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Absence of disease does not mean good health.

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I also found this on the internet. It's a good article that speaks to the progression of disease due to metabolic poisoning.

 

 

Absence of disease does not mean good health.

 

 

"Toxicology textbooks list the first symptoms of chronic poisoning as low energy, fatigue, muscle weakness, inability to concentrate and intestinal complaints. These symptoms are virtually identical to those experienced by the chronically ill."

The concept of viewing metabolic poisoning as responsible for poor metabolic performance explains the "walking-wounded" symptoms from which so many people today suffer.

Metabolic is the adjective derived from the word metabolism. Metabolism is often defined as "the process which enables [the body] to convert protein, carbohydrate and fat from foods into energy for cellular repair, immune function, muscle contraction, nervous system function, reproduction, digestion and a myriad of other activities." Metabolic poisoning is poisoning on the cellular level, which is the level where metabolism takes place. We believe metabolic poisoning can be caused by chemicals, viruses, bacterial infections, allergies, pollutants, intestinal infections, poor metabolism, drugs and alcohol that adversely influence the functioning of various organs in the body, or the body's basic chemistry. After years and years of exposure, this metabolic poisoning begins to manifest as various disease states. Individual differences in genetics, levels of exposure and whether the individual mitigates these exposures through healthy diet and other lifestyle considerations account for the great differences in the ways individuals react to toxins.

Where Symptoms Lead

Heart Disease: When you're 20, it begins with elevated cholesterol. At 30, it becomes discernible with small plaques on an arteriogram. At 40, it's subclinical, with larger plaques. At 50, it has arrived at the threshold of "disease" with leg pain during exercise. At 60, it becomes severe with angina pectoris. At 70, it ends with a stroke or heart attack.

Cancer: It begins at 20 with exposure to carinogens. At 30, it may be detectible as cellular metaplasia, meaning abnormality. At 40, it's still considered subclinical, but metaplasia is still increasing. At 50, it's a carcinoma "in situ," or too small to be detected. At 60, it becomes a "clinical cancer" showing up through cancer detection processes. At 70, it ends with metastasized cancer.

Osteoarthritis: At 20, it begins with what's clinically known as abnormal cartilage staining. At 30, there's a slight narrowing of joint space. At 40, it shows up as bone spurs. By 50, it's mild articular pain. By 60, it's moderate articular pain. By 70, you're disabled.

Diabetes: At 20, it begins as obesity. By 30, it shows up as abnormal glucose tolerance. At 40, it's elevated fasting blood glucose. At 50, it's sugar in your urine. At 60, you're requiring insulin. By 70, you're blind, and experiencing diseases of the peripheral nervous system, and kidney disease.

Emphysema: It begins at 20 for smokers. By 30, there are mild airway obstructions. By 40, x-rays show hyperinflation. At 50, the individual experiences shortness of breath. By 60, recurrent hospitalization is common. By 70, the individual needs oxygen to breathe at all, and gradually suffocates, unable to breathe deeply enough to meet his or her need for oxygen.

Cirrhosis: It begins at 20 for heavy drinkers. By 30, a biopsy would show a fatty liver. By 40, the liver is enlarged. By 50, an upper GI hemorrhage might be experienced. By 60, ascites, excessive fluid accumulation in the peritoneal cavity or abdominal cavity might occur. By 70, jaundice, or a hepatic coma are the conclusion.

 

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Prabha Krishnan

Tuesday, August 29, 2006 8:43 PM

Re: [HealthyIndia] China arrests vaccine protestors. Why should India lag behind?

 

 

 

Dear Joyce,

 

Please give me details of this product NDF.

 

Question is which create/accept the damage and then struggle to rectify it?

 

I am working on this issue, with Pulse Polio programme as example looking to do a Public Interest Litigation, demanding the Right to Informed Consent. I also do a slide show called How Can I Catch Polio to raise awareness.

 

I agree that personal anger if not channelised will lead to further damage, but Jag is really transcending his pain by being of service to all.

 

Best, Prabha KrishnanJoyce Rosenwald <joycer (AT) mlode (DOT) com> wrote:

 

 

 

I can feel your pain as a victim of vaccines myself, and I applaud you for trying to do something about it. However, I will tell you that personal anger will only make you more ill and retard your recovery.

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