Hiya, 4pbears!
Yes, it is possible to do a
Liver Flush without a gall bladder.
Here is an excellent post by Telman on what happens during a flush:
//www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=880392#i
Although part of the mechanism of the flush is that it activates the gallbladder to contract, ejecting bile and things it contains like stones, toxins,
parasites and cholesterol crystals, more is involved than that. It also activates the liver to eject bile, which carries stones, parasites, toxins and cholesterol crystals out of the liver, too. Everything that is in the gallbladder comes from the liver. Removing the gallbladder will give you temporary relief from gallbladder disease and attacks, but the real problem lies in the liver. Even without the gallbladder, the
Liver Flush works to clean the liver and help address these problems.
Not only is it possible to do a
Liver Flush without a gallbladder, it is really important, even more so than for people who still have a gallbladder.
When you lose your gallbladder, a number of things tend to happen. Since the bile is no longer concentrated, the amount which reaches the intestines is not the correct strength to effectively digest the food. Since it is not stored up and ejected in the exact quantity and strength as needed when food passes out of the stomach into the intestines, then bile simply dribbles into the intestines at a small but constant rate, leaving the intestines in a constant state of semi-preparedness for digestion but never properly prepared. Bile enters the intestines even when there is no food present at that point to absorb it. This stresses nearby organs which must also constantly produce chemicals to neutralize it.
There are two main results outside the liver.
First, the intestines tend to clog up more quickly with undigestible matter – what we call mucoid plaque. As the layers build up in the intestines, their ability to absorb nutrients decline. Also, toxins, decaying matter, and the harmful bacteria which breaks down decaying tissue increases. This leads to a variety of health conditions, including allergies, diverticulus (sp?), leaky gut, and other intestinal disturbances. Put in a nutshell, without a gallbladder, we tend to auto-toxify more than if we had a gallbladder.
Secondly, since inadequate bile is present to digest foods, the pancreas takes over the job of creating digestive enzymes, including the hormone insulin, to attempt to complete digestion. This works for a time, but after a decade or two (depending on your nutrition and health care) many people tend to develop diabetes. The pancreas becomes worn out.
Diabetes has it’s own timetable of events, of course depending on how well you take care of your health. In many cases, diabetics develop numbness in the extremities caused by nerve damage, tissue damage from vascular decline throughout the body but particularly in the extremities, blood pressure problems, and heart problems. Some develop glaucoma, which can cause blindness. Diabetes can be prevented if you make changes in your diet and use appropriate supplements.
Changes inside the liver: There is no longer a gallbladder which draws bile out of the liver and concentrates it to aid in digestion. Instead of having a sort of tidal effect happening in the biliary system of the liver, there is only constant, slow drainage. When the gallbladder contracts, it empties and needs to be filled up by bile drawn from the liver, and so it draws bile out of the liver. When the gallbladder is removed, this tidal action is stopped.
The result, inside the liver: Bile in the deepest parts of the biliary system cannot be drained properly. It stagnates and fills up with metabolic garbage. Stones form (my idea here) when there is a bit of dirt which irritates the biliary tube; the liver responds by encircling the irritant with the materials close at hand: bile salts, cholesterol, blood, and calcium. This acts much like the formation of a pearl in an oyster. When stones form, they block the trickle of bile flow even more, so that dirt, which usually gets swept into the colon and out, cannot get out. The tissues fill up with toxins. And the entire process occurs a little closer to the main hepatic duct opening, until the entire liver is compromised. The result is that the liver becomes too clogged up with metabolic garbage and stones to filter the blood properly.
Conditions that can follow: Blood pressure rises because it is harder to pass blood through a clogged liver than through a clean liver. With a rise in blood pressure, weaknesses in arterial walls are stressed, and to prevent rupture, they are patched with cholesterol. This tends to increase blood pressure further, as now blood has to flow through blood vessels with cholesterol clotted to the walls. Blood clots can form. The possibility of heart disease or strokes increases.
Also, the blood must be filtered by other organs of elimination, like the kidneys, which also get filled up with toxins and stones. Eventually, all the organs and tissues of the body become filled with toxins that can’t be filtered out because the organs of elimination (liver, kidneys, colon, skin, and lymphatic system) have been filled up.
This is what can happen. The easily observable results are allergies,
Arthritis (often appear at 3 years following surgery), migraines (may appear before surgery, because the liver has already been clogged for some time), asthma, skin problems, bad breath, digestive problems, constipation, poor digestion, and diabetes (may appear 10 – 20 years following surgery).
I doubt that this happens to every person who loses his or her gallbladder. These are only the possible things that can happen following gallbladder removal; they are not inevitable. I do not want to sound like an alarmist. However, if you know what can happen, you can choose to prevent them from happening. To give you an idea, many of these things have happened to me:
My story:
//www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=792270#i
//www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=794006#i
Thanks to the liver/gallbladder flush, I have reversed many of these conditions. I am not completely well yet, but my allergies, migraines and
Arthritis are not as frequent or severe as they used to be. I have also experienced some rejuvenation, which was unexpected but most welcome:
//www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=862635#i
Your gallbladder has just been removed. You can prevent the onset of many conditions that often follow by doing the liver/gallbladder flush. One of the obvious ways it will help you is that it will establish a thorough flush, to help make up for not having the 3x/day mini-flush that people with a gallbladder experience. You could also use the Tsetsi mini-flush between the more thorough Liver Flush, to create a more frequent and mild flush of the liver:
//www.curezone.org/blogs/m.asp?f=1196&i=5
I have done 19
Liver Flushes so far and removed about 5,000 stones. I am very happy to have started this protocol and delighted with the opportunity to learn things from other posters here on CZ. I recommend this procedure to you without reservation!
Good luck!
PC