Posting it up here..Newport- could you check this?
I'm going to bring this post up here, for Musi asking about the sesame seed things in the stool.
I was the head, head-lice checker at the school my kids went to in grade school. I'll add chief toilet checker to the list too.
The "sesame seed" description of the dog tape worm, remind me of what the head-lice nits looked like too.
Just curious to see if dowsing would also show this for Musi (dog
Tapeworm segments/eggs in stool) It makes sense because of her killing the echinococcus, but is it cleaned up, and the eggs are dead?
//www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=1342075
Dried
Tapeworm segments are displayed in the images below...
Tapeworms... Another intestinal parasite, the tapeworm, is transmitted to dogs and cats that ingest fleas (fleas think
Tapeworm eggs are real tasty!) or that hunt and eat wildlife or rodents infested with
Tapeworms or fleas. If you were to see an entire tapeworm you would notice that they are arranged with a small head at one end and many tiny brick-like repeating segments making up the rest of the worm. There are generally two types that infest dogs and cats;
Tapeworms can reach 4 to 6
inches in length within the intestine. It is the last segments in the chain that are released from the worm that can be seen in the dog or cats' stool or as in these photos, attached to the fur under the pet's tail. An entire tapeworm may have 90 segments! Many cases are diagnosed simply by seeing these tiny terminal segments attached to the pet's fur around the anus or under the tail; they even move around a bit shortly after they are passed and before they dry up and look like little grains of rice or confetti. These segments of the tapeworm contain the eggs
http://www.adbadog.com/p_pdetails.asp?fspid=86
>>>>The sac is passed from the host’s rectum and out into the world, either on the host’s stool or on the host’s rear end. The segment is the size of a grain of rice and is able to move. Eventually the segment will dry and look more like a sesame seed. The sac breaks and tapeworm eggs are released