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| The number one prevention suggestion to avoid
Lyme disease is after exposure to a known region of Lyme
Disease tick areas |
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| Home Remedies that are proven to
work. |
| E-mail these recipes to everyone
you love before they undergo the knife. |
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Gallstones dissolved in 72 hours,
no surgery with household kitchen ingredients. |
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Kidney stones dissolved, milk for
burns. Stroke symptoms. |
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letter for sale items. |
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Colloidial Silver and Anthrax |
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Normally, a healthy body is able to kill
off any dangerous bacteria on its own. But in the case
of illness, like pneumonia, or an especially lethal bacteria
like anthrax, the body may need some extra help. |
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From The Doctors Prescription for Healthy
Living |
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Volume 5, number 10 EPA has established
a daily reference dose for silver in drinking water. |
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Colloidal
Silver A Natural Antibiotic for LYME DISAESE?
Lyme disease is transmitted by a spirochete,
(a spiral shaped bacteria), through a tick bite
of the deer tick, causing an inflammatory disorder
and a rash that may be followed weeks to months
later by neurologic, cardiac, or joint abnormalities.
This lime disease can be controlled with antibiotic
natural and or pharmaceutical. Colloidal
silver has been known to help these infections.
Tick fever and fever mountain rocky spotted are
the results of the tick bite from the black legged
tick, the deer tick and other ticks world wide.
more
info... |
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COLLOIDAL MINERALS AND THEIR USES |
| Prior to the introduction of
antibiotics coloidal silver was used widely in hospitals
and has been known as a bactericide for at least 1200
years. Not until the late 1800's did western scientists
understand what had been known for thousands of years
- that silver is a powerful germ fighter! After scientists
and doctors explored the possibilities of using colloids
as medicine, the suspension known as "Colloidal Silver"
became widely used in medicine as one of the mainstays
of anti-microbial treatment. |
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| HOW TO FIND THE TICK |
| The number one prevention suggestion
to avoid Lyme disease is after exposure to a known
region of Lyme Disease tick areas; to completely
disrobe and examine entire body and crevices to
search and eliminate ticks before they attach.
Because tick bites are nearly painless, a tick
may not be noticed until after it is attached.
It is important to remove the tick as soon as
possible after it is discovered.
Attachment involves inserting the hypostome into
the skin and depositing cement. Cement is a white
substance secreted into the wound where it serves
as both a gasket and a holdfast material. Cement
abundance, deposition time and location within
and on the skin varies greatly between genera
and may delay initial true feeding in some species.
Removal of this cement is desirable because any
left behind could harbor pathogens and be a source
of additional inflammation. A solution of colloidal
silver can be used as a topical scrub of the
tick bite area and then apply
tea tree oil. |
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| HOW TO REMOVE A TICK |
| Place the tips of tweezers or edges
of other removal devices around the area where the
mouthparts and head enter the skin.
With steady slow motion, pull the tick away from
the skin or slide the removal device along the
skin.
Follow any directions provided by a commercial
tool. (ie. Tick Nipper, & Ticked-Off as examples)
Do not jerk, crush, squeeze or puncture the tick.
After removal, place the tick directly into a
sealable container and place in the refrigerator
for later identification should lyme disease symptoms
appear at a later time. Disinfect the area around
the bite site using a solution of
colloidal silver as a topical scrub of the
tick bite area and then apply
tea tree oil.
Pulling the tick by squeezing the tick abdoman,
Applying a hot match stick to the tick,
Applying petrolium jelly or fingernail polish
to the tick.
These methods used to get the tick to "back out"
do not work but usually cause the tick to regurgitate
more pathogens into your body. |
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Tee
Tree Oil
the Greatest Natural Antiseptic in the World.
An ever increasing number of people in the world are turning
to alternative medicine, relying on a combination of western
medical practices with natural herbal therapies. Melaleuca
Tea Tree Oil has an obvious appeal in this area. |
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Colloidal
Silver
This natural mineral is used for burns at our burn
hospitals throughout the world.
