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Save your gallblader.
Gallstones can be removed without surgery.*
The gallbladder is a small pouch that sits just under the liver. The gallbladder stores bile produced by the liver. After meals, the gallbladder is empty and flat, like a deflated balloon. Before a meal, the gallbladder may be full of bile and about the size of a small pear.
In response to signals, the gallbladder squeezes stored bile into the small intestine through a series of tubes called ducts. Bile helps digest fats, but the gallbladder itself is not essential. Removing the gallbladder in an otherwise healthy individual typically causes no observable problems with health or digestion yet there may be a small risk of diarrhea and fat malabsorption. Get more information from WebMD videos on gallbladder basics.
SYMPTOMS
OF CHRONIC GALLBLADDER PROBLEMS
People can go for years with digestive symptoms and never realize
that they may be related to a gallbladder problem. That's because
they are so inter-related with other digestive symptoms. Constipation
is one of the most commonly missed ones. The list provided here may
be related to gallbladder but bear in mind that it could also be something
else. The first four on the list are most indicative of gallbladder
issues. It is not necessary to have all or many symptoms to have gallbladder
problems but the more you have from this list, the more confirmation
you have that the gallbladder is involved. See Protocols For Saving Your Gallbladder. See This Tea Dissolves Kidney Stones.
NOTE: Consult your Health Care Professional for an accurate diagnosis.
Pain
or tenderness on
the right side under the rib cage
Pain
between shoulder blades
Stools
light or chalky colored
Indigestion,
especially
after eating fatty or greasy foods
Nausea
Dizziness
Bloating
Gas
Burping
or belching
Feeling
of fullness or food not digesting
Diarrhea
(or alternating from soft to watery)
Constipation
Headache
over eyes, especially the right eye
Bitter
fluid comes up after eating
Frequent
use of laxatives
SYMPTOMS
OF GALLBLADDER ATTACK
NOTE: If you are in severe pain, and particularly if your symptoms
are accompanied by fever SEEK MEDICAL ATTENTION IMMEDIATELY. The following
symptoms are typical of a gallbladder ATTACK.
Moderate
to severe pain under the right side of the rib cage
Radiating
pain to the back or to the right shoulder
Severe
upper abdominal pain (biliary colic)
Nausea
Queasiness
Vomiting
Gas
Burping
or belching
Attacks
are often at night
Attacks
often occur after overeating
Pain
often but not always follows a meal that includes fats or grease
Pain
may be worse with deep inhalation
Attacks
can last from 15 minutes to 15 hours.
SYMPTOMS
OF GALLSTONES
Symptoms of a gallbladder attack are often caused by gallbladder stones.
A stone may block the neck of the gallbladder or get stuck in a bile
duct inhibiting the flow of bile or possibly causing a back-up of
bile. However, short of causing an actual attack, stones may be present
for years and never cause any symptoms at all. Biliary pain can occur
in about a third of the gallstone patients (which leaves two thirds
NOT experiencing pain) and sometimes the gallstone symptoms are difficult
to differentiate from that of dyspepsia. The gallstones can impair
the functioning of the gallbladder, however, which can result in any
of the common gallbladder symptoms.
Gallbladder symptoms can look and feel the same with or without stones.
Therefore, all of the symptoms listed on this page can accompany gallstones
and gallstones can also be asymptomatic meaning you do not have any
symptoms. These are called silent gallstones.
IN
THE CASE OF KNOWN GALLSTONES TRY THIS
Drink
1/2 cup of Olive Oil, with the juice of 1 Whole Lemon midway between
breakfast and lunch. Chug-a-lug this mixture and lay down immediately
as severe nausea often occurs when the gallbladder constricts to expel
gallstones. Repeat procedure once a day for up to four days in the
case of serious gallstone accumulation. Stop the procedure when nausea
no longer occurs as this indicates gallstones are no longer present.
Expelled gallstones may appear in the stool as small flat disks. NOTE: Meat eaters tend to have issues with the appendix. Vegetarians tend to have issues with the gall bladder. See Protocols For Saving Your Gallbladder.
Also see Artichoke Leaf Extract. See Dieterata.com for the Inner Clean Diet.
Scientists Discover New Organ In The Human Body
FACTOID
Due
to the power and corrupting influence of Big
Pharma, the teaching
of nutritional science and the use of vitamin and herbal supplements
is
not taught to any significant extent in our medical schools.
The obvious
reason is that teaching this science reduces the use of prescription
drugs.
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only. Statements about products and health conditions may not have
been evaluated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and
may not be approved to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent disease. Nutritional
or health products and data are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure
or prevent disease. As always, consultation with your health care
professional is recommended before beginning treatment programs, consuming
medications or nutritional supplements, and before dieting, fasting
or exercising. None of these activities are herein presented as substitutes
for competent medical treatment, especially if the consumer is pregnant,
nursing, or has any preexisting medical conditions. See
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