Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-06 Thread Dorothy Fitzpatrick
This could be why the liposomal Vit C is a good thing--best of both - lecithin 
and Vit C together.  dee

On 5 Oct 2010, at 21:07, Dick Rochon wrote:

 Yes, cholestrol plaque is deposited on the blood vessels where there is a 
 weak or damaged spot. That's why british sailors were called limeys, because 
 they found that eating limes when they were at sea for months at a time 
 prevented them from getting scurvy, a vitamin C deficiency disease that 
 caused them to bleed internally and die. Collagen is necessary to build 
 strong, healthy cells, and without enough vitamin C you cannot develop 
 collagen.
 
 If your blood vessels are getting plugged it is because you are vitamin C 
 deficient, and a 500mg pill a day is barely enough to do the job. Lecithin 
 will dissolve plaque, but until you heal the damaged blood vessels you need 
 the plaque. Does this ring a bell? Linus Pauling and his associate MD used 
 this combination to successfully treat cardiovascular disease. And now with 
 Liposomal encapsulated vitamin C it goes directly into the blood system 
 without being digested in the stomach.
 
 Dick
 
 
 
 


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-06 Thread Sandee George

I love this one Brickley - so very very true !
REgards
Sandee


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-05 Thread Diane Mackey
I take serrapeptase daily and started because my legs didn't have good 
circulation and I had relief in less than two weeks, taken as recommended, and 
reduced to dosage to half for the duration of a large bottle of 40,000 units..  
However, I also took lecithin at the same time.  Lecithin will emulsify fats, 
so I feel it helps to keep arteries clean and serrapeptase helps to eat away at 
the inflammation and reduce the plaque.

That said, I don't know how serrapeptase can break off plaque in a chunk.  I 
don't know of any reported case where a chunk of plaque has caused a stoke, 
but have heard of plaque build up causing a blockage, as well as a blood clot 
causing a blockage.  Serrapeptase 'digests' plaque but I've never heard that it 
bores holes into it or causes it to break apart.  I would hate for people to 
not use this wonderful enzyme because they would hear that it causes plaque to 
break apart, yet I can find no reports at all on the web that this is the case.

It's sad to me that people don't follow what is recommended, when self healing. 
 Too much of a good thing is no longer a good thing in many cases of natural 
healing.  As Renee stated, two different people on two different lists said 
this happened to them..  If these people are on this type of list, who are they 
reporting the side effect to so that the world knows this happened?  Are they 
taking bad recommendations without doing needed research to back up what ever 
they read?  Who is the expert they have come to trust?  If such a thing had 
happened to me, I would be reporting it far and wide, even if it were my own 
fault for over-dosing.

I fully understand that many of us are pioneers and use ourselves as lab rats 
in our attempt to self heal with the use of alternative remedies, but this has 
to be done with common sense.  This silverlist has been my source of 
information about silver for at least 6 years, and I know who I am dealing 
with, who I can trust on here, who the experts are, when gathering information 
and using protocols related to silver.  I don't take anything said on here as 
gospel without seeing agreements by others and some sources to back things up.  
When there are many contradictions, then I have to choose who makes the most 
sensible argument.

Diane 

  - Original Message - 
  From: Renee 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 7:00 PM
  Subject: RE: CShelp re cholesterol


Be careful of taking the serrapeptase and don't try to push it.  Follow 
the dosage no the bottle.  Taking too much too fast can 'chunk' off bits of 
plaque which can travel and cause strokes.  Happened to 2 people on 2 different 
lists I'm on, trying to get rid of their plaque too fast.  

It's safe is used as directed.

Samala,
Renee 




---Original Message---


I'm taking serrapeptase...but at the dosage on the bottle (I've read 
that
others increase it substanstially). Marshall, can you give an 
approximate
dosage amount in which this would happen in about a month?
   
  
   


Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-05 Thread Diane Mackey
Trem,

Please tell us what is too much, how often you took it, what other supplements 
you were taking, where was the blockage located,  and exactly why you believe 
it was the serrapeptase that caused the stroke.  This is vital information for 
anyone who uses serrapeptase.

Diane 
  - Original Message - 
  From: Trem 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 7:54 PM
  Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol


  Too much got me.  Had a stroke.

