I am puzzled how serrapeptase can do anything with a completely blocked
vein or artery, how can it even get there to do anything? I liken it to
a carburetor that one has allowed the gas to dry out of, and has stopped
it up with the varnish left behind. I have put gas back into such
carburetors for months, and the small orifice still will not clear
simply because the gas is unable to make it into there. If you can get
ANY flow through, then it will clean out quickly, getting the initial
flow is the hard part. But if serrapeptase will indeed unblock a
completely blocked artery, then that would be great. I just don't see
how it could though. Maybe even when they are considered completely
blocked, they still have a very small amount of flow through them.
Marshall
Trem wrote:
Steve,
I have a complete blockage on the left side and had an endarterectomy
several years ago but it's still blocked above the repair site. I was
and am hoping to somehow dissolve the blockage before I croak. sure
hope it works so I take it t20,000 units twice daily.
Trem
----- Original Message -----
*From:* Norton, Steve <mailto:[email protected]>
*To:* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
*Sent:* Sunday, August 23, 2009 2:01 PM
*Subject:* Re: CS>Re: Liposomal Encapsulation
I agree.
l was commenting on the post about Nattokinase for a partial
carotid artery blockage.
- Steve N
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From*: Trem <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
*To*: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
*Sent*: Sun Aug 23 14:46:19 2009
*Subject*: Re: CS>Re: Liposomal Encapsulation
Hi Steve,
I think Serrapeptase is best for cleaning plaque out. Here's a
link showing Hans Niepers work many tears ago.
http://www.life-enthusiast.com/enzyme/serrapeptase.pdf
Trem
----- Original Message -----
*From:* Norton, Steve <mailto:[email protected]>
*To:* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
*Sent:* Sunday, August 23, 2009 12:30 PM
*Subject:* Re: CS>Re: Liposomal Encapsulation
Nattokinese could be more effective in that specific instance
because it dissolves blood clots and not because it dissolves
arterial plaque. I believe it does not dissolve arterial plaque.
- Steve N
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From*: Dorothy Fitzpatrick <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
*To*: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
*Sent*: Sun Aug 23 13:49:10 2009
*Subject*: Re: CS>Re: Liposomal Encapsulation
I'm not sure about nattokinese either sol, as I read Dr Wong
on this and he didn't like the blood thinning properties of
it. dee
On 23 Aug 2009, at 19:04, sol wrote:
Dorothy Fitzpatrick wrote:
Do you have any info on Serrapeptase Steve?
I'm not Steve, but I have a friend who has tried Serrapeptase
but gets better results with Nattokinase. (she has some kind
of partial carotid artery blockage).
sol
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