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What would be the very best home liver cleansing for sluggish bile secretions?
When I ask this question online there are a billion gazillion of them far too many to figure. Does anyone have any experience in this field. I’m fighting candida and I’m taking lamisil and nystatin with a very modified diet and things were getting much better but stopped. Then I read about the lack of bile being one of the causes for candida and with my stool color and history I know I could use a really good liver cleansing. Any ideas? Thanks for the pointers!
4 Answers
- EddySaysLv 710 years agoFavorite Answer
This is what a real medical doctor has to say about your condition.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/candida-cleanse/A...
Cleansing your liver by discontinuing consumption of processed and refined foods is the best "cleanse".
If we will stop putting garbage into our bodies they can work the way they were designed.
Luck.
- Anonymous4 years ago
1
Source(s): Solve Candida Problem http://sparkindl.info/CureCandidaYeastInfection - Anonymous10 years ago
Using a natural detox diet to remove toxins and poisons from your body might sound like a good idea. After all, what could be better than eating pure and natural foods. Though I advise patients to take traditional medications, I like the idea of detox dieting:
Natural methods detoxification are:
-Master Cleanse or Lemonade Diet
-Fat Flush Diet
-Liver Cleansing Diet
-Martha's Vineyard Detox Diet
-Raw Food Diet
Look some up on google for input.
Source(s): M.D - Anonymous5 years ago
Bile, a yellow, brownish, or olive-green liquid has a pH of 7.6-8.6 and consists mostly of water and bile acids, bile salts, cholesterol, a phospholipid called lecithin, bile pigments, and several ions. Bile salts, which are sodium salts and potassium salts of bile acids, play a role in emulsification, the breakdown of large lipid globules into a suspension of droplets about 1 micrometer in diameter, and in the absorption of lipids following their digestion. The phagocytosis of aged red blood cells liberates iron, globin, and bilirubin (derived from heme). The iron and globin are recycled, and some of the bilirubin is converted to conjugated bilirubin. Conjugated bilirubin is then secreted into the bile and is eventually broken down in the intestine. One of its breakdown products (stercobilin) gives feces their normal brown color. In the regulation of bile secretion, acidic chyme entering the duodenum stimulates other enteroendocrine cells to secrete the hormone secretin into the blood, and CCK causes contraction of the wall of the gallbladder, which squeezes stored bile out of the gallbladder.