  Trem
- Original Message - 
From: Renee 
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 4:00 PM
Subject: RE: CShelp re cholesterol


  Be careful of taking the serrapeptase and don't try to push it.  
Follow the dosage no the bottle.  Taking too much too fast can 'chunk' off bits 
of plaque which can travel and cause strokes.  Happened to 2 people on 2 
different lists I'm on, trying to get rid of their plaque too fast.  

  It's safe is used as directed.

  Samala,
  Renee 




  ---Original Message---


  I'm taking serrapeptase...but at the dosage on the bottle (I've read 
that
  others increase it substanstially). Marshall, can you give an 
approximate
  dosage amount in which this would happen in about a month?
 

 







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23:35:00


Re: CShelp re cholesterol Question

2010-10-05 Thread mborgert


My cholesterol,since 2000, has been 284. I am in perfect health, and 67 yrs. My 
doc said if it reached 325 than worry.



From: Deborah Gerard devorah...@yahoo.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, October 4, 2010 4:48:28 PM
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol Question


Is there any high level that one should be concerned about?  Is there 
anyother 
syptom that goes along with high cholesterol one should watch for?
thanks in advance,
Debbie





From: Dorothy Fitzpatrick d...@deetroy.org
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, October 4, 2010 2:09:31 PM
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol

I have read in many knowledgeable sources that 'high' cholesterol is 
irrelevant.  We all need cholesterol all the time to repair everything in our 
bodies.  The brain is largely cholesterol so to try and reduce it would be 
madness in my opinion.  Also, we are all different and what might be deemed 
high 
by the medics, could indeed be perfectly normal for *that* person so to mess 
with it could potentially be disastrous!  dee

On 4 Oct 2010, at 18:12, needling around wrote:

 A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol.  I did some 
research in the archives and sent along some info.  I was wondering if anyone 
had any specific recommendations for this situation.  He is not overweight.
 Thanks.
 PT
  
  


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-05 Thread Marshall Dudley

 Absolutely.

Marshall

On 10/4/2010 7:54 PM, Deborah Gerard wrote:

Marcshall,
If takeing low level anti-biotic's would lower inflamation wouldn't CS 
do the same job maybe?

thanks Deb


*From:* Marshall Dudley mdud...@king-cart.com
*To:* silver-list@eskimo.com
*Sent:* Mon, October 4, 2010 3:15:04 PM
*Subject:* Re: CShelp re cholesterol

  I concur with that completely.  Cholesterol being deposited in the
veins is not due to high cholesterol but to inflammation of the veins.
That is why research has found that anti-inflammation agents such as
aspirin, and low level antibiotics reduce this problem.  The correct
answer is to remove the inflammation, not remove the stuff to try and
reduce it.  If you get rid of the inflammation and take some
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a month.

Marshall




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Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase

2010-10-05 Thread Marshall Dudley
 Yes, serrapeptase can help with nasal drip problems.  I have not heard 
of it helping arthritis. I cured my arthritis with CMO.


Marshall

On 10/4/2010 10:08 PM, Del wrote:
I would like to mention that I have just begun taking serrapeptase 
(about 160,000 units per day - Doctor's Best) in hopes that it will 
reduce or cure my sinus problems.
I have always had constant post-nasal drip, and as I get older it is 
increasing.
This is especially bad for me as a singer, as the mucus frequently 
tangles around my vocal cords.
My wife told a friend to take serrapeptase for her arthritis (don't 
know why, haven't heard that it does anything for arthritis).  After a 
year, the friend told her that it had not helped her arthritis, but 
had cleared up her


sinus problems.
Here's hoping!

Del
- Original Message - From: Marshall Dudley 
mdud...@king-cart.com

To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 4:08 PM
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase



 On 10/4/2010 3:29 PM, zzekel...@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 10/4/2010 3:15:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
mdud...@king-cart.com writes:


If you get rid of the inflammation and take some
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a
month.

Marshall

*How much serrapeptase should one take ???  Lois*
I would take no more than 200,000 a day until they are clean, to give 
the body time to strengthen the vessels as the plaque is removed, and 
to also to prevent large chunks from breaking off.  Once the veins 
are clear, probably a month unless you have some virtually totally 
blocked veins, drop it to maybe 40,000 every day or probably every 
few days to keep them clean.


Marshall


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RE: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase

2010-10-05 Thread Lisa
What's CMO?

-Original Message-
From: Marshall Dudley [mailto:mdud...@king-cart.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 05, 2010 11:42 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase

  Yes, serrapeptase can help with nasal drip problems.  I have not heard 
of it helping arthritis. I cured my arthritis with CMO.

