You can tell your son he can still do the Hulda Clark liver cleanse if he is
interested in furthering his health.  Those who have had a gall bladder
removed can do them.

Depending on his age, he might want to make sure he has a bone density scan
within the next 5 - 10 years.  Sometimes the removal of the gall bladder
increases the probability of osteoporosis.  If decreasing bone density
becomes a problem, he might consider taking a strontium or strontium plus
product.  Go to www.tahoma-clinic.com  and read article on osteoporosis.
Men get it too!!!

He might want to learn about alkalizing his body.  At 67, I put on bone
density and the only change I made was drinking alkaline water from the
water filter I sell.

A good article on alkalizing one's body naturally without the filter is
available here:

http://www.4optimallife.com/Water-Ionizers-Alkalizers-Articles3.html

Kallie Miller

www.4optimallife.com
Magnetic mattress pads, Water Ionizer/Alkalizers
Rebounders, Zappers, Mental Imagery Procedures, EFT


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "sol" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2005 8:14 PM
Subject: Re: CS>Gall Stones


> I'd like to know what one can/should do if the gallbladder has been
> removed. My son, who is not very alternative, is very far away, and
> lives alone had emergency gallbladder removal about 2 months ago. He
> never got a chance to think about it, it was the first attack he had, it
> started late on a Friday night, and he drove himself to the emergency
> room at 5 am Saturday morning, where they put him on morphine
> immediately and operated about 9 am. His white count was through the
> roof, indicating inflammation and infection, too.  I think the pain was
> so totally excruciating he never thought about alternatives at all, he
> just wanted it to stop hurting. To top it off he had suffered a rather
> severe Lis-Franc joint injury to one foot two weeks before and had just
> gotten one of those cast-boots to wear, having gone through a week of
> not being able to walk even with crutches. Sigh.
> The first we heard of the surgery was a call from his hospital room
> about 1 pm on the Saturday of the op.
> I will say they do it fast and well these days, Tehy sent him home
> Sunday morning, and he healed right up with no complications at all, and
> hardly any pain at all, and certainly nothing anything like the pain
> he'd been in during the attack. I had no idea a first attack could be so
> bad, somehow I had always thought gall bladder problems crept up,
> worsening over some time, before getting to that stage.
>
> My worry now is what can be expected since his gallbladder is history?
> Anything I should be telling him about? Anything CS can help with that
> might happen?
> TIA,
> sol
>
>
>
>
> >
> >
>
>
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