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Dwarf Tapeworm (most common tapeworm) LIVER/BILE
 

Hookworms? Pin Worms?
Hulda Clark Cleanses



Hookworms? Pin Worms?
Hulda Clark Cleanses


Js.mom Views: 9,152
Published: 15 y
 

Dwarf Tapeworm (most common tapeworm) LIVER/BILE


Helping myself too..in being able to be to find all the scripts in one post without having to search in both places for them.

Also reposting information on where you get Dwarf Tapeworms (grains, dried fruit, cereals)

This newer scriipt of Newport's for the Nana variety, is a very important one for the liver and detoxing! (And, John, from the descriptions- it could be what you were asking about for what your son passed.)

thank you for adding the other stages too Newport- important, because the cystercoids are what they are saying destroys the intestinal villi- which is what celiac is)

Nana variety Dwarf Tape Worm script:
//www.curezone.org/blogs/fm.asp?i=1568116


Diminuta type:
//www.curezone.org/blogs/fm.asp?i=1523983


From Newport:
>>Plugs your bile duct, so when you first hit it you get all sorts of sensations as the backup to the lymph is released.

May want to take some Chlorella and Triphala to soak up any toxic bile as well as Ox Bile to clear that old bile.>>

Liver scripts to follow up with:

Stone Breaker script:
//www.curezone.org/blogs/fm.asp?i=1569881


Ox Bile script:
//www.curezone.org/blogs/fm.asp?i=1523974


Bilirubin:
//www.curezone.org/blogs/fm.asp?i=1523574


Obstructive Jaundice--(for now until updated)

Machine Prefs numbers to go with it:
//www.curezone.org/ig/i.asp?i=38861


//www.curezone.org/upload/Members/Newport/scripts/Jaundice_Obstructive_1...


Lymph Blockage:
//www.curezone.org/blogs/fm.asp?i=1524052



//www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=1570898

I think this one is one of the main culprits of the celiac, gluten problems, and many (most) gallbladder problems, and the liver not being able to detox (plugged up bile ducts). Gallbladder surgery is the #1 surgery..and dwarf Tapeworms are the most common Tapeworm (live in the bile ducts).

>>caused by cystercoids destroying the intestinal villi in which they develop.>>
my side-note..."what if", the increase in "celiac", is nothing to do with the gluten itself, but what people are infected with from the grains-- dwarf tapeworm!)

Combining information for the two types of Dwarf Tapeworm:

//www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=1523374


HYMENOLEPIS DIMINUTA | Dwarf worm, found in birds & rodents, 1 inch long, can stay with host a lifetime. *


NOTE: Hymenolepis diminuta adults are found in the intestine or bile ducts
NOTE:
- Thrive on Lead
- Live off of bile

Alternative names are:
- Dwarf Tapeworm infection
- Rat tapeworm

Hymenolepis worms live in warm climates and are common in the southern USA. The eggs of these worms are ingested by insects, and mature into a life form referred to as a "cysticercoid" in the insect. In H. nana, the insect is always a beetle. Humans and other animals become infected when they intentionally or unintentionally eat material contaminated by insects. In an infected person, it is possible for the worm's entire life-cycle to be completed in the bowel, so infection can persist for years. Hymenolepis nana infections are much more common than Hymenolepis diminuta infections in humans because, in addition to being spread by insects, the disease can be spread directly from person to person by eggs in feces. When this happens, H. nana oncosphere larvae encyst in the intestinal wall and develop into cysticercoids and then adults. These infections were previously common in the southeastern USA, and have been described in crowded environments and individuals confined to institutions. However, the disease occurs throughout the world. H. nana infections can grow worse over time because, unlike in most tapeworms, H. nana eggs can hatch and develop without ever leaving the definitive host.

A study in Connecticut found that one third of rats sold in pet stores were infected with H. nana and concluded that these and other rodents sold in pet stores pose a potential threat to public health.>>

In that thread:

http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Hymenolepis_d...



Hymenolepis diminuta is a cestode which sometimes causes infection in humans. Human infection results from eating such foods as dried fruits and precooked breakfast cereals in which the infected grain insects, themselves infected from eating rat or mouse droppings, are present. Some symptoms of infestation in humans include, enteritis, anorexia, headaches, anal pruritus, abdominal distress and small gut irritation. Hymenolepiasis is the term for a human to be infected with either H. diminuta or Hymenolepis nana, a dwarf sister species very closely related to H. diminuta>>

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymenolepis



Hymenolepiasis is the most common cestode parasite in the human body. Infections are seen more often among children.

H. diminuta fertilized eggs pass in the stool from an infected host. The eggs are then eaten by grain beetles where the cysticerci, or larval stage develops. Humans then can eat the bug or its mealworm phase in cereal or flour. The worm matures in the duodenum, the first portion of the small intestine, and attach to the mucosa lining.

Patients with more than 15,000 eggs per gram of stool may experience cramps, diarrhea, irritability, anorexia, or enteritis **** caused by cystercoids destroying the intestinal villi in which they develop. ***** ( my side-note..."what if", the increase in "celiac", is nothing to do with the gluten itself, but what people are infected with from the grains-- dwarf tapeworm!) [

HH. nana worms are flat and segmented with skinny necks. They vary in length from approximately 15 to 40 mm and are 1 mm wide

H. diminuta is thought to be passed to humans most often through the ingestion of insects in dried grains or cereal.[1] Research done in 2000 showed that of nine pet stores surveyed in Connecticut U.S.A., 75% sold rats, mice or hamsters infected with H. nana. A serious public health risk could result from pet store parasite transmissions[2].

H. diminuta worms are the same shape as H. nana but are much larger, up to 90 cm long and 44 mm wide.>>

The link where I had gotten this from before, isn't working now.


The adults of the dwarf Tapeworm are 25 to 40 mm in length and 1 mm in width (Lapage, 1951). This tapeworm is transparent.
Hymenolepis nana is the most common cestode parasite of humans in the world (Roberts and Janovy, 2000). It lodges itself in the intestines and absorbs nutrients from the intestinal lumen (Cameron, 1956). In human adults, the tapeworm is more of a nuisance than a health problem, but in small children, many H. nana can be dangerous. Usually it is the larva of this tapeworm that causes the most problem in children (Lapage, 1951). The larva will burrow into the walls of the intestine, if there are enough Tapeworms in the child, severe damage can be inflicted. This is done by absorbing all the nutrition from the food the child eats (Lapage, 1951). Usually a single tapeworm will not cause any danger, but in small children, many tapeworms can become a problem (Lapage, 1951). Hymenolepis nana usually will not cause deaths unless in extreme circumstances and usually in young children or in people who have weakened immune systems. In some parts of the world, individuals that are heavily infected are a result of internal autoinfection

From Newport's back posts:
THYMUS!

>>When they did research on this they found that only rats with a faulty thymus got ill. Apparently it is the thymus that creates immune response to kill their eggs and stop the hatching...

and also with the pinworms Newport posted about below this:

>>Some tests on rats have shown that Pinworms are only an issue with a non working thymus, do the job.

Lots of things effect your thymus but lately Sucralose (Splenda) is on the top of the list for that: http://www.rense.com/general63/SPLENte.htm





 

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