Guest guest Posted February 5, 2006 Report Share Posted February 5, 2006 Okay, I am not a doctor or a scientist, but my first thought when hearing this was that toxins often kill cells, permanently.. (Thats what the hunt for stem cells is all about, replacing damaged structures in your body that only grow once, when you are very, very young.) So, long gone toxins may often have caused cell damage, brain damage, nerve damage, DNA damage, lung damage, etc, that can't be repaired.. At least in this life.. Those toxins would probably have been flushed out of the body long ago (doing damage to everything they touched, possibly) So all the 'detoxifying' in the world would never bring those cells back.. Like, for example, an amputated leg can't be 'cured'. Important concept to grasp.. Dead = Gone = Irreplacable Toxicologists can correct me on this, but this is my understanding.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 6, 2006 Report Share Posted February 6, 2006 When I spoke to my NMD about CSM he said what about getting the toxins out of the cells? So I do believe that they are in the cells also. They are stored everywhere in a severely toxic person as we are with mold poisoning. Loni LiveSimply <quackadillian@...> wrote: Okay, I am not a doctor or a scientist, but my first thought when hearing this was that toxins often kill cells, permanently.. (Thats what the hunt for stem cells is all about, replacing damaged structures in your body that only grow once, when you are very, very young.) So, long gone toxins may often have caused cell damage, brain damage, nerve damage, DNA damage, lung damage, etc, that can't be repaired.. At least in this life.. Those toxins would probably have been flushed out of the body long ago (doing damage to everything they touched, possibly) So all the 'detoxifying' in the world would never bring those cells back.. Like, for example, an amputated leg can't be 'cured'. Important concept to grasp.. Dead = Gone = Irreplacable Toxicologists can correct me on this, but this is my understanding.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 6, 2006 Report Share Posted February 6, 2006 Loni, I didn't say that there weren't any toxins in cells, just that its my understanding that something like cholestyramine can only detoxify mycotoxins that are still there.. circulating around or whatever.. All toxins need to go through the body before they even reach the gut or bilary system.. If they are in food, then cholestyramine or whatever might be able to bind them before they go through the bloodstream, BUT most exposure from mold in homes is probably INHALED which is bad news because when many toxins hit your body,they might do some serious damage, FIRST.. where they hit or floating through your bloodstream - before the liver or whatever removes them from the blood and sends them into the bile..usually to get either reabsorbed or - only IF we're very lucky, in a place and at a time where cholestyramine can bind them and help remove them. Thats what Dr. Shoemaker says. Thats what the papers that people have posted say.. Thats the way it is.. I'm not saying that detoxifying is bad, simply that its like cleaning up the little burning spots AFTER a fire has already burned a home.. Often the damage that has been done can't get undone.. Sure, you might be able to arrest further damage. And your body might be able to repair some of it.. if given the chance by the removal of what remains, and the avoidance of new exposure.. But its hit or miss.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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