Guest guest Posted April 30, 2008 Report Share Posted April 30, 2008 On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 2:16 PM, thehavens <thehavens wrote: age spots are known as liver spots because the liver controls the skin.......once impacted , it starts losing it's " house cleaning " abilities!!! our natural process works from the inside out.....once impacted from the incredible toxic assault from so many places, the liver slows down, the internal cleaning ability stops or is dramaticly slowed .......and we get " age spots " !!!! the " hepatic shen food " , from the ZIQUIN EDUCATIONAL GROUP, in conjunction with the bath /detoxing process from miracle ll, will allow your liver to re-generate aAlso one can try Milk Thistle, the active ingredient is Sylimarin. Here in Scandinavia we can get a Sylimarin extract. Weak liver is hereditary also, it runs in my family which of course causes gout. Many of my aunts and uncles have suffered from this painful malady of gout. I had my first attack at 44 yo, of course I am the best drinker in the family. I refused to believe that I would never be able to drink red wine with my juicy steak ever again, so I went on a quest for a natural remedy. After many promising and expensive combo products that didn't work, I finally discovered Milk Thistle after reading the German pharmaceutical guide to herbal medicine. It said it helps liver cells to regenerate. It works. I have used it now for 16 years, I have only had one additional attack and that was when I ran out of after two shipments never arrived. Finally I found the local brand and all is well. I have recommended this to nine of my relatives and 8 out of 9 have been successful. The one who wasn't must have a bad imbalance in her body, very overweight and doesn't respond to any herb. Craig Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2008 Report Share Posted April 30, 2008 Did you try cherry juice for gout? Jane - Craig Rawlings Thursday, May 01, 2008 12:04 AM Re: Re:Brown Areas ON Skin (Aging Spots). aka LIVER SPOTS On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 2:16 PM, thehavens <thehavens wrote: age spots are known as liver spots because the liver controls the skin.......once impacted , it starts losing it's "house cleaning" abilities!!! our natural process works from the inside out.....once impacted from the incredible toxic assault from so many places, the liver slows down, the internal cleaning ability stops or is dramaticly slowed ......and we get "age spots"!!!! the "hepatic shen food", from the ZIQUIN EDUCATIONAL GROUP, in conjunction with the bath /detoxing process from miracle ll, will allow your liver to re-generate a Also one can try Milk Thistle, the active ingredient is Sylimarin. Here in Scandinavia we can get a Sylimarin extract. Weak liver is hereditary also, it runs in my family which of course causes gout. Many of my aunts and uncles have suffered from this painful malady of gout. I had my first attack at 44 yo, of course I am the best drinker in the family. I refused to believe that I would never be able to drink red wine with my juicy steak ever again, so I went on a quest for a natural remedy. After many promising and expensive combo products that didn't work, I finally discovered Milk Thistle after reading the German pharmaceutical guide to herbal medicine. It said it helps liver cells to regenerate. It works. I have used it now for 16 years, I have only had one additional attack and that was when I ran out of after two shipments never arrived. Finally I found the local brand and all is well. I have recommended this to nine of my relatives and 8 out of 9 have been successful. The one who wasn't must have a bad imbalance in her body, very overweight and doesn't respond to any herb. Craig Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2008 Report Share Posted April 30, 2008 Yes in many different forms, extract etc. Didn't work for me then. I wouldn't do it now as I only eat very low carb food. However, I am much more healthy now and it may work if I could handle all the carbs. However, Milk Thistle works great so I won't mess with the formula. CraigOn Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 5:11 PM, Jane MacRoss <highfield1 wrote: Did you try cherry juice for gout? Jane - Craig Rawlings Thursday, May 01, 2008 12:04 AM Re: Re:Brown Areas ON Skin (Aging Spots). aka LIVER SPOTS On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 2:16 PM, thehavens <thehavens wrote: age spots are known as liver spots because the liver controls the skin.......once impacted , it starts losing it's " house cleaning " abilities!!! our natural process works from the inside out.....once impacted from the incredible toxic assault from so many places, the liver slows down, the internal cleaning ability stops or is dramaticly slowed ......and we get " age spots " !!!! the " hepatic shen food " , from the ZIQUIN EDUCATIONAL GROUP, in conjunction with the bath /detoxing process from miracle ll, will allow your liver to re-generate a Also one can try Milk Thistle, the active ingredient is Sylimarin. Here in Scandinavia we can get a Sylimarin extract. Weak liver is hereditary also, it runs in my family which of course causes gout. Many of my aunts and uncles have suffered from this painful malady of gout. I had my first attack at 44 yo, of course I am the best drinker in the family. I refused to believe that I would never be able to drink red wine with my juicy steak ever again, so I went on a quest for a natural remedy. After many promising and expensive combo products that didn't work, I finally discovered Milk Thistle after reading the German pharmaceutical guide to herbal medicine. It said it helps liver cells to regenerate. It works. I have used it now for 16 years, I have only had one additional attack and that was when I ran out of after two shipments never arrived. Finally I found the local brand and all is well. I have recommended this to nine of my relatives and 8 out of 9 have been successful. The one who wasn't must have a bad imbalance in her body, very overweight and doesn't respond to any herb. Craig Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.