Extra
virgin Siberian pine nut oil heals stomach and duodenum ulcers
quickly and effectively without surgery, antacids or antibiotics
- guaranteed!
Gastric and duodenal ulcers healed with extra
virgin pine nut oil: Testimonials
The oil worked so
fast I almost couldn't believe it
I am a cab driver from New York City. For years now,
I have been suffering from chronic gastritis, and recently it
got worse: I was diagnosed with a large gastric ulcer.
My doctor put me on triple therapy (two antibiotics
plus a prescription antacid), but the ulcer did not go away. In
fact, I started feeling worse because of the side effects that
included severe diarrhea and vomiting. I tried a number of home
remedies, too, but nothing seemed to work.
I almost gave up hope, and started thinking about
surgery. Then, a friend of mine from Queens told me about extra
virgin pine nut oil. I was in so much pain I was ready to try
almost anything, so I ordered a bottle. And in just a week - what
a turnaround!
I took a teaspoon of oil three times a day, and
my symptoms started improving virtually on day one. After five
weeks of taking pine nut oil, I felt so good that I decided to
have my doctor do an endoscopy. He was very sceptical, but - guess
what! - I was right. The ulcer was completely healed.
I would like to thank you guys for bringing this
wondeful product to the United States. Keep up the good work!
David F., 47, New York City
I was in incredible
pain...
I am 44 years old, married with two
small children. Our country was going through a very difficult
time, I could not find any decent work, and had to earn a living
by doing a lot of hard physical labor. I was totally exhausted
because of the physical and emotional stress resulting from this
situation, and eventually I have developed a serious stomach ulcer
problem.
Every time I ate something, I was in incredible pain. I was literally
afraid to eat. Even after eating an apple or a little cabbage,
I would go into horrible pain. I had blood in my stool. I tried
antibiotics, but they did not help me.
Two years ago I started taking pine nut oil three times daily.
In two months, my condition inproved so much I almost couldn't
believe it. The pain was gone, I no longer felt like I was disabled,
and I practically got a new lease on life.
For two years now, I have been a healthy man again.
Pine nut oil has completely cured me!
Jacek K., 44, Warsaw, Poland
You made me a believer!
I had severe digestion problems since I was a child.
In my twenties, I have developed chronic gastritis, and was later
diagnosed with a large stomach ulcer.
My doctor performed testing for H.pylori, but I
tested negative. For years, I stayed on Zantac and other acid
suppressors. The pain was somewhat relieved, but I have suffered
from severe, unstoppable diarrhea, and the ulcer still didn't
go away.
Then someone told me about your pine nut oil. I
started taking three teaspoonfuls daily, but after two weeks I
did not feel any improvement. However, I decided to persevere,
since I had no other options left. I also increased the dosage
to five teaspoonfuls daily, taking two additional teaspoons of
the oil at bedtime.
Boy, am I thankful that I did! Slowly but surely,
things started to change. I kept taking the oil, and after two
and a half months I asked my doctor to see if the ulcer was still
there...
You should have seen the expression on his face
when he saw that the ulcer was completely healed. There were no
signs of gastritis, either!
You made me a believer. Thank you so much.
Carolyn B., 34, Dallas, Texas
I spent two and a
half months in a hospital...
About six years ago, I was suffering from very strong
stomach pains. I even had to spend two and a half months in a
hospital. I felt some relief, but only for a short time. Even
touching the abdominal area was painful.
Then, my nephew brought me some extra virgin pine
nut oil from Siberia. I started taking it every day. Relief came
almost right away. After a while, my ulcers were completely healed.
Today I can eat all my favorite foods again, including
beef, sausage and pickles. I never thought I would be able to
taste them again. Occasionally, I still take extra virgin pine
nut oil in the morning to prevent re-occurrence of the ulcers.
Maria S., 56, Plovdiv, Bulgaria
Large duodenal ulcer
gone in 25 days
Last year I was diagnosed with a duodenal ulcer almost
an inch in diameter. My symptoms included acute pain and heartburn.
Having tried antibiotics and antacids without much
success, I started taking three teaspoons of extra virgin pine
nut oil every day. The pain started going away almost right away,
but for the first five days (I took the oil three times daily),
I felt some discomfort and heaviness in my stomach. However, after
I decided to take the oil just twice daily - in the morning and
before going to sleep at night - the discomfort was gone, and
soon I started feeling much better.
I kept taking the oil for 25 days, also avoiding
any spicy foods. In a month, a gastroscopy has confirmed that
the ulcer was completely healed.
Olga K., Kiev, Ukraine
Peptic ulcers are a serious and growing health problem
in the US
Gastric and duodenal ulcers affect about 5 million
Americans each year, and more than 40,000 people annually have
ulcer-related surgery. Each year, approximately 15,000 people
in the US die of ulcer-related complications, the worst of which
are an internal bleeding and a phenomenon called perforation.
