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>

> Pearl

> By the way, this simple regiment also got me off of BP meds! It's 4

> years there also.

 

Ya know, I used to eat a 1/2 cup of oatmeal with 2 egg whites and a

little brown sugar cooked in it. Makes your oatmeal taste more like

bread pudding. Looks like I may need to get my oatmeal back out and

see if I can get my BP down again...by the way, thanks for the St.

John's Wort advice. I have decided to try it and have been feeling

much better lately! Happy Summer Solstice everyone! Celebrate by

turning off as many electrical things as you can and spend a

candlelit evening with a loved one! I am planning a candlelight

picnic in the living room and playing cards and games with my boys.

Blessings,

Brandy

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Brandy,

 

Amen.

 

We often enjoy a game of cards, Scrabble or Cribbage by lantern light at night. It is truely wonderful!

 

Valorie

 

 

-

boleybrandy

herbal remedies

Wednesday, June 20, 2001 4:11 PM

[herbal remedies] Re: Cholesterol

> > Pearl> By the way, this simple regiment also got me off of BP meds! It's 4> years there also.Ya know, I used to eat a 1/2 cup of oatmeal with 2 egg whites and a little brown sugar cooked in it. Makes your oatmeal taste more like bread pudding. Looks like I may need to get my oatmeal back out and see if I can get my BP down again...by the way, thanks for the St. John's Wort advice. I have decided to try it and have been feeling much better lately! Happy Summer Solstice everyone! Celebrate by turning off as many electrical things as you can and spend a candlelit evening with a loved one! I am planning a candlelight picnic in the living room and playing cards and games with my boys.Blessings,BrandyFederal Law requires that we warn you of the following: 1. Natural methods can sometimes backfire. 2. If you are pregnant, consult your physician before using any natural remedy. 3. The Constitution guarantees you the right to be your own physician and toprescribe for your own health. We are not medical doctors although MDs are welcome to post here as long as they behave themselves. Any opinions put forth by the list members are exactly that, and any person following the advice of anyone posting here does so at their own risk. It is up to you to educate yourself. By accepting advice or products from list members, you are agreeing to be fully responsible for your own health, and hold the List Owner and members free of any liability. Dr. Ian ShillingtonDoctor of NaturopathyDr.IanShillington

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  • 5 months later...

Recognize the pattern, select the points you need and always include Stomach 40.

It helps a lot, but your pacient must have been going on a special diet,

exercises, and sometimes, medicine (I means pills to low cholesterol).

Enjoy, Roberta

-

juliegaines2001

acupuncture

Friday, December 07, 2001 7:35 PM

acupuncture cholesterol

 

 

Can anyone explain to me how acupuncture can lower cholesterol

levels? Why would needling work for a problem like this?

 

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

An excerpt from Dr. Byrnes current newsletter:

 

COMMENT: That's right, Pene, women with higher blood cholesterol levels

DO live longer than women with lower levels as a comprehensive review of

the available studies showed (Circulation (1992), 86:3, 1046-60). A

recent study published in the Lancet showed the same thing in men

(Lancet (2001), 358: 351-55). I also have a client who essentially told

her doctor the same thing as Pene did and then faxed him a copy of Dr.

Mary Enig's article that I ran in the last issue of this e-zine. He was

shocked, but the truth hurts sometimes doesn't it? If you're on a

tasteless, low-fat diet and/or taking various drugs to lower your " high "

cholesterol levels, I hope you'll take Pene's letter and experiences to

heart (no pun intended) and rethink your decision as soon as possible.

 

You can get the entire newsletter free at http://www.PowerHealth.net

 

It also discusses selenium being good for and cancer.

 

Ron

_____________

Get the FREE email that has everyone talking at

http://www.mail2world.com

 

 

 

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In a message dated 18/12/01 08:53:58 GMT Standard Time, ron

writes:

 

I should live to be a ripe old age then because my cholesterol reading was

double the recommended (10.8) at one time............... I can put off

writing that will for a couple of more weeks then!

