natural ingredients so I just assume it > can't hurt too much and > with all the positive reports I would always hear > from Heidi's website I > began to feel better about trying it. > > > > _____ > > From: E. Andersen [mailto:meand@...] > Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 9:53 AM > > Subject: Re: Heidi's Liver/Gall Bladder > cleanse > > > > Being one of the " oldtimers " I can remember Dr. D. > mentioning the diet would > be taking care of those probs if you are fairly > compliant and there not > being a need for the cleanses.That's what I still go > by. I do not relish the > thought of having to go thru those cleanses for no > reason. I guess if you > started with a lot of congestion it might be a good > thing. > And all the talk of older people needing to do this > makes me uneasy. I AM > probably the oldest person on this list and NOT > doing one of those. Blech.. > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been > removed] > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Hi! Just poking my head in from my " vacation " for a moment. I concur with Don on the reasons for cleansing. I spent 36 years building up this stuff and I just wanted to help speed up the healing process by flushing out some of the junk. I also have a long family history of gall bladder surgery and a few symptoms of my own that were distinctly gall/liver. The difficult parts were this: locating all the things I needed, especially ornithine (I'm very rural), drinking the epsom salts (I didn't use the vitamin C for flavor), getting extremely hungry even though Heidi said I wouldn't (I'm thin now and nursing a baby), and dealing with my two young children while running to the toilet so many times. The parts I thought would be difficult but weren't: drinking the olive oil/grapefruit stuff, (it was delicious!)and passing the stones (effortless even though some were very large). I feel better for having done just one cleanse back in July. I need to do another follow up but haven't had the time during this very busy summer. Now that my liver isn't aching, I now can notice a need for some kidney therapy. I love being at a point where I'm fine tuning my body rather than being overwhelmed by all that's wrong. Cheers, Robin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Using Epsom salt and ornithine are optional. In fact, I never used ornithine and only used Epsom salt about half the time. I probably won’t use Epson salt any more in the future. Instead I will just take some magnesium, if I have some around at the time. Don Re: Heidi's Liver/Gall Bladder cleanse Hi! Just poking my head in from my " vacation " for a moment. I concur with Don on the reasons for cleansing. I spent 36 years building up this stuff and I just wanted to help speed up the healing process by flushing out some of the junk. I also have a long family history of gall bladder surgery and a few symptoms of my own that were distinctly gall/liver. The difficult parts were this: locating all the things I needed, especially ornithine (I'm very rural), drinking the epsom salts (I didn't use the vitamin C for flavor), getting extremely hungry even though Heidi said I wouldn't (I'm thin now and nursing a baby), and dealing with my two young children while running to the toilet so many times. The parts I thought would be difficult but weren't: drinking the olive oil/grapefruit stuff, (it was delicious!)and passing the stones (effortless even though some were very large). I feel better for having done just one cleanse back in July. I need to do another follow up but haven't had the time during this very busy summer. Now that my liver isn't aching, I now can notice a need for some kidney therapy. I love being at a point where I'm fine tuning my body rather than being overwhelmed by all that's wrong. Cheers, Robin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Don St. wrote: I probably won’t > use Epson salt any more in the future. Instead I will just take some > magnesium, if I have some around at the time. Don, As a magnesium fanatic (due to my kidney defect - I toss it out constantly) may I make a few suggestions on choice of magnesium. I agree epsom salts is not the nicest form. Two options I'd suggest: Slowmag or generic equivalent (as the slowmag factory is down at the moment) is good as it has magnesium chloride which takes 8 hours to absorb - and it comes with some calcium for mineral balance. The chloride is good because it protects the stomach acid you need to digest protein. Magnesium oxide (a common form as one tablet has a lot of Mg in it) steals the chloride from your stomach acid leaving you with severe indigestion when you try to eat protein. An even better form of magnesium but very hard to find, is magnesium gluconate. (K-mart pharmacists can get it) It comes in 500mg tabs with only 27mg of Mg in it so you need a lot- but this is bio-available magnesium and no calcium incase you want it pure. It's pricier but worth it in my opinion. So those are alternates to epsom salt the chloride being IMO the best inorganic form and the gluconate the best organic form of Mg. The gluconate is fast absorbing - about an hour or two - so fast results - where the chloride takes a long time to absorb and you'd maybe take it at night to absorb by morning. (Magnesium deficiency is the norm in USA) Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 Tom wrote: > The main thing I understand from reading Dr. D's website, Heidi's column and > other sources is that the diet of course is good for the liver, but that > doesn't mean that the liver came into the diet in good shape. Hi, I do understand a lot of people have stones. Research shows that abdominal discomfort occurs as often in people without stones as in those with stones however. So I suspect the liver can be in bad shape stones or not. > The stones have no > relation to eating a compliant or beneficial blood type diet, but rather > were formed during all the time you lived before you stumbled on the blood > type diet. The blood type diet is not so efficient as to rid the liver and > gallbladder of stones Well that part means to me that the diet lacks something - maybe it lacks some rules on how to use foods in a certain ratio or whatever - but a good diet should cleanse the liver continuously, stones or not, and at least should slowly get rid of old clutter and stones. My view do far of the BTD is that is starts the ball rolling but lacks rules for health within the diet. For example there is no rule