Great suggestions, Paula.

Dianne, Have you considered CS? Most of the people I know who had heart surgery of any type also had MRSA. Because post surgery bodies are often overburdened, it gets a foothold and persists as an energy-depleting problem. It's rare to have surgery and not have MRSA. When the body fights a superbug and normal infection and is trying to heal, less important body functions are robbed of nutrients and energy. Triage. Aches and pains just don't have a high priority when life-threatening stuff uses up all the healing resources in the body.

If he were mine, I'd make him (yeah right ;-) drink chlorophyll with .25 tsp DMSO and 2 tsp CS once or twice a day. And I'd give him bone brew (bones boiled for hours with some vinegar to draw out the minerals--and garlic, onion, celery, sea salt, pepper for flavor) with every meal to assure bioavailable minerals for all his enzyme processes.

Relatives of mine had dramatically different heart surgery experiences. One not only had MRSA but was drastically allergic to the antibiotic they gave him to fix it. Wrong. He said he didn't get an erection for a year. He's strong now--surgery was at age 40, 12 years ago.

Another man had surgery at age 70. Never felt any pain and once the pneumonia left (in 3 days) was fine. Married 6 months later.

Dad had it at age 80 to replace a valve. Idiot docs apparently didn't know what a healthy 80-year old heart looked like and he had excellent insurance so they did a quad bypass too. I asked about occlusion and blockage and the surgeon told me there was none but his veins were a bit thicker at the heart (duh-he'd just had 3 years vitamin C IV chelation) but there were no calcium deposits or plaque in them. Once he woke up from the 3 month coma they accidentally put him in --- they'd left a hole in a bypass vessel and couldn't make it stop bleeding with all the clotting drugs they pumped in--which worked immediately causing a stroke after they went back in and stitched up the hole. Once he woke up, he's been fine for 8 years save for the stroke damage. Energy's fine, brain's addled. Wife only does what doctors say so we can't even try to fix that unless she goes before he does.

Saralou




Paula Perry wrote:
Diane,
For the heart d-ribose and l-carnatine are a couple of supplements that give the heart energy in addition to the CoQ10. /The Sinatra/ /Solution /by Dr. Sinatra has a coprehensive protocol for all heart conditions. For the heart burn he may need the HDL acid with pepsin.
Paula

    ----- Original Message -----
    *From:* Dianne France <mailto:[email protected]>
    *To:* silver-list <mailto:[email protected]>
    *Sent:* Monday, July 21, 2008 11:59 PM
    *Subject:* CS>endomorphins

    Dear Group,
I have a question about surgeries and endomorphins. My husband
    has always been extremely strong and had a high pain tolerance but
since his open heart surgery aches and pains bother him terribly. Does surgery use up your endomorphins and you have to build them
    back up?  My dad had this same reaction after heart surgery and
    never seemed to get his pain tolerance back.
Not many years back my husband was in a bad horse crash and had a
    horse go over backwards on him and then got up and walked all over
    him when he was down.  He had a cracked hip and several broken
ribs and took part of his ear off and limited palse in one leg. He told me not to call 911 because he would be able to get up in a
    few minutes.  I didn't listen and this hospitalized him for days
    and they came close to amputating the leg.  He said since heart
    surgery he feels like a whimp.  I don't know what to think or do
    for him.  Any recommendations would be appreciated.  It has now
    been one month.  I started back giving him vitamin supplements
    several weeks ago.  Mostly B's, C, E, CoQ10 and milk thistle.  He
    also is having taste problems since surgery and much more
indigestion. He is taking enzymes when he eats to try and help. He doesn't like taking lots of supplements. Thanks,
    Dianne