Friday, June 22, 2012

Hookworms and Allergies Sufferers

I heard on NPR that people are using Hookworms in their bodies, to help fight allergies...Eeewww!  All I can think of is Thank God I tried PSTEC instead.,

So here is what happened with my allergy experience: We got a huge pile of chipper shredded pine boughs when the neighbors cut down some trees. I was thrilled but when I started shoveling the stuff my nose started running, I sneezed more than 40 times, my throat was burning, my exposed skin was itching and my tongue felt numb!  This all happened in a matter of minutes and lasted the entire time I was outside.

I stopped working, washed my face and arms and went inside. I knew I should wait till I was in a place where I could use the click tracks properly but I had to go to the store so I threw my headphones on and did the click track on the way.  By the time I was done, I felt like a normal human again and didn't sneeze the rest of the night.  I even hauled another load of the stuff and only noticed a little runny nose while I was outside working.  After that I felt fine.

So, you could go online and purchase live offal from a man who pooped out hookworms.  Then I guess you're supposed to ingest them and try to keep the ratio right so that they do more good than harm; like anemia, as they tend to rob you of your iron, give you diarrhea, and other things ...Or you can get your free download and spend 10 minutes listening to the most powerful tool ever and feel better right away. Even if it takes a few attempts, that would be less time then the several months it takes of watching the hookworms move through your intestines until they mature enough to start switching off your immune system to get your allergies to calm down then using the medications required to get rid of the parasite and the side effects you suffer along the way.

Here is an excerpt from another article about Hookworms and Allergies - In 2004, David Pritchard applied a dressing to his arm that was crawling with pin-size hookworm larvae, like maggots on the surface of meat. He left the wrap on for several days to make sure that the squirming freeloaders would infiltrate his system.
"The itch when they cross through your skin is indescribable," he said. "My wife was a bit nervous about the whole thing." Pritchard, an immunologist-biologist at the University of Nottingham, is no masochist. His self-infection was in the interest of science.

You can read the rest of the article here.

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