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Osteoporosis Is Often Resultant Of Bile Duct Congestion
 
Heavensky Views: 14,077
Published: 9 y
 

Osteoporosis Is Often Resultant Of Bile Duct Congestion


Through first hand experience and endless hours of studying medical texts and testimonials, thousands of health practitioners, students and those alike, including myself have learned that the majority of complications experienced later in life, which tend to be attributed to aging are caused by the long standing accumulation and stagnation of congestion throughout the organs of elimination.

Although the body is a self-healing and cleansing mechanism, there are certain mechanical characteristics within the body that are subjected to the same type of processes that are carried out on an engine of a vehicle. If we were to eat exactly as nature designed us to, the body would have no problem keeping every nook and cranny clean as a whistle. However, the modern diet consists of foods that are simply not designed to be processes through the organic human operating system. These foods cannot be processed and eliminated properly, and make changes to the chemical and biological make up of each functioning anatomy of the body.

One of these changes occur within the bile ducts of the liver; when unnatural foods are run through the body, and an unnatural lifestyle is carried on, bile changes in it's chemical make up, consistency and liquidity, often causing it to dehydrate, stagnate and clump up into stones. The accumulation of stagnant, hardened clumps of bile which have congested the bile ducts throughout the liver and gallbladder is an epidemic. Unless they are fully calcified, which is far and between, they are not dense enough to reflect ultrasounds to be detected and diagnosed by a physician. The build up of hardened bile is as common as ear wax in the ears; it happens to everybody, so the question is not whether if congestion exists, the question is how much congestion is there. The only way to determine how much congestion has accumulated is to expel all of the material from the liver by using a natural flush procedure.

For as long as medical texts have been dated, flushing the liver's bile ducts of congestion has been well documented and in some cultures this procedure remains the primary, most essential step in healing, no matter how mild or severe the illness is, because in most cases, it is the only thing that is necessary for full health to be regained.

This congestion is made up of mostly cholesterol and bile (the two main products the liver manufactures) along with hundreds of different toxins and hormones that have attempted to escape from behind them. John Hopkins University refers to these stones which are found throughout the duct network of the liver as 'inter-hepatic gallstones'. A fair percentage of patients who have had their gallbladder removed still experience 'gallbladder attacks'; this is because most of the congestion is trapped within the liver, not the gallbladder and the remaining congestion is not calcified nor dense enough to rebound ultrasounds. The liver is the organ that produces gall (bile) in the first place and has much more room to store this type of congestion. Click here to see a diagram of inter-hepatic Gallstones throughout the biliary tree. Click here to see what a real liver looks like when it is packed full of inter-hepatic congestion.

The full extent of the damage that occurs as a result of simple biliary congestion cannot be fully explained within a full sized novel - there are just not enough pages, but the following are just a small handful of the complications that come as a result;

Osteoporosis

Although bone is the hardest tissue in the body, it is, nevertheless, very much alive. Human bone consists of 20 percent water; 30-40 percent organic material, such as living cells; and 40-50 percent inorganic material, such as calcium. Bone tissue contains many blood and lymph vessels and nerves. The cells responsible for balanced bone growth are osteoblasts and osteoclasts. Osteoblasts are the bone-forming cells, whereas osteoclasts are responsible for resorption of bone to maintain optimum shape. A third group of cells, known as chondrocytes, are in charge of forming cartilage. The less dense parts of the bone, called cancellous bone, contain red bone marrow, which produces red and white blood cells.

Most bone diseases occur when bone cells no longer receive enough nourishment. Gallstones in the liver usually lead to lymph congestion in the intestinal tract and, consequently, in other parts of the body. Good bone health results from the sustained balance between the functions of osteoblast and osteoclast cells. This delicate balance becomes disturbed when nutrient supply is deficient and thereby slows the production of new bone tissue by osteoblasts.

Osteoporosis results when the amount of bone tissue is reduced because the growth of new bone does not keep pace with the destruction of old bone. Cancellous bone is usually affected before compact bone is. Compact bone makes up the outer layer of the bone.

In generalized osteoporosis, excessive calcium is reabsorbed from bone, thereby raising the calcium levels of blood and urine. This may predispose a person to form stones in the kidneys and, possibly, suffer renal failure. Gallstones in the liver substantially reduce bile production. Bile is essential for the absorption of calcium from the small intestines. Even if the body received more than enough calcium foods or food supplements, a shortage of bile would render much of the ingested calcium useless for bone building and other important metabolic processes. In addition, the presence of gallstones in the liver raises the level of harmful acids in the blood, some of which are neutralized by calcium leached from the bones and teeth. (Something similar happens when a person drinks cow’s milk. To neutralize the high phosphorus concentration of ingested milk, the body uses not only the milk’s calcium but also calcium from the bones and teeth.)
Eventually, the body’s calcium reserves become depleted, diminishing bone density or bone mass. This may lead to bone and hip fractures and even death. With more than half of all women over age 50 already affected by osteoporosis (albeit only in industrialized nations), it is obvious that the current approach of taking hormones or calcium supplements is a shot in the dark; it in no way addresses the imbalance in the liver and gallbladder caused by reduced bile output due to gallstones.

Rickets and osteomalacia are diseases that affect the calcification process of bones. In either case, the bones become soft, especially those of the lower limbs, which are bowed by the weight of the body. The fat-soluble vitamin D, calciferol, is essential for balanced calcium and phosphorus metabolism and, therefore, healthy bone structures.

Insufficient bile secretion and disturbance of the cholesterol metabolism, both of which are caused by gallstones in the liver, lead to vitamin D deficiency. Lack of sufficient exposure to natural sunlight further aggravates these conditions.
Infection of bones, or osteomyelitis, may result when there has been a prolonged lymphatic obstruction in the body, especially in or around bone tissues. Consequently, blood-borne microbes gain unhindered access to bones. As we know, infectious microbes only attack tissues that are acidified, weak, unstable, or damaged. The microbes may originate from gallstones, a tooth abscess, or a boil.

Malignant tumors of the bone can occur when lymphatic congestion in the body and the bones, especially, has reached extreme proportions. The immune system is depressed and malignant tumor particles from the breasts, lungs, or prostate gland can spread to or develop in those parts of the bones that have the softest tissue and are more prone to congestion and acidification, that is, the cancellous bone. Bone cancer and all other diseases of the bone indicate lack of nourishment of bone tissue.

Such diseases usually defy treatment unless all gallstones in the liver are removed and all other organs and systems of elimination are cleared of any existing congestion as well.

I, personally cured myself of the severe atrophiation of muscle and bone tissue as a result of bile duct congstion by carrying out a long series of liver flushes,

If you would like more information on how to go about doing this, you can either visit the Liver Flush Forum of this website, reply to this topic, message me or buy Andreas Mortiz's book here;

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=liver+and+gallbladder+flush

I have followed hundreds of people through this process, and I am certain that in over 90 percent of cases of osteoporosis, poor bile output due to congested bile ducts throughout the liver and gallbladder is the root cause and is permanently healed through the process of elimination.

To your health and happiness,

Heavensky
 

 
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