Colloidal silver was a prescription medicine until the
penicillin was introduced. Now this natural antibiotic
is sold as a supplement over the counter. |
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LYME DISEASE
lyme disease and the disease lyme
symptom for the colloidal silver removal tick and the fever
mountain rocky spotted all can ehrlichiosis
First weeks of LYME DISEASE SYMPTOMS
Over 80% of people that are bitten by an infected tick develop
Erythema migrans, also known as the bull's eye rash,
Fever 30-40%
Chills 30-40%
Flu like symptoms 50%
Headache 40-50%
Stiff neck 30-40%
Myalgias 40-50%
Polyarthralgias 40-50%
Fatigue 40-50%
Lyme Disease is caused by the spirochetal bacterium Borrelia
burgdorferi.
Babesia or that bite tick is only deer tick
Mid Term LYME DISEASE Symptoms
Meningitis overall central nervous system or peripheral
nervous system 10-20%
Cranial neuropathy 10-20%
Radiculoneuropathy 10-20%
Atroventricular nodal 4-10%
Pericarditis 4-10%
Myopericarditis 4-10%
Eye involvement
Borrelia burgdorferi is that the spirochete
Later LYME DISEASE Symptoms
Arthritis up to 60% of untreated patients, most often monoarticular
and large joint,
Encephalopathy subtle cognitive dysfunction probably uncommon
Polyneuropathy distal paresthesias or radicular pain
CAUSE OF LYME DISEASE
Lyme disease, is caused by the spirochetal bacterium Borrelia
burgdorferi. Lyme borreliosis is the most commonly reported
tick-borne infection in North America and Europe. Lyme disease
is a multi-system disorder which can affect a complex range
of tissues including the skin, heart, nervous system, and to
a lesser extent the eyes, kidneys and liver. The illness is
caused by a spirochaete (spiral-shaped bacteria), which is transmitted
during the blood feeding of ticks of the genus Ixodes.
Another spirochetal bacterium affecting Human ehrlichiosis due
to Ehrlichia chaffeensis was first described in 1987. The disease
occurs primarily in the southeastern and south central regions
of the country and is primarily transmitted by the lone star
tick, Amblyomma americanum. Sennetsu fever, caused by Ehrlichia
sennetsu, is characterized by fever and swollen lymph nodes.
Another spirochetal bacterium affecting Human ehrlichiosis due
to Ehrlichia chaffeensis was first described in 1987. The disease
occurs primarily in the southeastern and south central regions
of the country and is primarily transmitted by the lone star
tick, Amblyomma americanum. Sennetsu fever, caused by Ehrlichia
sennetsu, is characterized by fever and swollen lymph nodes.
Erythema migrans, the best clinical indicator of Lyme disease,
develops in at least 75% of patients, beginning as a red macule
or papule, usually on the portion of an extremity or on the
trunk (especially the thigh, buttock, or axilla), between 3
and 32 days after a tick bite. Erythema migrans developed at
the site of the tick bite "bull's-eye" rash (called erythema
migrans).
antibiotic natural for the tick fever and is Erythema migrans
TRANSMISSION OF LYME DISEASE
Ticks, potentially infected with disease causing agents,
present an often-unrecognized risk associated with the wilderness
habitat. Many people neglect to do frequent tick checks to interrupt
feeding. The most effective method of interrupting tick feeding
and stopping potential disease agent exchange is to mechanically
remove the tick.
The attachment period required to initiate an infection varies
for each pathogen. The interval required for Borrelia burgdorferi
(Lyme disease) to be transmitted by the Eastern black-legged
tick, Ixodes scapularis , (commonly known as the "deer tick")
and the Western black-legged tick, I. pacificus , are reported
to be greater than 24 hr for nymphal and 36 hr for adult I.
scapularis and 96 hr for I. pacificus nymphs. These transmission
times are not absolute and can be shortened if a tick has a
systemic rather than the more typical gut infection. Other published
potential "safety intervals" include transmission times for
Rickettsia rickettsii (Rocky Mountain spotted fever bacterium)
at more than 24 hr and Babesia microti (Babesiosis) at greater
than 54 hr.
DO NOT TRY TO REMOVE AN EMBEDDED TICK BY THE FOLLOWING METHODS:
Pulling the tick by squeezing the tick abdoman,
Applying a hot match stick to the tick,
Applying petrolium jelly or fingernail polish to the tick.
These methods used to get the tick to "back out" do not work
but usually cause the tick to regurgitate more pathogens into
your body. |
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