Marianne

 

> women with higher blood cholesterol levels

> DO live longer than women with lower levels

 

 

 

 

 

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In a message dated 18/12/01 17:04:54 GMT Standard Time, wayne

writes:

 

Evening Wayne (it could still be morning for you but almost bedtime for us)

Unfortunately we do not get any other readings - My cholesterol reading is

10.8 and it should be 5.6 maximum for women. It is only if we ask or it is

something that needs to be remedied that we are told anything but they would

not tell me unless I specifically asked. Prior to joining this group, I had

very little idea that I should be privvy to any other information and what to

ask for. I will now have to wait for my next bloods to ask the relevant

questions....

 

Marianne

 

> Morning Marianne,

>

> >>I should live to be a ripe old age then because my cholesterol reading was

> >double the recommended (10.8) at one time...............

>

> Which component is 10.8 ? You must be using some different units

> than my lab uses.

>

> Do you have the numbers for all of the components?

>

 

 

 

 

 

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Morning Marianne,

 

>>I should live to be a ripe old age then because my cholesterol reading was

>double the recommended (10.8) at one time...............

 

Which component is 10.8 ? You must be using some different units

than my lab uses.

 

Do you have the numbers for all of the components?

 

Wayne

 

 

 

 

 

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10.8 is high. Around 4 is supposedly o.k.

 

Tracy

 

-

" Wayne Fugitt " <wayne

 

Wednesday, 19 December 2001 05:56

Re: Cholesterol

 

 

> Morning Marianne,

>

> >>I should live to be a ripe old age then because my cholesterol reading

was

> >double the recommended (10.8) at one time...............

>

> Which component is 10.8 ? You must be using some different units

> than my lab uses.

>

> Do you have the numbers for all of the components?

>

> Wayne

>

>

>

>

>

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In a message dated 18/12/01 23:57:37 GMT Standard Time, nwgrant

writes:

 

Hi Tracey - Apparently 10.8 is quite dangerous and they were not amused that

mine had gone up that high. I got it down to 6 with diet (once initially

brought down by statins!!!) but they insisted that I went onto medication

once my athersclerosis was diagnosed. I try not to take them but will take

one if I know that I have exceeded a certain 'fat intake' for any one day.

Here they reckon on 5.6 to be the maximum safe level.

 

Marianne

 

> 10.8 is high. Around 4 is supposedly o.k.

>

 

 

 

 

 

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-

<marianne2406

 

Wednesday, December 19, 2001 6:10 PM

Re: Cholesterol

 

 

> In a message dated 18/12/01 23:57:37 GMT Standard Time, nwgrant

> writes:

>

> Hi Tracey - Apparently 10.8 is quite dangerous and they were not amused that

> mine had gone up that high. I got it down to 6 with diet (once initially

> brought down by statins!!!) but they insisted that I went onto medication

> once my athersclerosis was diagnosed. I try not to take them but will take

> one if I know that I have exceeded a certain 'fat intake' for any one day.

> Here they reckon on 5.6 to be the maximum safe level.

 

Hi Marianne,

 

Do you have it broken down as total, Hdl, Ldl and TGs?

 

The ratios are more important than the total.

========================

Good Health & Long Life,

Greg Watson, gowatson

USDA database (food breakdown) http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/

PubMed (research papers) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi

DWIDP (nutrient analysis) http://www.walford.com/dwdemo/dw2b63demo.exe

Patch file for above http://www.walford.com/download/dwidp67u.exe

KIM (omega analysis) http://ods.od.nih.gov/eicosanoids/KIM_Install.exe

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In a message dated 19/12/01 22:34:28 GMT Standard Time,

gowatson writes:

 

Hi Greg - Unfortunately no, we are never given results unless they want us to

know - I believe the HDL is the 10.8 figure - tgs were 'normal' I was told

but nothing about ldl (I have got that the right way round haven't I HDL bad

cholesterol?).

Marianne

 

> Hi Marianne,

>

> Do you have it broken down as total, Hdl, Ldl and TGs?

>

> The ratios are more important than the total.

>

 

 

 

 

 

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In most states you have a right to your records.

 

Request phostocopies of the lab reports when you see the doc. Most of

them will provide it without question. If they are sticky about it,

simply request a copy of your chart and be prepared to pay for it.

Often if you know another doc who is a human being you can get the

first doc to send it to them for free, then get a copy from doc #2.

 

Also doc #2 can get a new copy of the report direct from the lab if

you sign a release.

