> For what its worth:
>
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> If I was a non-responder, I would check into that.
If I were you, I'd take the story of the ozone cure for what it is--
anecdotal "evidence" and nothing more.
Dear anonymousone:
> For what its worth:
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> that said it could be cured that way, but I couldnt find
> any credible evidence to support that view.
You can find people that are *really* cured by witch doctors too.
> I ended up doing conventional treatment and, thank
> God, was cured. I was grade 3 stage 3 and I didnt have
> time to messed around with what I considered an
> unproven treatment.
Good move.
> Today I ran into a woman whose husband was actually
... "apparently"
> cured using ozone therapy. She works in the health
> care field and she didnt really have a reason to lie to
> me.
>
> If I was a non-responder, I would check into that.
Ozone is made by the white blood cells in response to localized
infections. Body-wide application, say to the blood stream, will risk
destruction of the live blood cells (thereby suppressing the immune
systems and O2 respiration), formation of additional plaque to line
the arteries, and not reach the hepatitis virus that is inside
cells... without killing those cells in the process.
Ozone is pretty "magic", but determining friend from foe is not one of
its strong suits. Ozone can notify the body that it is under attack,
and it can then look for the invader. But this is going to vary from
individual to individual. I would not recommend an ozone treatment as
a first line of defense / treatment.
David A. Smith
anonymousone - 15 May 2009 02:23 GMT
> Dear anonymousone:
>
[quoted text clipped - 41 lines]
>
> David A. Smith
I didnt recommend it as a first line of defense either.
But a non-responder with advanced liver disease might be well advised
to do some research on it.
After all, what has he/she got to lose?
Waterspider - 15 May 2009 04:58 GMT
On May 13, 10:11 am, dlzc <dl...@cox.net> wrote:
> Dear anonymousone:
>
[quoted text clipped - 43 lines]
>
> David A. Smith
I didnt recommend it as a first line of defense either.
But a non-responder with advanced liver disease might be well advised
to do some research on it.
After all, what has he/she got to lose?
Money?
dlzc - 15 May 2009 15:09 GMT
Dear anonymousone:
...
> > Ozone is pretty "magic", but determining friend from
> > foe is not one of its strong suits. Ozone can notify
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> might be well advised to do some research on it.
> After all, what has he/she got to lose?
I'm just not sure that increasing the load on the liver by globally
dumping dead cells that it will have to deal with is a good idea.
Maybe a diet change does the trick...
David A. Smith
Cactus Jammies - 27 May 2009 15:10 GMT
Dear anonymousone:
On May 14, 6:23 pm, anonymousone <te...@earthlink.net> wrote:
...
> > Ozone is pretty "magic", but determining friend from
> > foe is not one of its strong suits. Ozone can notify
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> might be well advised to do some research on it.
> After all, what has he/she got to lose?
I'm just not sure that increasing the load on the liver by globally
dumping dead cells that it will have to deal with is a good idea.
Maybe a diet change does the trick...
David A. Smith
///////////////////////////////////////////////////
Look up Lipid Replacement Therapy (google it with 'liver') Its not
quackery, it is bonafide and is used with cancer patients trying to recover
from chemotherapy It enhances the replacement of lipids damaged by oxidation
from the toxic compounds left in their systems. 20% of your blood resides
in your liver at any given time. Further research: Mitochondrae, liver
cell damage.
cactus jammies
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
dlzc - 27 May 2009 20:42 GMT
Dear Cactus Jammies:
On May 27, 7:10 am, "Cactus Jammies" <cactusjamm...@retinalcircus.orb>
wrote:
> On May 14, 6:23 pm, anonymousone <te...@earthlink.net> wrote:
> ...
[quoted text clipped - 23 lines]
> chemotherapy It enhances the replacement of lipids
> damaged by
*** !!! ***
> oxidation
*** !!! ***
> from the toxic compounds left in their systems.
> 20% of your blood resides in your liver at any given
> time. Further research: Mitochondrae, liver
> cell damage.
If anything is going to oxidize something, ozone will most likely do
it. Ozone's adverse effect on lipids is well documented. I
appreciate your sincerity, and I do love ozone applications.
But if ozone globally applied is anything, it falls under the category
of hormesis, or Nietzsche's "Anything that does not kill us, makes us
stronger". I certainly would not follow a course of chemo or
radiation therapy with application of ozone to the blood stream. That
seems to me to be adding insult to injury.
Again, if ozone is changing the "diet" the liver has to contend with,
and that has some positive effect, then Amen!
David A. Smith