In the past, it was thought that lifestyle factors,
such as alcohol abuse, stress, and smoking, cause peptic ulcers.
Later, it was also thought that they may be caused by bacteria
called Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), although many
researchers suggest that the presence of these bacteria in the
majority of peptic ulcer patients does not necessarily mean that
the bacteria cause ulcers, rather than just add to the severity
of the problem. In fact, there is extensive and mounting evidence
of the fact that all of the above-mentioned possible causes of
ulcer formation merely compound the real underlying cause: free
radical damage and oxidative stress.
Helicobacter pylori and lifestyle-related
circumstances are just the contributing factors, not the underlying
causes of peptic ulcers
Helicobacter pylori is a spiral shaped
bacterium that lives in the stomach and duodenum. It has a unique
way of adapting in the harsh environment of the stomach. Since
its discovery back in 1982, it has been studied rather extensively
and believed by many in the allopathic medical community to play
an important role in the development of peptic ulcers. Consequently,
there has been a fundamental shift in mainstream ulcer care from
the widespread use of antacids (which temporarily alleviated some
symptoms, but did nothing to address the root cause of the problem)
to the "treatment" of the ulcers with potent antibiotics
intended to kill H. pylori. The results of this approach
have been mixed.
Although such antibiotics as metronidazole, tetracycline,
clarithromycin and amoxicillin have now replaced antacid medications
as the preferred mainstream method of dealing with peptic ulcers,
many unanswered questions about the role of H. pylori
in the development of ulcers still remain.
For example, it is a well-known fact that the number
of people who have the H. pylori bacteria present in
their gastrointestinal systems far exceeds the number of people
who actually develop peptic ulcers. In fact, nowadays as many
as 50 percent of Americans (and 90-95 percent of people in some
other countries) have H. pylori in their systems, but
only a small minority of them ever develop ulcers. On the other
hand, many ulcer sufferers (especially those with stomach ulcers)
are not affected by H. pylori.
Moreover, an increasing number of doctors and medical
researchers, led by Dr. Martin Blaser, President-elect of the
Infectious Diseases Society of America and founder of the Foundation
for Bacteriology, think that Helicobacter pylori may
be protective against gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD),
Barrett's esophagus, and adenocarcinoma of the esophagus and stomach
cardia - a particularly deadly form of cancer that is becoming
more and more widespread. According to Dr. Martin, H. pylori
and humans have co-evolved for many thousands of years, and,
until very recently, all humans were colonized by these bacteria.
This means that H. pylori must be a long-established
part of our normal bacterial flora, or "indigenous biota".
In February 2005, Dr. Martin Blaser has published
a landmark article about H. pylori, entitled An Endangered
Species in the Stomach, in Scientific American magazine.
In this article, he has convincingly demonstrated that the decline
of H. pylori in developed countries over the past 100
years has paralleled an upsurge in potentially fatal diseases
of the esophagus. Here are some of Dr. Martin's conclusions presented
in the article:
"The possibility that this bacterium may actually
protect people against diseases of the esophagus has significant
implications. For instance, current antibiotic treatments that
eradicate H. pylori from the stomach may have to be reconsidered
to ensure that the benefits are not outweighed by any potential
harm. To fully understand H. pylori's effects on health,
researchers must investigate the complex web of interactions between
this remarkable microbe and its hosts. Ultimately, the study of
H. pylori may help us understand other bacteria that
colonize the human body, as well as the evolutionary processes
that allow humans and bacteria to develop such intimate relations
with one another."1
Consequently, the jury is still out with regard
to the exact role of Helicobacter pylori in health and
disease. While there is a possibility that this bacterium plays
a certain role in ulcer development, there is also extensive data
supporting the opposite point of view: namely, that H. pylori
may, under certain adverse circumstances, become a contributing
factor to the disease, but not its underlying cause. And, taking
into account the mounting evidence of a protective role played
by Helicobacter pylori in relation to esophageal diseases,
the currently popular medical practice of wholesale eradication
of H. pylori by antibiotics may create more serious problems
than the ones it is supposed to solve.
Without doubt, this issue requires a lot of additional
research before any final conclusions can be drawn. However, it
is definitely premature to recommend strong antibiotics as the
"default" allopathic cure for peptic ulcers, if only
because bacteria tend to develop resistance toward antibiotics,
leading to the appearance of new, antibiotic-resistant strains.
