One Drop Tells a Story
You’re
full of it! Mind you, so am I. In fact, we all are. When it’s inside,
half of it’s blue; the other half’s red. And when it’s outside,
it’s always red. But for every living animal on the planet, it’s
totally different. And did you know that just one drop of you life-giving
liquid tells analysts practically everything about your body’s health,
or lack of it!
Since
the 1920’s scientists have been studying the hidden secrets of our
blood. And now, with over 70 years of accumulated clinical research
data, there are hundreds of clinics worldwide, able to analyze a
drop of your blood, and then give you a complete medical run-down.
So how do they do it? Well, there are 2 methods.
Each provides complementary information about your body’s condition.
The first procedure is known as the Oxidative Stress Test, and the
first task is making a pinprick on your finger. Your blood is then
left to sit there between 20 seconds to 1 minute before being pressed
onto a glass slide in layers (generally taking 8 layer samples in
two rows of four samples each.) The slides are left uncovered until
they are dry. An in the process of drying, your blood undergoes
a natural process of spinning as it coagulates. The unique characteristics
of your sample are then viewed and evaluated.
The
second procedure is simple named Live Blood Analysis. A microscope
view of one drop of blood is projected onto a video monitor, showing
your "internal" nutritional environment’. With this information,
the practitioner can specifically identify and target deficiencies
for correction.
This method is an extremely powerful tool.
Viewing an inactive white blood cell in an ultra-dark field enables
the technician to pinpoint the reason for its inactivity. It could
be one of many things, such as: lack of oxygen in the blood; low
trace minerals; lack of exercise; too much alcohol or yeast (pathogenic
candida albicans); weak kidneys, bladder or spleen.
Together,
the dried blood slides and the live blood samples identify the following
conditions: dietary insufficiencies; metabolic disorders; pH imbalance;
free radical activity; calcium/phosphorus levels; metals toxicity;
bowel toxicity; degenerative correlations; inflammatory activity;
enzyme activity; and nutritional considerations such as vitamin,
mineral, and amino acid deficiency, plus many more.
And all this, just by viewing an inactive
white blood cell. Imagine what can be found out about the state
of you health after doing a full analysis!
Back to
Kwan Jai Health Services