RE: CSO3 H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?

2006-01-02 Thread Jim Holmes
I am not current with Dr. Weil now, but in the last few years he had
discredited CS. 

Jim

-Original Message-
From: Jonathan B. Britten [mailto:jbrit...@cc.nakamura-u.ac.jp] 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:38 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSO3  H2O2 AND BLOODROOT? 

It might be worth your time to add bloodroot to the regimen.  I have 
found that bloodroot penetrates the gum and goes deep into the 
surrounding tissue, provided that you can keep the area covered with 
the tincture.   I will go so far as to say that I believe you can get 
considerable regeneration of the root canal and nerve in the case of 
infected root canal work.   A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture, 
and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue (I have 
used silicone putty intended for earplug use) may work wonders. I 
wonder also whether bloodroot tincture might not carry particulate EIS 
to the site, but this is pure speculation.

An additional merit to trying bloodroot, in my opinion, is that this 
herb seems somehow to mark necrotic and neoplastic tissue such that 
healing, via the normal immune response, continues for YEARS after 
application.   Those who have used Cancema may be aware of this 
long-term effect.   I think there is nothing remotely similar in the 
mainstream medical bag, and that the failure of medical colleges to 
teach extensively about herbal medicine and escharotics is a terrible 
situation.

Andrew Weil's first book has lots about this topic.  I first learned of 
bloodroot from that book.  (His second, follow-up  book, written after 
he became a health guru, may have been the beginning a selling-out.  
Seemed so to me.)

JBB





On Wednesday, Dec 28, 2005, at 01:26 Asia/Tokyo, Marshall Dudley wrote:

 I have twice had to take antibiotics because of a
 tooth infection that I waited too long to treat with
 alternative therapies. During antibiotic use, I
 discontinued ingesting CS so as to not counteract the
 antibiotics.

 Why would they counteract each other?  I happen to have an infected 
 tooth
 root right now, and am taking EIS, penecillian, olive leaf extract and
 magnetic pulsing it.  After 3 days it is only slightly sensitive now.  
 I
 definitely will continue the EIS to prevent a yeast flare-up, which I 
 get
 if I take an antibiotic withoug the EIS.

 Marshall


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Re: CSO3 H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?

2005-12-27 Thread Jonathan B. Britten
It might be worth your time to add bloodroot to the regimen.  I have 
found that bloodroot penetrates the gum and goes deep into the 
surrounding tissue, provided that you can keep the area covered with 
the tincture.   I will go so far as to say that I believe you can get 
considerable regeneration of the root canal and nerve in the case of 
infected root canal work.   A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture, 
and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue (I have 
used silicone putty intended for earplug use) may work wonders. I 
wonder also whether bloodroot tincture might not carry particulate EIS 
to the site, but this is pure speculation.


An additional merit to trying bloodroot, in my opinion, is that this 
herb seems somehow to mark necrotic and neoplastic tissue such that 
healing, via the normal immune response, continues for YEARS after 
application.   Those who have used Cancema may be aware of this 
long-term effect.   I think there is nothing remotely similar in the 
mainstream medical bag, and that the failure of medical colleges to 
teach extensively about herbal medicine and escharotics is a terrible 
situation.


Andrew Weil's first book has lots about this topic.  I first learned of 
bloodroot from that book.  (His second, follow-up  book, written after 
he became a health guru, may have been the beginning a selling-out.  
Seemed so to me.)


JBB





On Wednesday, Dec 28, 2005, at 01:26 Asia/Tokyo, Marshall Dudley wrote:


I have twice had to take antibiotics because of a
tooth infection that I waited too long to treat with
alternative therapies. During antibiotic use, I
discontinued ingesting CS so as to not counteract the
antibiotics.


Why would they counteract each other?  I happen to have an infected 
tooth

root right now, and am taking EIS, penecillian, olive leaf extract and
magnetic pulsing it.  After 3 days it is only slightly sensitive now.  
I
definitely will continue the EIS to prevent a yeast flare-up, which I 
get

if I take an antibiotic withoug the EIS.

Marshall



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Re: CSO3 H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?

2005-12-27 Thread Carol Ann
  
A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture, 
and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue
  
  Hi Jonathan,
  Why would the surrounding tissue need protection from Bloodroot.
  

Jonathan B. Britten jbrit...@cc.nakamura-u.ac.jp wrote:  It might be worth 
your time to add bloodroot to the regimen.  I have 
found that bloodroot penetrates the gum and goes deep into the 
surrounding tissue, provided that you can keep the area covered with 
the tincture.   I will go so far as to say that I believe you can get 
considerable regeneration of the root canal and nerve in the case of 
infected root canal work.   A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture, 
and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue (I have 
used silicone putty intended for earplug use) may work wonders. I 
wonder also whether bloodroot tincture might not carry particulate EIS 
to the site, but this is pure speculation.


  
A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture, 
and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue
  


  
  
  Carol Ann
   
 ___
  The Pessimist complains about the Wind;  
  The Optimist expects it to change;  
  The Realist adjusts the Sails.   - The world needs more sailors.  






-
Yahoo! Shopping
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Re: CSO3 H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?

2005-12-27 Thread Jonathan B. Britten
Bloodroot tincture is very hard on surrounding tissue;  it is caustic.  
The mucous membranes inside the mouth will be very, very painful if you 
don't protect them properly.


As with everything on this list, use your own good judgment, consult a 
medical professional, and be responsible for your actions;  none of us 
is qualified to give medical advice, and I am merely relaying my own 
experiences.






On Wednesday, Dec 28, 2005, at 12:43 Asia/Tokyo, Carol Ann wrote:


A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture,
and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue


Hi Jonathan,
Why would the surrounding tissue need protection from Bloodroot.


