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Re: StocksGoneWild post# 64356

Tuesday, 04/21/2020 12:50:12 AM

Tuesday, April 21, 2020 12:50:12 AM

Post# of 73685
That's what fixes blood clots, I'll give you another remedy to strengthened the immune system, Honeybee sting therapy, that's how acupuncture started in China 5-6000 years ago and still practiced today.

Do your own research, my grandfather was a bee keeper and a Horticulturist and he knew that through his own experience with bees over the years, he used them for arthritis pain and flu like symptoms, he was hardly ever sick.

Problems caused by nature..only nature will fix, problems caused by chemicals only medicine can fix.

https://www.healthline.com/health/what-is-leech-therapy

Leeches are effective at increasing blood circulation and breaking up blood clots. It should be no surprise that they can be used to treat circulatory disorders and cardiovascular disease. Chemicals derived from leech saliva have been made into pharmaceutical drugs that can treat: hypertension. varicose veins.



http://www.bterfoundation.org/bee-venom-therapy/


Apitherapy (bee venom therapy) is the medicinal use of bees or bee products. There is no research to show it is an effective treatment for people with MS. Therapy with bee venom involves receiving up to 40 stings in a session. Ice is used to numb the skin and to reduce pain.Bee Venom Therapy (BVT) is the therapeutic use of honey bee venom, either injected by stings from live bees or injected by needles. BVT is used to treat a variety of ailments, primarily neurological and immunological, including chronic pain, arthritis, and multiple sclerosis.



HISTORY OF BEE VENOM THERAPY
Bee venom therapy (BVT) has been recognized for over 5,000 years as being helpful in the treatment of diseases and injuries. Early hunter-gatherers drew images on rocks depicting the honeybee as a source of medical treatment. BVT was practiced by ancient Egyptians, Chinese, and Greek therapists, including Hippocrates.
BVT was studied by the Austrian physician Phillip Terc in his 1988 “Report about a Peculiar Connection between the Bee Stings and Rheumatism.” But it was Bodeg Beck, a Hungarian who moved to America after World War I, who brought apitherapy to the United States. Charles Mraz, a beekeeper from New York, met Beck in the 1930’s and advanced the popularity of Apitherapy significantly. He treated people with bee stings for arthritis pain for over sixty years, was a founding member of the American Apitherapy Society, and authored Health and The Honey Bee in 1994, which recounted his experiences with BVT.
Research about bee venom therapy continues today. In 2004, South Korean researchers published a study (Hye Ji Park, et al. “Anti-arthritic Effect of Bee Venom: Inhibition of Inflammation Mediator Generation by Suppression of NF-KappaB Through Interaction With the p50 Subunit.” Arthritis and Rheumatism, 2004 Nov; 50(11); 3504-3515.) in which they gave rats with advanced rheumatoid arthritis low does of bee venom. BVT dramatically reduced tissue swelling and osteophyte formation on affected paws, showing a correlation between the anti-inflammatory properties and anti-arthritis effects of bee venom.
In a study at Georgetown University School of Medicine (Washington, D.C.) to evaluate the safety of honeybee venom extract as a possible treatment for patients with progressive forms of multiple sclerosis, the results were so encouraging that the researchers called for expansion of the clinical trials (Castro HJ, et al. “A phase I study of the safety of honeybee venom extract as a possible treatment for patients with progressive forms of multiple sclerosis.” Allergy Asthma Proc. 2005 Nov-Dec;26(6):470-6). BVT has also been utilized to treat Lyme Disease, as discussed in the 2015 article “Can Apitherapy Treat the Symptoms of Lyme Disease?” by Tom Odor.
As yet, there is no legally marketed venom extract in the U.S.A. to use in BVT.


https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4516920/

Bee Venom (BV) has long been used in Korea to relieve pain symptoms and to treat inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis. The underlying mechanisms of the anti-inflammatory and analgesic actions of BV have been proved to some extent. Additionally, recent clinical and experimental studies have demonstrated that BV and BV-derived active components are applicable to a wide range of immunological and neurodegenerative diseases, including autoimmune diseases and Parkinson’s disease. These effects of BV are known to be mediated by modulating immune cells in the periphery, and glial cells and neurons in the central nervous system. This review will introduce the scientific evidence of the therapeutic effects of BV and its components on several immunological and neurological diseases, and describe their detailed mechanisms involved in regulating various immune responses and pathological changes in glia and neurons.



NATURAL HISTORY OF HONEY BEES
Honey bees are socially advanced insects with a caste- and job-related hierarchy. This hierarchy is hardwired into the genetics and anatomy of the hive residents. Worker bees, being genetically female, have modified ovipositors which act as “stingers,” capable of injecting venom from their venom sac. Honey bees can sting only once, for their stingers are barbed. The barbs allow the stingers to remain within the skin; the bee can not remove it. For the honey bee, this means that it is bound to the victim, unless wiped or torn away from the embedded stinger. Once the stinger and honey bee are separated, the bee will die from its wound. For the victim, this means that the stinger remains embedded in the skin, connected to its venom sac and associated muscles, even if the bee is torn away. The associated musculature continues to pump venom and advance the barbed lancets (singer) into the victim, even after the bee is separated from its stinger.
More about honey bees can be found here:

www.gpnc.org/honeybee.htm
www.ars.usda.gov/AboutUs/AboutUs.htm?modecode=53-42-03-00
https://honeybeesuite.com/
www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/bees/
www.attra.org/attra-pub/nativebee.html

C4urself the 1st Ammendment.
Don't assume that i don't know, and i wont assume, that you have no idea.