to eat a proper level of antioxidants - not is there a rule to avoid inflammatory aspects of foods. I believe if we added in the Perricone ideas, we'd have a far better use of O type foods. I've found that Perricone style eating has done a lot for my own organ health for good reasons. The O diet by itself can involve way too much saturated fat and way too few fibers and antioxidants and good fats. Those are the cleansing things. So I would add in the Perricone rules which in short are: Eat 5 meals/snacks a day, and a minimum of: Some antioxidant at each. Have extra-virgin olive oil or fish oil (as in salmon) at each Have 5 g fiber at each. Have 1/4 lb of protein at each. Have NO saturated fat or sugar. There are other details but that is the key. The idea is to eat a lot of foods that are anti-inflammatory at cell level (like antioxidants, fiber and EV olive or fish oil) and no foods that are inflammatory at cell level (like trans fats, saturated fats and sugar.) This anti-inflammatory diet has cleaned up my system I believe. I am not a great believer in " cleanses " . They tend to consist of damaging things at cell level and those tissues in our gut for example are extremely delicate and do not need to be damaged by harsh " cleanses " . If I felt an organ needed some help, I'd use a homeopathic tissue sarcode to encourage it, or else just the homeopathic tissue salts (Schuessler salts) taken daily for health. Or third choice is a homeopathic drainage remedy, which is not harsh but encourages a detox when it is especially needed for some reason. > Each day I run > into more and more things that help me put together more of the puzzle of > the health. That is indeed a challenge for each of us :-) Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 Don St. wrote: With hypothyroidism cholesterol is typically elevated, In > fact, cholesterol levels may be used in the initial finding to leading to > the diagnosis of hypothyroidism. I mention cholesterol because that is what > most stones that are flushed out of the gallbadder and liver are made of. Diet can certainly reverse that - with the Perricone approach. It took me three months (I am also hypothyroid along with my other issues) to get my high cholesterol under control. Lots of blueberries, strawberries, turmeric, spinach etc for antioxidant each meal/snack. Rice bran fiber and Ezekiel bread and black beans for fermentable fiber. (It needs to be fermentable to support gut bacteria that make the SCFAs needed.) Total saturated fat and trans fat (hydrogenated stuff) avoidance. For example I'd brown hamburger, and run it under the hot tap in a metal colander to take out saturated fat - and replace with EV olive. I have been using a teaspoon of EV olive daily 5 times a day for a while. And I eat as much salmon as I can afford/tolerate. It worked like a charm. Without the full set of components - it did not work. Previously I tried low fat - that did not work, and I tried other diets to lower cholesterol - all were not useful in my case. But this worked. (I mentioned the Perricone meal rules in another email.) Hope you find what works for you. Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 E. Andersen wrote: > AM probably the oldest person on this list and NOT doing one of those. > Blech.. I'm with you :-))) Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 Tom wrote: the liver digesting fats > efficiently is important. In my opinion it matters what fats you give your liver a lot more than how the liver handles fat in general. (Digesting fats is an issue for cats too so it's in my specialty area.) the liver is only a factory and can only do what it is designed to do. Handling saturated fats and trans fats is not easy - it is not usual to eat those. Cooking over a fire drips the saturated fat out - and in nature trans fats do not exist. Olive oil helps you digest and burn fat - how much extra virgin olive oil and/or fish oil is in your current diet? Is it 5 times the amount of saturated fat? If not that would be something to aim for to give your liver a chance. The O diet lists EV olive oil as beneficial - and I feel like many folks here are into ghee and butter and such - those are saturated, and give the liver a VERY hard time. Why eat them? The connection to cholesterol is well proven, and fatty liver disease etc stands in line behind that :-) EVO is very tasty - you can add any number of beneficial herbs to it as well, and brush it over veg for flavour or add it to cooking or salads or use it to make salad dressing or to replace fat in meat. So as to get a little five times a day. (You do not want it all at once in the day.) Just a suggestion. Might be worth a try :-) Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 susan forrester wrote: > Adkins diet within O limits and exercise and you WILL > lose. I promise. Also the (Dr.) Perricone prescription within O limits or Dr Phil weight loss solution within O limits. (Those include beneficial foods, right thinking, emotional eating management, setting up a winning environment, exercise, stress relief and a support system - plus food supplements if you are weight loss resistant - all essential components.) ...Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 Maddviking@... wrote: I may be speaking against > conventional wisdom here but I think maybe people are doing more damage than good > with all of these cleanses. I feel that way too. You only have to look at the delicate construction of cells at the microscopic level to realize how important it is to respect that design and not stick it through the mill. There are gentle ways to build health that are within the design of our complex systems, without the need for harsh anything. > You could always swallow that cleansing knotted > yoga rope until it comes out the other end. :-))) Waste of good rope right :-)) Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 In a message dated 8/13/2004 4:08:02 AM Eastern Daylight Time, furryboots@... writes: The O diet lists EV olive oil as beneficial While we're talking about Extra Virgin Olive Oil, I've read an article that says that many of the brands that " say " they are EVO may be made from combinations of oils depending on what's cheap and what's at hand. Canola, vegetable, saflower, etc. Any thoughts on this? I use only EVOs that swear they are 100% olive oil and have the company address on them. They are a little more expensive but they taste a lot better. 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.