Jonathan B. Britten jbrit...@cc.nakamura-u.ac.jp wrote:

It might be worth your time to add bloodroot to the regimen. I have
found that bloodroot penetrates the gum and goes deep into the
surrounding tissue, provided that you can keep the area covered with
the tincture. I will go so far as to say that I believe you can get
considerable regeneration of the root canal and nerve in the case of
infected root canal work. A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture,
and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue (I have
used silicone putty intended f! or earplug use) may work wonders. I
wonder also whether bloodroot tincture might not carry particulate EIS
to the site, but this is pure speculation.


A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture,
and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue




Carol Ann
 ___
The Pessimist complains about the Wind;
The Optimist expects it to change;
The Realist adjusts the Sails.   - The world needs more sailors.




image.tiff


Yahoo! Shopping
Find Great Deals on Holiday Gifts at Yahoo! Shopping 



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Re: CSO3 H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?

2005-12-27 Thread Carol Ann
Thanks, that's good to know and keep in  mind.  I'm working on a similar 
problem myself and put together a  potion which includes Bloodroot. 
  
  Powders of Myrhh in a fine poultice; Licorice, Goldenseal, White Oak Bark and 
Bayberry Root Bark.  
  
  Extracts, not tinctures  of Bloodroot (45-56% alcohol);  Echanechia (no 
alcohol) 
  
  Alternately   1 drop of Ti Tree or Lavender Essential Oil used every other 
application  
  
  whetted with CS and a drop or two of DMSO mixed until a paste like  
consistency is attained.  I use half a cotton ball elongated. . 
  
I find that Tinctures perhaps due to their higher alcohol content seem to be 
harsher on compromised tissue.
  
  Carol Ann
  
   

Jonathan B. Britten jbrit...@cc.nakamura-u.ac.jp wrote:  Bloodroot tincture 
is very hard on surrounding tissue;  it is caustic.  
The mucous membranes inside the mouth will be very, very painful if you 
don't protect them properly.

As with everything on this list, use your own good judgment, consult a 
medical professional, and be responsible for your actions;  none of us 
is qualified to give medical advice, and I am merely relaying my own 
experiences.





On Wednesday, Dec 28, 2005, at 12:43 Asia/Tokyo, Carol Ann wrote:

 A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture,
 and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue


 Hi Jonathan,
 Why would the surrounding tissue need protection from Bloodroot.


 Jonathan B. Britten  wrote:

 It might be worth your time to add bloodroot to the regimen. I have
 found that bloodroot penetrates the gum and goes deep into the
 surrounding tissue, provided that you can keep the area covered with
 the tincture. I will go so far as to say that I believe you can get
 considerable regeneration of the root canal and nerve in the case of
 infected root canal work. A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture,
 and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue (I have
 used silicone putty intended f! or earplug use) may work wonders. I
 wonder also whether bloodroot tincture might not carry particulate EIS
 to the site, but this is pure speculation.


 A cotton ball soaked in bloodroot tincture,
 and covered with something to protect the surrounding tissue




 Carol Ann
  ___
 The Pessimist complains about the Wind;
 The Optimist expects it to change;
 The Realist adjusts the Sails.   - The world needs more sailors.





 Yahoo! Shopping
 Find Great Deals on Holiday Gifts at Yahoo! Shopping 


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  Carol Ann
   
 ___
  The Pessimist complains about the Wind;  
  The Optimist expects it to change;  
  The Realist adjusts the Sails.   - The world needs more sailors.  






-
 Yahoo! DSL Something to write home about. Just $16.99/mo. or less

Re: CSO3 H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?

2005-12-27 Thread Dan Nave

I don't quite get it.  Just where would you apply it?

Dan




Subject: Re: CSO3  H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?
From:Jonathan B. Britten jbrit...@cc.nakamura-u.ac.jp
Date:Wed, 28 Dec 2005 13:08:04 +0900
To:silver-list@eskimo.com

Bloodroot tincture is very hard on surrounding tissue;  it is caustic. 
The mucous membranes inside the mouth will be very, very painful if you 
don't protect them properly.


As with everything on this list, use your own good judgment, consult a 
medical professional, and be responsible for your actions;  none of us 
is qualified to give medical advice, and I am merely relaying my own 
experiences.





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Re: CSO3 H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?

2005-12-27 Thread Jonathan B. Britten
One can soak a small piece of cotton in tincture and place the cotton 
directly above the infected tooth, on the surface of the gum, while 
keep the outside surface of the cotton from touching other tissue in 
the mouth, by covering the cotton with plastic or whatever works.In 
case of severe infection, there may be a large cavity resulting above 
the tooth.   Dental infections, like any infection above the neck, can 
be extremely dangerous, and  professional medical supervision is always 
advised.




On Wednesday, Dec 28, 2005, at 14:19 Asia/Tokyo, Dan Nave wrote:


I don't quite get it.  Just where would you apply it?

Dan




Subject: Re: CSO3  H2O2 AND BLOODROOT?
From:Jonathan B. Britten jbrit...@cc.nakamura-u.ac.jp
Date:Wed, 28 Dec 2005 13:08:04 +0900
To:silver-list@eskimo.com

Bloodroot tincture is very hard on surrounding tissue;  it is caustic. 
The mucous membranes inside the mouth will be very, very painful if 
you don't protect them properly.


As with everything on this list, use your own good judgment, consult a 
medical professional, and be responsible for your actions;  none of us 
is qualified to give medical advice, and I am merely relaying my own 
experiences.





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Checked by AVG Free Edition.
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12/27/2005



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