Marshall

On 10/4/2010 10:08 PM, Del wrote:
 I would like to mention that I have just begun taking serrapeptase 
 (about 160,000 units per day - Doctor's Best) in hopes that it will 
 reduce or cure my sinus problems.
 I have always had constant post-nasal drip, and as I get older it is 
 increasing.
 This is especially bad for me as a singer, as the mucus frequently 
 tangles around my vocal cords.
 My wife told a friend to take serrapeptase for her arthritis (don't 
 know why, haven't heard that it does anything for arthritis).  After a 
 year, the friend told her that it had not helped her arthritis, but 
 had cleared up her

 sinus problems.
 Here's hoping!

 Del
 - Original Message - From: Marshall Dudley 
 mdud...@king-cart.com
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 4:08 PM
 Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase


  On 10/4/2010 3:29 PM, zzekel...@aol.com wrote:
 In a message dated 10/4/2010 3:15:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
 mdud...@king-cart.com writes:

 If you get rid of the inflammation and take some
 serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a
 month.

 Marshall

 *How much serrapeptase should one take ???  Lois*
 I would take no more than 200,000 a day until they are clean, to give 
 the body time to strengthen the vessels as the plaque is removed, and 
 to also to prevent large chunks from breaking off.  Once the veins 
 are clear, probably a month unless you have some virtually totally 
 blocked veins, drop it to maybe 40,000 every day or probably every 
 few days to keep them clean.

 Marshall


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-05 Thread Dick Rochon
Yes, cholestrol plaque is deposited on the blood vessels where there is a 
weak or damaged spot. That's why british sailors were called limeys, because 
they found that eating limes when they were at sea for months at a time 
prevented them from getting scurvy, a vitamin C deficiency disease that 
caused them to bleed internally and die. Collagen is necessary to build 
strong, healthy cells, and without enough vitamin C you cannot develop 
collagen.


If your blood vessels are getting plugged it is because you are vitamin C 
deficient, and a 500mg pill a day is barely enough to do the job. Lecithin 
will dissolve plaque, but until you heal the damaged blood vessels you need 
the plaque. Does this ring a bell? Linus Pauling and his associate MD used 
this combination to successfully treat cardiovascular disease. And now with 
Liposomal encapsulated vitamin C it goes directly into the blood system 
without being digested in the stomach.


Dick




- Original Message - 
From: Marshall Dudley mdud...@king-cart.com

To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Tuesday, October 05, 2010 8:30 AM
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol



 Absolutely.

Marshall

On 10/4/2010 7:54 PM, Deborah Gerard wrote:

Marcshall,
If takeing low level anti-biotic's would lower inflamation wouldn't CS do 
the same job maybe?

thanks Deb


*From:* Marshall Dudley mdud...@king-cart.com
*To:* silver-list@eskimo.com
*Sent:* Mon, October 4, 2010 3:15:04 PM
*Subject:* Re: CShelp re cholesterol

  I concur with that completely.  Cholesterol being deposited in the
veins is not due to high cholesterol but to inflammation of the veins.
That is why research has found that anti-inflammation agents such as
aspirin, and low level antibiotics reduce this problem.  The correct
answer is to remove the inflammation, not remove the stuff to try and
reduce it.  If you get rid of the inflammation and take some
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a month.

Marshall




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Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase

2010-10-05 Thread Smitty
 What's CMO?


Google it. . . . . .

Smitty


Re: CShelp re cholesterol Question

2010-10-05 Thread sol

mborg...@att.net wrote:


My cholesterol,since 2000, has been 284. I am in perfect health, and 
67 yrs. My doc said if it reached 325 than worry.


I am finding I can use my total cholesterol to help monitor my thyroid 
hormone levels. When thyroid is too high, my cholesterol drops. When my 
thyroid levels are more normal it stays around 200-220, which I think is 
where it should be.

sol


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Dorothy Fitzpatrick
I have read in many knowledgeable sources that 'high' cholesterol is 
irrelevant.  We all need cholesterol all the time to repair everything in our 
bodies.  The brain is largely cholesterol so to try and reduce it would be 
madness in my opinion.  Also, we are all different and what might be deemed 
high by the medics, could indeed be perfectly normal for *that* person so to 
mess with it could potentially be disastrous!  dee

On 4 Oct 2010, at 18:12, needling around wrote:

 A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol.  I did some 
 research in the archives and sent along some info.  I was wondering if anyone 
 had any specific recommendations for this situation.  He is not overweight.
 Thanks.
 PT
  
  


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Sandy
Hi PT,

I've heard chromium picolinate helps. I once went in for some tests at the Dr 
and for my last meal before the cut off time for eating was greasy barbecued 
pork ribs [I know, I know]. I thought for sure my cholesterol would be sky high 
but the test showed it was perfect. I had been taking chromium picolinate for 
about a year so figured what they said about it must be true.