 

Andy

 

Gettingwell, marianne2406@a... wrote:

> In a message dated 19/12/01 22:34:28 GMT Standard Time,

> gowatson@s... writes:

>

> Hi Greg - Unfortunately no, we are never given results unless they

want us to

> know - I believe the HDL is the 10.8 figure - tgs were 'normal' I

was told

> but nothing about ldl (I have got that the right way round haven't I

HDL bad

> cholesterol?).

> Marianne

>

> > Hi Marianne,

> >

> > Do you have it broken down as total, Hdl, Ldl and TGs?

> >

> > The ratios are more important than the total.

> >

>

>

>

>

>

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In a message dated 21/12/01 00:23:36 GMT Standard Time, AndyCutler

writes:

 

In the UK if we started to ask for these the doctor could/would strike us

from his records and we would have problems finding another in the area to

take us on.

 

Marianne

 

> In most states you have a right to your records.

>

 

 

 

 

 

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Evening Andy,

 

>>Request phostocopies of the lab reports when you see the doc.

>>Also doc #2 can get a new copy of the report direct from the lab if

>>you sign a release.

 

Often they want to fax a copy. The result is sometimes lousy. I try

make JPEG's from the faxed copies. Sometimes they are readable, sometimes,

barely so.

 

I have thought of telling the Dr's office, " I Want the Original " .

Maybe that will cost a dollar more.

 

After all, who's property is this? I pay for the reports, I think they are

mine.

 

I face this dilemma very soon.

 

In some cases, I can get lab reports without seeing a doctor. Last

time, I did in fact see the doctor because he had been so nice to allow me

to run the reports thru his office.

I might do it again, even though anything he tells me is not usually

anything that I will do.

 

Wayne

 

 

Wayne

 

 

 

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Gettingwell, Wayne Fugitt <wayne@f...> wrote:

> Evening Andy,

>

> >>Request phostocopies of the lab reports when you see the doc.

> >>Also doc #2 can get a new copy of the report direct from the lab

if

> >>you sign a release.

>

> Often they want to fax a copy. The result is sometimes lousy. I

try

> make JPEG's from the faxed copies. Sometimes they are readable,

sometimes,

> barely so.

>

> I have thought of telling the Dr's office, " I Want the

Original " .

> Maybe that will cost a dollar more.

 

If they are willing to fax it, they will probably photocopy it for you

for free while you are there.

 

>

> After all, who's property is this? I pay for the reports, I think

they are

> mine.

 

In some states your records are yours, in others not. The law and

what reasonable human beings would expect are quite different in this

area - we have a bunch of apallingly corrupt laws governing medicine

because we let the AMA worshippers legislate what they wanted and

didn't bother to check if it made sense.

 

>

> I face this dilemma very soon.

>

> In some cases, I can get lab reports without seeing a doctor.

Last

> time, I did in fact see the doctor because he had been so nice to

allow me

> to run the reports thru his office.

> I might do it again, even though anything he tells me is not usually

> anything that I will do.

>

> Wayne

>

>

> Wayne

>

>

>

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-

" andrewhallcutler " <AndyCutler

 

Friday, December 21, 2001 1:35 PM

Re: Cholesterol

 

 

> Gettingwell, Wayne Fugitt <wayne@f...> wrote:

> > Evening Andy,

> >

> > >>Request phostocopies of the lab reports when you see the doc.

> > >>Also doc #2 can get a new copy of the report direct from the lab

> if

> > >>you sign a release.

> >

> > Often they want to fax a copy. The result is sometimes lousy. I

> try

> > make JPEG's from the faxed copies. Sometimes they are readable,

> sometimes,

> > barely so.

> >

> > I have thought of telling the Dr's office, " I Want the

> Original " .

> > Maybe that will cost a dollar more.

>

> If they are willing to fax it, they will probably photocopy it for you

> for free while you are there.

>

> >

> > After all, who's property is this? I pay for the reports, I think

> they are

> > mine.

>

> In some states your records are yours, in others not. The law and

> what reasonable human beings would expect are quite different in this

> area - we have a bunch of apallingly corrupt laws governing medicine

> because we let the AMA worshippers legislate what they wanted and

> didn't bother to check if it made sense.

>

 

Does anyone have a list or know a website which lists which states

allow me to get copies of my medical records & which do not?

 

Alobar

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