The strongly negative side effects of antibiotics, namely the
extermination of the numerous beneficial strains of bacteria,
leading to further damage to the gastrointestinal system, should
not be overlooked, either. When a so-called "triple therapy"
(two antibiotics plus an acid suppressor) is used, patients are
required to take up to 20(!) pills a day. Side effects of "triple
therapy" include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dark stools,
metallic taste in the mouth, dizziness, headache, and yeast infections
in women.
Another serious and potentially life-threatening
condition that sometimes develops after the use of antibiotics
is called pseudomembranous colitis. On average, it develops in
0.5 to 4 percent of those treated with antibiotics to eliminate
peptic ulcers.
It is easy to understand the enthusiasm with which
the pharmaceutical industry is now promoting the use of antibiotics
as a "cure-all" for peptic ulcers. After all, peptic
ulcers in the United States alone are a $10 billion business,
and the big drug manufacturers are not willing to give it up.
However, an objective look at all the known facts surrounding
the problem of peptic ulcers and their treatment points in an
entirely different direction.
Meet free radicals and oxidative stress: the
real culprits behind gastroduodenal ulcerative disease
Free radicals, also known as "reactive oxygen species"
(ROS), are atoms or atomic groups that contain unpaired electrons.
Since electrons have a very strong tendency to exist in a paired
rather than an unpaired state, free radicals indiscriminately
pick up electrons from other atoms, converting those other atoms
into secondary free radicals, and thus setting up a chain reaction
that can cause substantial biological damage. To protect itself
from the damaging action of free radicals, our body uses substances
called antioxidants, which are also often referred to as free
radical scavengers.
 
Oxidative stress is defined as the state in which
the level of toxic reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) overcomes
the endogenous antioxidant defences of the host (Bulger EM,
Helton WS; 1998). This state results in an excess of free
radicals, which can react with cellular lipids, proteins, and
nucleic acids, leading to local injury and eventual organ dysfunction.
Clinical studies prove that peptic ulcers are caused
by a free radical overload
There were many studies done worldwide to confirm
that peptic ulcers are caused and mediated by free radicals, and
to justify using natural antioxidants to treat them. All of these
studies pointed to the correctness of this assumption, but one
of them merits particular attention.
The study in question, entitled The Role of
Free Radicals in Peptic Ulcers and Gastritis,2
took place in Turkey in 2003, and covered 42 people. In a total
group of 42, there were 15 cases of peptic ulcers, 14 cases of
gastritis (inflammation of the lining of the stomach), and 13
controls. All 29 patients with peptic ulcers and gastritis were
H. pylori-positive.
The study pursued two goals: 1) to verify that peptic
ulcers and gastritis are closely related with the activity of
free radicals; and 2) to see if there are signs of antioxidant
depletion in the affected tissues. The findings of the study have
clearly confirmed that oxygen-derived free radicals that can initiate
membrane damage by lipid peroxidation do play a major pathological
role in the pathogenesis of peptic ulcers and gastritis .
The study mentions a number of other researchers
who came to the same conclusions. For example, in 2000 a group
of Indian scientists has shown that infection with H.pylori
is associated with generation of free radicals, which leads to
oxidative stress in the gastric mucosa.3
Another group of scientists, which has studied the role of glutathione
in the anti-ulcer effect of black tea, showed that GSH plays a
major role in cytoprotection against ulceration.4
Finally, a number of studies have investigated the influence
of free radical scavengers (antioxidants) on the healing of gastric
and duodenal ulcers resistant to therapy and found that antioxidative
therapy stimulates the healing of therapy-resistant ulcers.5
All of these studies clearly confirm that gastric and duodenal
ulcers are primarily caused by oxidative stress and free radical
damage. Therefore, effective treatment and prevention of peptic
ulcers must be based on using the best available natural antioxidant
complexes in order to enhance our body's depleted antioxidant
shields. One such healing antioxidant complex, abundant in very
potent and effective free radical scavengers, is contained in
extra virgin pine nut oil (EVPO).
Extra virgin Siberian pine nut oil: a time-tested
natural remedy with a proven track record of alleviating ulcer-related
pain and healing peptic ulcers
After the fact that gastric and duodenal ulcers
are caused by free radicals has been proven by clinical studies,
there has been a massive search in the naturopathic community
for the best and most balanced natural sources of anti-ulcer antioxidants.
This search has produced some very encouraging and exciting results.
Somewhat unexpectedly, the researchers have come across extra
virgin pine nut oil – a golden-colored, tasty oil pressed from
the seeds of Siberian
pine (Pinus Sibirica). It turned out that this little-known
oil has been used in Russia and China for many centuries not just
for food, but for successfully healing peptic ulcers and alleviating
ulcer-related pain. Moreover, the oil proved to be such a powerful
anti-ulcer remedy that, after extensive
clinical studies, it has been officially approved as an anti-ulcer
medication in Russia, China and the Eastern Europe.
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