This research is supported by Chinese practitioners who use electric currents to treat cancer tumors, who report that treatment releases large quantities of chlorine into the air during treatment. This chlorine release is not consistent with electrolysis which would cause salt to precipitate.
Individuals with acute chlorine imbalance often report digestive stress with excessive bloating in the upper GI tract, typically below the rib cage.
Probable cause of digestive issue, upper GI bloating/distension:
- Long term stress has triggered overproduction of abnormal UFAs in cells throughout body;
- These UFAs absorb huge quantities of chlorine causing systemic chlorine deficiency;
- The chlorine deficiency imbalances Sodium, (Sodium Bicarbonate) in the pancreas and upper small intestine
- Creating persistent, and often acute, inflammatory constriction of the upper GI;
Stress, from any combination of physical trauma, disease, or psychological challenges, are a big factor in the phenomenon.
Revici documented that the upper GI inflammation, top part of the small intestine, was a universal autopsy finding, in animals which were “stressed to death”. He asserted that stress triggered creation of anti-fatty acids UFAs, which absorbed sufficient chlorine to trigger systemic jeopardy and accelerate death from other factors. See P-230 Revici Guided Chemotherapy.
So… The immediate problem appears to be to restore chlorine/sodium balance. There are at least three potential agents for this job.
Settling the imbalance should normalize the ionic balance in the Small Intestine and the inflammation should reduce. Salt, NaCl is a poor option because it contributes Sodium, which is part of the problem. The chlorine is used as needed, but the sodium contributes to the imbalance. This means that either:
- Add Chlorine
- Remove Sodium
- Or Both
Available Chlorine reagents:
- Betaine-HCL – Included in the kit we sent. Betaine is TMG, from sugar beets bonded to Hydrochloric Acid. Betaine performance is usually good for moderate chlorine deficiency. In severe cases, individuals took up to 50 capsules without restoring digestion, often creating nauesea, etc. This suggests that the amount of chlorine in Betaine sometimes isn’t enough to get the job done. This is frequent with individuals cancer, or acute stress.
- Magnesium Chloride - Is a preferred reagent with elevated urea levels, which are a typical response. Elevated chlorine, with sulfur enable cellular mobilization of lipids, and increase NH4, which are part of the detox
- Ammonium Chloride – Is a preferred reagent because the NH4 is rapidly converted to Urea, which have simple detox paths. This is the simplest way to settle the imbalance because it contributes a lot of chlorine without creating a strong anionic imbalance. NH4 is a weak base that’s easy to dump.
- KCl – Potassium chloride – Is a backup option. The good news is that you can buy it in the grocery store as “Sodium Free – Salt substitute” . This strategy presumes blanaced potassium metabolism, with functional potassium release. Some research references suggest that Potassium may swap with sodium. In this case, KCl, will reduce the sodium side of the imbalance. If not, there is a good chance it will likely help.
- Ammonium Thiosulfate - is a catalyst for cellular chlorine binding. It also aids in liver flow.
- Ammonium Cations are preferred in this model because they provide a weak base with a stable exit path, and no toxicity. Ammonium is used in the body to bind noxious acids and is a primary a detoxifying agent.
|