As a side note I no longer eat greasy pork ribs and such...[shiver].

Sandy

--- On Mon, 10/4/10, needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net wrote:

From: needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net
Subject: CShelp re cholesterol
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Monday, October 4, 2010, 12:12 PM



 
 

A friend in his 30s has been found to have high 
cholesterol.  I did some research in the archives and sent along some 
info.  I was wondering if anyone had any specific recommendations for this 
situation.  He is not overweight.
Thanks.
PT
 
 


  

Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Alan Jones
I have read that niacin helps lower cholesterol.  It should be regular
niacin, not no-flush and not niacinamide.

Start low.  In one day I jumped from a 100mg dose to 200mg, I turned BRIGHT
red for almost an hour.  Do some Googling before you try this.

Alan

On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Sandy hollis302...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Hi PT,

 I've heard chromium picolinate helps. I once went in for some tests at the
 Dr and for my last meal before the cut off time for eating was greasy
 barbecued pork ribs [I know, I know]. I thought for sure my cholesterol
 would be sky high but the test showed it was perfect. I had been taking
 chromium picolinate for about a year so figured what they said about it must
 be true.

 As a side note I no longer eat greasy pork ribs and such...[shiver].

 Sandy

 --- On *Mon, 10/4/10, needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net* wrote:


 From: needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net
 Subject: CShelp re cholesterol
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Date: Monday, October 4, 2010, 12:12 PM

 A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol.  I did some
 research in the archives and sent along some info.  I was wondering if
 anyone had any specific recommendations for this situation.  He is not
 overweight.
 Thanks.
 PT






-- 
Alan Jones

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or
to the people.  (Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution)


Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Marshall Dudley
 I concur with that completely.  Cholesterol being deposited in the 
veins is not due to high cholesterol but to inflammation of the veins.  
That is why research has found that anti-inflammation agents such as 
aspirin, and low level antibiotics reduce this problem.  The correct 
answer is to remove the inflammation, not remove the stuff to try and 
reduce it.  If you get rid of the inflammation and take some 
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a month.


Marshall

On 10/4/2010 2:09 PM, Dorothy Fitzpatrick wrote:

I have read in many knowledgeable sources that 'high' cholesterol is 
irrelevant.  We all need cholesterol all the time to repair everything in our 
bodies.  The brain is largely cholesterol so to try and reduce it would be 
madness in my opinion.  Also, we are all different and what might be deemed 
high by the medics, could indeed be perfectly normal for *that* person so to 
mess with it could potentially be disastrous!  dee

On 4 Oct 2010, at 18:12, needling around wrote:


A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol.  I did some 
research in the archives and sent along some info.  I was wondering if anyone 
had any specific recommendations for this situation.  He is not overweight.
Thanks.
PT




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Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase

2010-10-04 Thread ZZekelink
 
In a message dated 10/4/2010 3:15:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
mdud...@king-cart.com writes:

If you  get rid of the inflammation and take some 
serrapeptase your veins will be  as clean as a new born babe in a  month.

Marshall



How much serrapeptase should one take ???  Lois


Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread cking001
Lecithin works well on cholesterol.

A tablespoon or two daily of granulated has a good history.

I get mine here...
http://www.puritan.com/lecithin-064/lecithin-granules-001060

Chuck
If all the cars on the Earth were lined up bumper to bumper, some
idiot would try to pass them.


On 10/4/2010 1:12:49 PM, needling around (ptf2...@bellsouth.net)
wrote:
 A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol. I did some
 research in the archives and sent along some info. I was wondering if
 anyone had any specific recommendations for this situation. He is not
 overweight.
 Thanks.
 PT


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Alan Jones
I also agree.  Also, I have read that only about half of heart attack
victims have high cholesterol.

