Once in your body, different parasites behave differently. Some parasites eat the food you are eating (sugar is a favorite parasite food), while others eat YOU! Parasites can attach themselves to the body and suck out its nutrition. Different types of parasites can cause a deficiency of vitamin A, vitamin B12, and iron.
Additionally, these parasites secrete waste by-products into the gut and bloodstream that are capable of causing allergic and autoimmune reactions. These can be quite toxic and affect a person in different ways. These can also have an affect on the immune system and further weaken the bodies defenses and make it even more susceptible to illness and disease.
Parasite and worms can cause a wide range of chronic and degenerative health problems. In fact, any long-term cure for almost every disease and chronic ailment must incorporate some form of serious parasite cleansing in addition to other therapies applied. Parasites survive and reproduce in the body, often for long periods of time - sometimes years!
Whether diagnosed or not, parasites can often be the underlying cause of a number of health problems including
- Gastrointestinal upset
- Bloating
- Constipation
- Diarrhea
- Digestive problems
- vaginal irritation
- Irritable bowel syndrome
- Joint and muscle aches and pains
- Anemia
- brain or nervous system damage
- immune dysfunction
- Developed allergic-like reactions
- Skin conditions
- Restlessness & anxiety
- Nervousness
- Sleep disturbances
- Teeth grinding
- Chronic fatigue
- Abdominal pain
- chronic fatigue
Many health practitioners believe that not only do parasites result in symptoms such as those listed above, but that they also may be responsible for a number of other health problems. These include environmental illness, hypoglycemia, Crohn's disease, long-standing obesity, depression, upper respiratory tract ailments, and endometriosis.
It is highly recommended that a person does at least, once or twice a year, an ambitious parasite cleanse.
You can get parasites from the any of the sources listed below:
Sexual Contact
Traveling Abroad
Increasing use of day-care centers.
Contamination of municipal and rural water supplies.
Use of antibiotics and immunosuppressive drugs
Exotic regional foods
Pets
Under cooked meat
Soil
Unwashed vegetables
Parasites enter your body in one of four ways:
Through the nose and skin.
Through a transmitting agent, such as a mosquito.
Through food and water intake.
Kissing