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Price = $99.00 - Per Bottle.
Lymplex = Lymph System Support Formula is a new all natural herbal formula
designed to support
the cleansing and rejuvenation of the lymphatic system.
Lymplex contains 10 herbs specifically chosen for their lymphatic cleansing and rejuvenating properties.
These herbs include Echinacea Augustifolia,
Echinacea Purpura, Astragalus, Cleavers,
Calendula, Red Root, Lobelia, Mullein and Burdock.
Recommended dosage: Take 1 capsule per 150 lbs. of bodyweight, 3 times per
day.
Take capsules 30 minutes before any meals. Please, Check Below for all
Detail:
When we think of circulation, we commonly think of our
blood, the veins and arteries that carry
it and the heart that beats to move it about our bodies.
There is another circulatory system that exists in our bodies that is often forgotten.
It is called the lymphatic system and it
has it's own fluid called lymph fluid, and it's own vessels
called lymphatic vessels and it's own pumping system.
Whereas the blood delivers oxygen and
nutrients to the cells, the lymph is responsible for
removing waste products and dealing with infections.
If your body were a small city, then the
lymph would be the garbage men, the sewer system
and the police force all in one.
When the lymphatic system is working
well, wastes are removed from the cells and infections
are dealt with quickly and efficiently, often without you ever knowing that you
were
even exposed to an infection.
When the lymphatic system is not working
well, wastes build up, toxins accumulate and
infections become chronic. Fatigue, depression and ill health are the
result!
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Let's look first at how the lymphatic
system removes wastes:
As we said, Lymph fluid bathes all the cells of the body.
Think of it as a slow moving river washing away the waste products of the cells.
After cleansing the tissue,
the lymph fluid is transported through a series of tubes called lymphatic
vessels
and through
specialized glands glands called lymph nodes and other lymph organs
before
it finally rejoins the rest of the blood in the chest.
While you cannot see a lymph vessel like
you can see the blue veins on the insides of your arms
or feel the
flow of lymphatic fluid like you can feel the blood move through the
arteries
of your wrists, they are there.
This means that we have nearly 3 times as
much lymph fluid in our
body as blood.
We all have an estimated
100,000 lymph nodes and
approximately 45
pints of
lymph fluid in our body as blood.
Let's first look at the lymph nodes.
They are found throughout the body,
with clusters of
them in the Groin, Neck and Armpits.
Inside the lymph nodes special white
blood vessels called lymphocytes that produce antibodies.
Antibodies are
molecules that are attached to infectious
microorganism
and foreign debris.
These antibodies are signals to the rest of the white
blood cells
in the immune system that
whatever they are attached to must be destroyed and
removed from the body.
These antibodies are critical to our Immune System.
Without them, our Immune System is blind and does not know what to attack.
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While most of the 100,000 lymph nodes in
the body are general nodes, there are
a few that have special functions.
The first special lymph nodes we talk
about are the Tonsils. When you get a sore throat,
and you feel swollen glands in your neck, these are your Tonsils.
Tonsils are lymph nodes and you are born
with three pairs of them. As late as the 1970's
1/3rd of all operations performed in the USA under General Anesthesia were for the removal
of
Tonsils. It is now recognized that
rather than cut out swollen lymph nodes.
It is better to improve one's health so that they do not swell up in the first place.
Swollen Tonsils are simply tonsils that
are working overtime trying to produce
antibodies and clean the throat.
Tonsils keep the throat healthy and
balance the Immune System. This
is an important and difficult job.
The mouth is the dirtiest and most
infected place in the human body. Every tooth has
millions
of bacteria living on it. This is the plaque we brush off every time we
brush our teeth.
The bacteria that grow on teeth have been associated with many diseases including heart disease.
With
every swallow of food we transfer these bacteria down our throat. Now the
stomach has
acids to kill
these bacteria, but the throat must continually deal with this bacterial
onslaught and it is the Tonsils
that come to our defense.
While there are some extreme cases where
chronically infected Tonsils
must be
surgically removed. This
should be avoided if at all possible.
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The spleen is another specialized lymph
node and one of it's jobs is to filter the blood of foreign
substances and the 500 billion worn out blood cells that die every hour.
The spleen also stores
red blood cells and releases blood to the body in case of extreme blood loss.