On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 2:15 PM, Marshall Dudley mdud...@king-cart.comwrote:

  I concur with that completely.  Cholesterol being deposited in the veins
 is not due to high cholesterol but to inflammation of the veins.  That is
 why research has found that anti-inflammation agents such as aspirin, and
 low level antibiotics reduce this problem.  The correct answer is to remove
 the inflammation, not remove the stuff to try and reduce it.  If you get rid
 of the inflammation and take some serrapeptase your veins will be as clean
 as a new born babe in a month.

 Marshall

 On 10/4/2010 2:09 PM, Dorothy Fitzpatrick wrote:

 I have read in many knowledgeable sources that 'high' cholesterol is
 irrelevant.  We all need cholesterol all the time to repair everything in
 our bodies.  The brain is largely cholesterol so to try and reduce it would
 be madness in my opinion.  Also, we are all different and what might be
 deemed high by the medics, could indeed be perfectly normal for *that*
 person so to mess with it could potentially be disastrous!  dee


 On 4 Oct 2010, at 18:12, needling around wrote:

  A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol.  I did some
 research in the archives and sent along some info.  I was wondering if
 anyone had any specific recommendations for this situation.  He is not
 overweight.
 Thanks.
 PT

 --
Alan Jones

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or
to the people.  (Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution)


RE: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Lisa
I'm taking serrapeptase...but at the dosage on the bottle (I've read that
others increase it substanstially). Marshall, can you give an approximate
dosage amount in which this would happen in about a month?

Lisa

-Original Message-
From: Marshall Dudley [mailto:mdud...@king-cart.com] 
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 3:15 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol

  I concur with that completely.  Cholesterol being deposited in the 
veins is not due to high cholesterol but to inflammation of the veins.  
That is why research has found that anti-inflammation agents such as 
aspirin, and low level antibiotics reduce this problem.  The correct 
answer is to remove the inflammation, not remove the stuff to try and 
reduce it.  If you get rid of the inflammation and take some 
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a month.

Marshall



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Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase

2010-10-04 Thread Marshall Dudley

 On 10/4/2010 3:29 PM, zzekel...@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 10/4/2010 3:15:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
mdud...@king-cart.com writes:


If you get rid of the inflammation and take some
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a
month.

Marshall

*How much serrapeptase should one take ???  Lois*
I would take no more than 200,000 a day until they are clean, to give 
the body time to strengthen the vessels as the plaque is removed, and to 
also to prevent large chunks from breaking off.  Once the veins are 
clear, probably a month unless you have some virtually totally blocked 
veins, drop it to maybe 40,000 every day or probably every few days to 
keep them clean.


Marshall


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Marshall Dudley
 LOL. Statistically exactly half the population would have higher then 
average and half would have lower than average cholesterol, so if the 
heart attack statistics are the same that means that cholesterol has 
little if any effect.


Marshall

On 10/4/2010 3:42 PM, Alan Jones wrote:
I also agree.  Also, I have read that only about half of heart attack 
victims have high cholesterol.





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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Sandee George
Hi There Marshall, I know we have had this question asked before,  
however I just went to solaray website and found the following and  
would like your comment on same or if you have a better suggestion -  
thanks

Regards
Sandee


Quantity   4
Item ID 12719
Solaray - Serrapeptase - 90ct - 20,000 Units @ 10.50 each $42.00
Subtotal
$42.00
Shipping/Handling:
$6.00


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Marshall Dudley
 Any brand would probably prove satisfactory, but I think you can get 
better price per unit if you get it in 40,000 or 50,000 units.  I do 
konw that the Drs Best brand has proven effective for a number of people.


Marshall

On 10/4/2010 4:35 PM, Sandee George wrote:
Hi There Marshall, I know we have had this question asked before, 
however I just went to solaray website and found the following and 
would like your comment on same or if you have a better suggestion - 
thanks

Regards
Sandee


Quantity   4
Item ID 12719
Solaray - Serrapeptase - 90ct - 20,000 Units @ 10.50 each $42.00
Subtotal
$42.00
Shipping/Handling:
$6.00


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RE: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Renee
Be careful of taking the serrapeptase and don't try to push it.  Follow the
dosage no the bottle.  Taking too much too fast can 'chunk' off bits of
plaque which can travel and cause strokes.  Happened to 2 people on 2
different lists I'm on, trying to get rid of their plaque too fast.  

It's safe is used as directed.

Samala,
Renee 
 
 
 
 
---Original Message---
 
 
I'm taking serrapeptase...but at the dosage on the bottle (I've read that
others increase it substanstially). Marshall, can you give an approximate
dosage amount in which this would happen in about a month?
 

Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Brickeyk
Chelation therapy using EDTA IV's lowered my cholesterol from 285 to 150  
back in 1996. I began to fear that my cholesterol was getting too low. My  
chelation Mexican DR Medina laughed and said stop at the local Casino in  Yuma 
Friday night and eat their prime rib dinner, that will bring it back up and 
 we can start the chelation treatment again. A never ending cycle.
Brickey


Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Alan Jones
Exactly.

On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 3:15 PM, Marshall Dudley mdud...@king-cart.comwrote:

  LOL. Statistically exactly half the population would have higher then
 average and half would have lower than average cholesterol, so if the heart
 attack statistics are the same that means that cholesterol has little if any
 effect.

 Marshall


 On 10/4/2010 3:42 PM, Alan Jones wrote:

 I also agree.  Also, I have read that only about half of heart attack
 victims have high cholesterol.


-- 
Alan Jones

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or
to the people.  (Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution)


Re: CShelp re cholesterol Question

2010-10-04 Thread Deborah Gerard
Is there any high level that one should be concerned about?  Is there 
anyother 
syptom that goes along with high cholesterol one should watch for?
thanks in advance,
Debbie





From: Dorothy Fitzpatrick d...@deetroy.org
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, October 4, 2010 2:09:31 PM
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol

I have read in many knowledgeable sources that 'high' cholesterol is 
irrelevant.  We all need cholesterol all the time to repair everything in our 
bodies.  The brain is largely cholesterol so to try and reduce it would be 
madness in my opinion.  Also, we are all different and what might be deemed 
high 
by the medics, could indeed be perfectly normal for *that* person so to mess 
with it could potentially be disastrous!  dee

On 4 Oct 2010, at 18:12, needling around wrote:

 A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol.  I did some 
research in the archives and sent along some info.  I was wondering if anyone 
had any specific recommendations for this situation.  He is not overweight.
 Thanks.
 PT
  
  


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Deborah Gerard
Marcshall,
If takeing low level anti-biotic's would lower inflamation wouldn't CS do the 
same job maybe?
thanks Deb





From: Marshall Dudley mdud...@king-cart.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, October 4, 2010 3:15:04 PM
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol

  I concur with that completely.  Cholesterol being deposited in the 
veins is not due to high cholesterol but to inflammation of the veins.  
That is why research has found that anti-inflammation agents such as 
aspirin, and low level antibiotics reduce this problem.  The correct 
answer is to remove the inflammation, not remove the stuff to try and 
reduce it.  If you get rid of the inflammation and take some 
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a month.

Marshall



  

Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Trem
Too much got me.  Had a stroke.

Trem
  - Original Message - 
  From: Renee 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 4:00 PM
  Subject: RE: CShelp re cholesterol


Be careful of taking the serrapeptase and don't try to push it.  Follow 
the dosage no the bottle.  Taking too much too fast can 'chunk' off bits of 
plaque which can travel and cause strokes.  Happened to 2 people on 2 different 
lists I'm on, trying to get rid of their plaque too fast.  

It's safe is used as directed.

Samala,
Renee 




---Original Message---


I'm taking serrapeptase...but at the dosage on the bottle (I've read 
that
others increase it substanstially). Marshall, can you give an 
approximate
dosage amount in which this would happen in about a month?
   
  
   



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23:35:00


Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase

2010-10-04 Thread Del
I would like to mention that I have just begun taking serrapeptase (about 
160,000 units per day - Doctor's Best) in hopes that it will reduce or cure 
my sinus problems.
I have always had constant post-nasal drip, and as I get older it is 
increasing.
This is especially bad for me as a singer, as the mucus frequently tangles 
around my vocal cords.
My wife told a friend to take serrapeptase for her arthritis (don't know 
why, haven't heard that it does anything for arthritis).  After a year, the 
friend told her that it had not helped her arthritis, but had cleared up her 
sinus problems.

Here's hoping!

Del
- Original Message - 
From: Marshall Dudley mdud...@king-cart.com

To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 4:08 PM
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol / serrapeptase



 On 10/4/2010 3:29 PM, zzekel...@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 10/4/2010 3:15:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
mdud...@king-cart.com writes:


If you get rid of the inflammation and take some
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a
month.

