Thursday, 28 February 2013

Lesson Sixteen


Lesson Sixteen

Purpose: To test for fluke disease.
A small number of intestinal flukes resident in the intestine
may not give you any noticeable symptoms. Similarly, sheep
liver flukes resident in the liver and pancreatic flukes in the
pancreas may not cause noticeable symptoms. Their eggs are
shed through the organ ducts to the intestine and out with the
bowel movement. They hatch and go through various stages of
development outdoors and in other animals. But if you become
the total host so that various stages are developing in your organs,
you have what I term fluke disease. I have found that cancer,
HIV, diabetes, endometriosis, Hodgkin's disease,
Alzheimer's disease, lupus, MS and “universal allergy syndrome”
are examples of fluke disease.
You can test for fluke disease in two ways: electronically
and by microscope observation.

Materials: Cultures or slides of flukes and fluke stages from
a biological supply company (see Sources) including eggs,
miracidia, redia, cercaria, metacercaria. Body fluid specimens to
help you locate them for observation under a microscope.
Method: Test for fluke stages in your white blood cells first.
If you have any fluke stages in your white blood cells you may
wish to see them with your own eyes. To do this, you must first
locate them. Place your body fluid samples on one plate, your
parasite stages on the other plate, and test for as many as you
were able to procure, besides adults. After finding a stage
electronically, you stand a better chance of finding it physically
with a microscope.

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