Many people
believe that it is the Liver that filters the blood. Rather than filter
the blood,
the Liver instead creates substances that combine with toxins that helps them get
removed from the
body.
The word "filter" is more appropriately given to the Spleen than to the Liver.
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The Thymus gland is another organ of the
lymph system and it is located behind your breastbone
in the center of your chest. The Thymus is where T Cells come from and as
such, play a very
important role in immunity. Unfortunately, the Thymus typically shrinks to
a
fraction of its size by adulthood.
The Appendix is another part of the
lymph system. There are on average 500.000 Appendixes
surgically cut out of Americans every years. For a long time we thought
that the Appendix
was a useless organ left over from evolution that served no purpose.
We now know that to be incorrect.
It turns out that the Appendix is a reserve for good colonic flora. In the
event of an infection,
or in modern times antibiotics, destroy the good bacteria in
the colon, all is not lost.
The good bacteria held in the appendix can come out and repopulate the colon.
In the same way that the tonsils keep
the throat healthy, the appendix keeps the colon healthy.
Unlike the tonsils, when the appendix needs to be removed, it is a
life-threatening event and
surgery must be quickly performed, but one must still ask, what can we do to
keep the
appendix healthier so that it might not require surgery in the first place?
Maybe --- More fiber in the Diet?
Now that we know what the lymph system
does, the question remains, how does the lymph fluid
move
through the body? The circulatory system has the heart to push the blood
along.
The Lymphatic
system relies almost entirely on the movement of our muscles to get from place
to place. While the
lymph does get a little boost from the back pressure of the blood supply
and the
movement of the
diaphragm as we breathe, without exercise,
the lymphatic decreases by 94%.
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For thousands of years, humans had
to exercise. Before cars, we had to walk.
Before gas stoves,
we had to chop wood. Before plumbing, we had to carry water.
Before
grocery stores we had to grow
crops.
Even if we were not in a physically demanding job like being a
farmer or a mason or a caarpenter,
just day to day living made you move about.
Nowadays, many people spend more than half their lives without getting any exercise at all.
We already spend 8 hours a day sleeping in a bed. If you work from a desk, add another 8 hours of inactivity.
Add to that our daily commute and it
becomes apparent, the average American now spends
a
vast majority of his or her time in a state of
physical inactivity.
While being relieved of the backbreaking
manual labor that made up much of pre-industrial existence
has
certainly been a blessing in many ways, it has
also had a negative effect on
our bodies.
We are meant to move, and without
movement, the fluids of our bodies become stagnant,
and
specifically our lymph fluids. MOVE THE BODY!
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This is one of the many reasons that
exercise is important for our health. When you see small
children locking their legs in a chair, this is because they instinctively want
to move their lymph.
Unfortunately, this behavior is not encouraged in most schools.
If you
have a sedentary desk
job, get up every few minutes and move about. It is good for you!
Try to get at least 5 minutes
of movement every hour of your waking day.
There is another way in which we can
support our lymphatic system and that is with bitter foods.
If you taste nearly any medical herb, you will notice that it is bitter.
Bitter flavors stimulate the
Immune System in the same way sweet flavors suppress it.
Fruits and vegetables 5,000 years ago
were more bitter and less sweet than they are
today.
An example of this is a crabapple. Thousands of years ago,
all apples tasted like crabapples.
You never had one? They are small, bitter apples that you'd rather
spit out than swallow.
Over thousands of years, farmers picked the biggest and sweetest crab apples to
grow and in this
manner bred what are now known as the modern apple. While these sweet
apples taste good,
they have been stripped of their medicinal lymphatic stimulating qualities and
their excessive
sweetness encourages infections by increasing our blood sugar levels as well as
directly
suppressing our Immune Systems.
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For all these reasons, we have developed
LYMPLEX.
Let us know if you have looked at, studied all of the above, and have questions.
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Please do check the site below -- it is about
the CASTER OIL PACK
It will help your necessary Health Knowledge!
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2518 WEXFORD BAYNE ROAD, SEWICKLEY, PA 15143-8609
PHONE = 724-935-1847 FAX= 724-935-0035
Email = amicos@aol.com
Thank you very much for the time and the visit.
Accessed
Times
Updated June, 2009
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