DMG said...
I'll catch you fools on the other side of the Atlantic, I've got a trip to pack for. KW, I'll shoot you an email this weekend. I'm heading straight to Leicester after I land, and then I'll be in Sweden until middle of next week. You around on the 9th or 10th?
Monday, August 30, 2010
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Before you leave Doc! would you grace me with your knowledge...True or false...Since most people in this culture have been ingesting synthetic antibiotics from a very young age does this kill good bacteria in our colon and contribut to the toxicity in the body?...Are there any "natural antibotics" that I can ingest as an alternative?
Doc,
I'm in a good mood.
It is true that on some occasions antibiotics can kill bacteria that are beneficial in the gut. Here's an analogy:
The wolf population keeps the rabbit population at a certain level which allows certain plants to grow and therefore allows the rabbits to have enough to eat.
If the wolf population is killed off, the rabbits will be allowed to reproduce at will, eating all of the plants, and likely outstripping their food supply.
Similar with antibiotics. Kill off the bacteria the keeps Clostridium difficile in check, and you can develop pseudomembranous colitis. However, very few people take antibiotics on a daily basis. It's more about risk:benefit ratio.
So overall the answer to your question is FALSE.
About "toxicity". Please, for the love of all that is holy, would one of you guys please read about the function of the liver and kidneys?
Doc, not every antibiotic kills every bacteria. Why would you worry about killing off "good" bacteria when it's the "bad" bacteria that's going to kill you now?
I'm not against giving patients probiotics to help repopulate the normal gut flora.
Silver is a natural antibiotic Dr. Love.
However, very few people take antibiotics on a daily basis.
But don't they? Doesn't chlorine count as an antibiotic? It kills bacteria - and is in all the tap water and much bottled water.
If one drinks chlorinated water, wouldn't there at least be the possibility that intestinal flora will be affected?
DMG
I'm going up north on the 10th, but the 9th should be ok. My email's on my bloglink so holla.
Safe Trip
II,
WHERE have you been? It's actually nice to hear from you. Yes, silver is an antibiotic, however we've already discussed argyria...so too much is bad for you.
No, chlorine does not count as an antibiotic, and as I've said not every bacteria is susceptible to killing by every antibiotic. Do an experiment, take a glass of tap water and leave it out for awhile I'm sure bacteria will eventually grow given the right circumstances. That's why you need to still wash your pool out on occasion (and that contains ALOT of chlorine).
Good to see you II. Missed my crazy online lawyer friend.
KW, I'll holla at you when I get back from Sweden on the 8th, probably be in Cambridge, but can probably meet you on the 9th?
Dr. Love,
When antibiotics became widely used, in the 1950s, circulatory sickness rates went through the roof, as they did with soldiers in WWII who first got antibiotics. Antibiotics are highly acidic fungal toxins that promote the growth and spread of fungus throughout the body. They incidentally kill a few bacteria species along the way, though bacteria are easily able to mutate into hardier species, so antibiotics produced by the pharma cartel have to be made more and more acidic to 'keep up,' and so people who use antibiotics get sicker and sicker.
We must now find a way destroy the fungi that have eaten holes in the arteries, so the arterial walls are repaired and the cholesterol that the body had wisely produced to patch these holes then gets dissolved and reabsorbed; the organic components are then usable for other constructive functions.
Antibiotics are evidently also responsible for the odd way that large worms typically now end up growing in the heart, brain, pancreas and other organs in people who have been subjected by MDs (serial killers; terrorists) to these prescribed poisons.
Fungal toxins made the colon wall permeable, so worm stages passed through from the colon into the rest of the body like commuters move through the turnstiles at subway stations.
"Candidiasis is not the only side-effect of antibiotic treatment, and antibiotics are not the only drugs that cause such problems. Drugs used in chemotherapy, anti-inflammatory steroidal drugs and other long-term drug therapies tend to kill or suppress the natural intestinal bacteria, and yeast, parasites and harmful bacteria start taking over. This is then called dysbiosis. Most patients receive such drugs in hospitals and can be expected to develop systemic Candida overgrowth as a result.
Our natural intestinal flora, mainly based on lactobacteria, not only helps to digest and absorb food, it also protects us against ingested harmful bacteria that otherwise may cause food poisoning. With a healthy intestinal flora millions of salmonella bacteria may be needed to cause an infection but with dysbiosis only tens of salmonella would be required.
With chronic dysbiosis the intestinal wall becomes inflamed, causing ulcers, appendicitis, malabsorption and Crohn’s disease, and as the intestinal membrane erodes we develop multiple food allergies, arthritis and autoimmune diseases. In addition to Candida also other pathogens and parasites now invade the bloodstream and various organs. With live cell analysis natural therapists can see and show their patients the fungi in their blood. This invasion greatly weakens the immune system so that people now become susceptible to frequent or chronic infections. Commonly this is then treated with more antibiotics, which continues to intensify the symptoms.
If you are forced to take antibiotics you must then take a fungicide, such as fresh garlic, at the same time, and have some probiotics after the antibiotic and before you ingest any carbohydrates. This will prevent most diseases that are caused by the careless medical method of using antibiotics. "
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