Parasites
Parasites are organisms that need a host in order to thrive and perpetuate their species.
We regularly treat our dogs, cats, cattle, horses, sheep and so on for parasites and worms yet we would never admit that we might need to treat ourselves. Why even veterinarians who deal with parasites all the time and should be well aware of their impact on health, do not consider it necessary to treat themselves. Parasites usually exist in three stages: adults in the gut, they lay eggs also in the gut and the eggs hatch into hatchlings which are as small as white blood cells and travel through the gut wall lodging anywhere in the body including the brain, liver, kidney and so on.
Parasites do not have a digestive system of their own and rely on our digested food to thrive. Anything that feeds has to excrete waste and the waste produced by adult parasites in the gut includes a chemical called phenol. Phenol will result in the breakdown of the gut lining which creates gaps in the mucous membrane allowing rubbish to enter the circulation creating inflammatory conditions both within the gut – Dysbiosis, colitis and so on – and in distant regions of the body – arthritis and so on. Parasites also produce a potent growth hormone which boosts the growth of the hatchlings to attain adulthood quickly. This same hormone boost could also affect our own normal cells resulting in benign tumours. When it affects already cancerous cells, this could lead to the formation of malignant tumours. Remember these hormones do not cause cancer but help cells to divide and increase in numbers. Treatment must be aimed at controlling the parasites to ensure our immune system is not overwhelmed and that balance is restored.
The conventional stool tests for parasites are never conclusive since in order to determine their presence they need to be stained, and they are so diverse and react differently that we need to know what parasite is present first before we can stain it properly to prove it is there!
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