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As part of this woman's gut cleanup, I gave her a new treatment pioneered by Dr.

Mark Pimentel, of the University of California at Los Angeles School of

Medicine.7 A nonabsorbed antibiotic called Xifaxin clears out abnormal bacteria

in the small bowel. I expected her bloating and even some of her inflammatory

symptoms to clear up by fixing her gut. But I was surprised by what she told me

after she took the antibiotic.

Overnight her OCD disappeared; after years of unsuccessful treatment with

psychotherapy and psychiatric medications, she was suddenly able to clean her

entire house and pick up everything off the floor. The lights in her brain had

come on for the first time in ten years.

A high level of ammonia in her blood caused her OCD. Ammonia is a neurotoxin

that excites and damages brain cells and the mitochondria (the site of energy

production in all cells). Bacteria in the gut produce ammonia, and when the

liver can't detoxify it or there is just too much, it causes brain damage.

http://www.ultramind.com/epidemic_ocd.php

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I don't believe in anything that happens " overnight " and I am sorry but this

sound like " pysudo " science to me. I have done my own research in real

scientific journals and jsut don't buy it. Overnight would be wonderful but it

doesn't exist. Genetics are responsible for the vast majority of cases. Just my

2 cents.

>

> As part of this woman's gut cleanup, I gave her a new treatment pioneered by

Dr. Mark Pimentel, of the University of California at Los Angeles School of

Medicine.7 A nonabsorbed antibiotic called Xifaxin clears out abnormal bacteria

in the small bowel. I expected her bloating and even some of her inflammatory

symptoms to clear up by fixing her gut. But I was surprised by what she told me

after she took the antibiotic.

> Overnight her OCD disappeared; after years of unsuccessful treatment with

psychotherapy and psychiatric medications, she was suddenly able to clean her

entire house and pick up everything off the floor. The lights in her brain had

come on for the first time in ten years.

>

> A high level of ammonia in her blood caused her OCD. Ammonia is a neurotoxin

that excites and damages brain cells and the mitochondria (the site of energy

production in all cells). Bacteria in the gut produce ammonia, and when the

liver can't detoxify it or there is just too much, it causes brain damage.

>

> http://www.ultramind.com/epidemic_ocd.php

>

>

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

I don't believe in anything that happens " overnight " and I am sorry but this

sound like " pysudo " science to me. I have done my own research in real

scientific journals and jsut don't buy it. Overnight would be wonderful but it

doesn't exist. Genetics are responsible for the vast majority of cases. Just my

2 cents.

>

> As part of this woman's gut cleanup, I gave her a new treatment pioneered by

Dr. Mark Pimentel, of the University of California at Los Angeles School of

Medicine.7 A nonabsorbed antibiotic called Xifaxin clears out abnormal bacteria

in the small bowel. I expected her bloating and even some of her inflammatory

symptoms to clear up by fixing her gut. But I was surprised by what she told me

after she took the antibiotic.

> Overnight her OCD disappeared; after years of unsuccessful treatment with

psychotherapy and psychiatric medications, she was suddenly able to clean her

entire house and pick up everything off the floor. The lights in her brain had

come on for the first time in ten years.

>

> A high level of ammonia in her blood caused her OCD. Ammonia is a neurotoxin

that excites and damages brain cells and the mitochondria (the site of energy

production in all cells). Bacteria in the gut produce ammonia, and when the

liver can't detoxify it or there is just too much, it causes brain damage.

>

> http://www.ultramind.com/epidemic_ocd.php

>

>

>

>

>

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