Marshall

*How much serrapeptase should one take ???  Lois*
I would take no more than 200,000 a day until they are clean, to give the 
body time to strengthen the vessels as the plaque is removed, and to also 
to prevent large chunks from breaking off.  Once the veins are clear, 
probably a month unless you have some virtually totally blocked veins, 
drop it to maybe 40,000 every day or probably every few days to keep them 
clean.


Marshall


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Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Krisstyna Holmquist
Red Yeast Rice...I've seen it work well in many, many people and I've seen
doctors blown away by it's results. It is a statin like the prescription
drugs out there, but is all natural and much safer.

Kriss

On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Sandy hollis302...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Hi PT,

 I've heard chromium picolinate helps. I once went in for some tests at the
 Dr and for my last meal before the cut off time for eating was greasy
 barbecued pork ribs [I know, I know]. I thought for sure my cholesterol
 would be sky high but the test showed it was perfect. I had been taking
 chromium picolinate for about a year so figured what they said about it must
 be true.

 As a side note I no longer eat greasy pork ribs and such...[shiver].

 Sandy

 --- On *Mon, 10/4/10, needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net* wrote:


 From: needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net
 Subject: CShelp re cholesterol
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Date: Monday, October 4, 2010, 12:12 PM


 A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol.  I did some
 research in the archives and sent along some info.  I was wondering if
 anyone had any specific recommendations for this situation.  He is not
 overweight.
 Thanks.
 PT







Re: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread needling around
Thank you but I have read it has the same long term side effects as the statin 
drugs, they just take a little longer to kick in so I don't want to recommend 
it.  After all a statin is a statin natural or synthetic.
PT
  - Original Message - 
  From: Krisstyna Holmquist 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 11:03 PM
  Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol


  Red Yeast Rice...I've seen it work well in many, many people and I've seen 
doctors blown away by it's results. It is a statin like the prescription drugs 
out there, but is all natural and much safer.

  Kriss


  On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Sandy hollis302...@yahoo.com wrote:

  Hi PT,

  I've heard chromium picolinate helps. I once went in for some tests 
at the Dr and for my last meal before the cut off time for eating was greasy 
barbecued pork ribs [I know, I know]. I thought for sure my cholesterol would 
be sky high but the test showed it was perfect. I had been taking chromium 
picolinate for about a year so figured what they said about it must be true.

  As a side note I no longer eat greasy pork ribs and such...[shiver].

  Sandy

  --- On Mon, 10/4/10, needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net wrote:


From: needling around ptf2...@bellsouth.net
Subject: CShelp re cholesterol
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Monday, October 4, 2010, 12:12 PM



A friend in his 30s has been found to have high cholesterol.  I did 
some research in the archives and sent along some info.  I was wondering if 
anyone had any specific recommendations for this situation.  He is not 
overweight.
Thanks.
PT

 





RE: CShelp re cholesterol

2010-10-04 Thread Neville Munn

I'd be interested also.

 

To my knowledge silver 'particles' are not uniformally spherical in shape or 
size, but rather are 'random' shapes and sizes.  I postulated some time ago if 
it were possible for these 'random' shapes to form an 'abrasive' action on any 
foreign matter which may be present within the circulatory system.  Of course 
one could imagine that that same abrasive action may also erode that same 
circulatory system...but would it?  Who knows?

 

Now that cholesterol is being put forward as being an inflamation I can see 
that praps I may have been barking up the wrong tree...or was I?  Either way, 
it seems that EIS/CS may in fact be beneficial in assisting the blood pathways 
in remaining fairly clear regardless of it's action...sounds good to me.

 

Any thoughts on the feasability of this too?  Or is my postulation absurd 
and/or ridiculous, and only makes sense to me?

 

N.
 


Date: Mon, 4 Oct 2010 16:54:19 -0700
From: devorah...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol
To: silver-list@eskimo.com






Marcshall,
If takeing low level anti-biotic's would lower inflamation wouldn't CS do the 
same job maybe?
thanks Deb





From: Marshall Dudley mdud...@king-cart.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, October 4, 2010 3:15:04 PM
Subject: Re: CShelp re cholesterol

  I concur with that completely.  Cholesterol being deposited in the 
veins is not due to high cholesterol but to inflammation of the veins.  
That is why research has found that anti-inflammation agents such as 
aspirin, and low level antibiotics reduce this problem.  The correct 
answer is to remove the inflammation, not remove the stuff to try and 
reduce it.  If you get rid of the inflammation and take some 
serrapeptase your veins will be as clean as a new born babe in a month.

Marshall