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Parasites are
everywhere, and they are very easy to contract from our food,
water, animals, even from each other. Some parasites (eg.
Pinworms) can even be transmitted through the air. Therefore, for
prevention, it’s recommend that a complete cleansing be
performed twice a year.
Växa’s
Parasitin+ contains homeopathic medicinals which are known to be
lethal antagonists to gastrointestinal and some circulatory
parasites, and is engineered to effectively eliminate protozoas,
flukes, roundworms and the entire body of tapeworms (including the
head or scolex). Other so called anti-parasitic formulations are
generally narrower in spectrum, and most are not effective against
the many varieties of tapeworms. Only Parasitin+ is this
effective!
What Is A
Parasite?
A parasite is an organism which lives off, and generally within, a
host body, such as our own body, or other living organisms, like
plants and animals. They live off the “life” of another body,
feeding on the nutrients, cells and organs of the host,
reproducing by depositing thousands of eggs, or simply replicating
by cell division, within the host’s tissues and cells.
Parasites are
often mobile, “grazing” in one area of the body after another,
eating the host’s cells directly or draining the best of the
nutrients directly from the host’s tissues, all while secreting
their fecal wastes throughout the host’s body, leaving their
poisonous toxic sludge (like ammonia) behind, further taxing the
host system’s abilities even more gravely. Parasites likely
infect everyone. It’s estimated that as many as 85% of the
world’s population is so inflicted. In fact, it’s highly
likely that you are infected by one or more of over 1000 known
parasites which can live in your body at any one time.
How Do We
Become Infected With Parasites?
Most parasitic infections come from our food and water sources but
can also be transmitted by human or animal contact. Simply petting
and grooming our pets can facilitate infection, the parasites’
eggs passing from their fur to our hands, nose and mouth. Some
parasites (e.g. pinworms) can even be transmitted through the air
and are in the dust we breath. It’s likely, therefore, that
those who live in the same household will all have the same
parasitic infections, whether they are currently symptomatic or
not.
There are a number
of major common parasites which can live in the human host and
which we should be concerned about: Protozoan, Flukes (flatworms),
Roundworms and Tapeworms.
Protozoan
are organisms that live in the blood, tissues and intestines.
Although exceptionally small, these parasites may remain active in
the human body for an entire lifetime, causing multiple
complications.
Flukes (Trematodes),
or flatworms, are likely the most common form of parasite found in
humans worldwide. These commonly infect everyone’s intestines
and other tissues including the heart, lungs, liver and kidneys.
All Flukes are terribly difficult to get rid of once infected,
accumulating over a period of 10 to 20 years.
The largest intestinal Fluke: Fasciolopsis
buski
Fleshy, red and beef-colored, Flukes attach
themselves within the mucosa of the small intestine. Living up to
one year per adult organism, they proliferate easily and spread to
other organs. Transmission is through unwashed vegetables, as well
as fish and pork. Although they normally develop outside the body,
new theories suggest that when "propyl alcohols" are
used or consumed (either in foods or cosmetics), they provide the
fluke with an environment which enables it to complete its entire
life cycle within man. This allow the fluke to migrate throughout
the body, thus infesting every tissue and organ with which it
comes into contact.
Roundworms
(Nematodes) include the families of hookworm, pinworm, whipworm,
threadworm, etc. Commonly found in the intestines and often
contracted through the skin, they, like other parasites, may
migrate throughout the body and present multiple symptoms of
disease.
Tapeworms (Cestodes)
are generally the largest of the parasites. These segmented worms,
containing 50,000 eggs within each of its 3,000-4,000 segments,
can release up to one million eggs per day! Some tapeworms may
live as long as 25 years and can quickly reach upwards to 10
meters/33 feet in length within the gastrointestinal tract.
However, their larvae can be found in almost any organ, being
capable of infecting other tissues in varying stages of its
development. Parasites have survival skills which are beyond the
capabilities of our Immune System, and that’s why they can
generally live for years within their host.
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The Dog Tapeworm: Echinococcus
granulosus
Electron microscope photograph of a young hydatid
worm (Dog Tapeworm) prevalent throughout Europe and North America.
Their lengths range from 3 to 9mm, and there are generally several
thousands in any infected host, including man. They are often
filled with water and are the cause of much bloating, and lastly
alveolar hydatid disease. Eggs are laid bimonthly at the rate of
500-800 eggs per organism. Common vectors (carriers) include cats
and dogs which easily pass on the parasite to humans through
petting and grooming.
Tapeworm
Larvae: Sparganosis mansoni
A larvae or "sparganum" of a tapeworm
after it was surgically removed form a subcutaneous mass. These
adult tapeworms can reach lengths of 100cm or 40 inches. After
penetrating the mucosa lining of the small intestine, they migrate
systemically throughout the body, invading a variety of tissues
and organs, and living for years.
The Pork
Tapeworm: Taenia solium
Showing the scloex (or head) with four suckers and
a double row of hooks by which it attaches itself. This
parasite lives within the small bowel of humans, penetrates the
intestinal wall and disseminates throughout the body. It's carried
by undercooked pork (Barbecue!), other contaminated foods, or by
autoinfection (anus-hand-mouth) and causes cysticerosis, as the
larvae infest the eye, as well as infecting the brain, leaving
calcified lesions/tumors, neurocysticercosis. The average length
is 3-5 meters (6-18 feet), living for many years within its host,
often incubating for up to 30 years before reproducing!
How Do I Know
If I Have A Parasitic Infestation?
Medical tests are available which will only detect some 50 out of
1000 different varieties of parasites, but even the effectiveness
of these tests detect only about 20% of those truly infected,
because parasites can take so many different physical forms within
their development. These “numbers” translate to some rather
abysmal confidence levels as to the accuracy of the tests, and the
probability of them working correctly on you. Chances are, if
you’re tested and you really are infected, you only have a 1%
chance of finding out. Not very good odds to say the least!
The Different Developmental Stages (a-f) of a parasitic Blood
Fluke (Schistosoma)
Parasites generally have long lives and remain undetected
within the body because of their biological cunning. Complicating
things even further is the fact that they regularly change their
shape and chemistry (morphology) so as to avoid detection by the
Immune System. Pictured above are the scanning electron
micrographs of the morphological transformations (varying stages
of development) of just one particular parasite (schistosome) in
the course of its life: (a) Egg in human tissues, intestines and
stool. (b) Miracidium in water. (c) Sprocyst in snail. (d)
Cercaria in water and human skin. (e) Schistosomuium in human
tissue and blood. (f) Adult worms in mesenteric veins in humans.
What Can I Do
To Get Rid Of Parasites?
Unfortunately, most available pharmaceutical drugs (parasiticides)
are specific for only one particular parasitic organism. And most
are generally not that effective because drugs target only certain
areas of the body’s metabolism, or only certain stages of
parasitic development. Parasiticides are generally very toxic,
even in the small doses needed, and thus, must be used carefully.
Because of the cunning survival strategies of parasites, and the
fact that most are motile, they can quickly migrate from the area
of your body that is being medicated, to one that is not, thus,
making it almost impossible for effective and complete
elimination.
Parasitin+'s
homeopathic formula helps to attack most major gastro-intestinal
parasites, including tapeworms, roundworms, flukes and protozoans.
There are no side-effects with Parasitin+. Parasitin+ is
completely safe and nontoxic! Unlike other anti-parasitic
medications, Parasitin+ works naturally without the harmful
side-effects that may cause nausea, diarrhea, headaches, etc.
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