Re: Porcelain Gallbladder - Calcified Gallbladder by Spirit ..... Liver Flush Support Forum
Date: 6/1/2003 6:24:16 PM ( 21 y ago)
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URL: https://www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=593121
You should get a good juicer and your should juice every day ... apples, radish, carrots, wheatgrass ... Get also parasites cleanse and use it. Read all about gradual liver cleanse ... and use all that you can ... Try enema and coffe enema ... Change your diet! You don't have to flush jet ... but you may need a flush after 1 -2 monts of juicing and better diet Eat olive oil every day, with salads!
Patients are usually asymptomatic, and porcelain gallbladder is found incidentally on plain abdominal radiographs, sonograms, or CT images. Surgical treatment of porcelain gallbladder is based on results from studies performed in 1931 and 1962, which revealed an association between porcelain gallbladder and gallbladder carcinoma. Porcelain gallbladder is uncommon, and recognizing the clinical and imaging characteristics of the disease is important because of the high frequency (22%) of adenocarcinoma in porcelain gallbladder. Surgery should not be delayed, even if the patient is asymptomatic, because the occurrence of carcinoma in porcelain gallbladder is remarkably high.
Pathophysiology: Histologically, flakes of dystrophic calcium exist within the chronically inflamed gallbladder wall. The muscular wall of the gallbladder undergoes fibrotic changes. Microliths are diffusely scattered throughout the mucosa, submucosa, and glandular spaces and in the Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses. Calcification occurs in 2 forms: (1) a broad continuous band of calcification in the muscularis and (2) multiple punctate calcifications in the mucosa and glandular spaces of the mucosa. Gallstones are present in 90% of patients, hydrops obstructs the cystic duct. Most authorities consider gallbladder wall calcification to be secondary to a low-grade inflammation, but intramural hemorrhage and an imbalance in calcium metabolism also are implicated.
Calcification in the right upper quadrant of the abdomen has several causes. Calcification can be categorized by the organ system in which it appears; for example, calcification can affect the liver, gallbladder, right kidney, digestive tract, peritoneal cavity, right adrenal gland, and retroperitoneum. Diseases associated with these organs include large gallbladder opaque calculi, milk-of-calcium bile (see Image 9), echinococcal cysts (see Images 10-11), schistosomiasis and other granulomatous diseases, old healed liver infarcts (see Image 12), calcified renal cysts, renal calculi, calcified nonparasitic liver cysts, primary and metastatic liver tumors, benign liver tumors, and calcification in old adrenal hemorrhage and adrenal masses.
Frequency:
Mortality/Morbidity: The clinical importance of porcelain gallbladder lies in its significant association with gallbladder carcinoma. Because the prognosis usually is poor in patients with gallbladder carcinoma, most authors agree that carcinoma occurs in the porcelain gallbladder with sufficient frequency to warrant prophylactic cholecystectomy.
Race: No racial predilection is reported. In regions in which gallstone disease has a high incidence, a high incidence of porcelain gallbladder might be expected; however, this relation .....
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