Sunday, 30 June 2024

A Quiet Place: Day One

 

                                 Silence Is Golden When You Cant Think Of A Good Answer


 
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Ozone

                                                                            Ozone

 
 
Ozone Is  Made In Nature Naturally
 

 
 
 Ozone
 
 
 
Ozone: Protection From Harmful UV Light  
 
 
Applications Of Ozone
 
 

 
 
Ozone Therapy




 
Current Events
 
National Doctors Day
 

 
 
 
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Saturday, 29 June 2024

Chromodacryorrhea

  

                                                                          Coronavirus

                                                              Sialodacryoadenitis Virus 





Sialodacryoadenitis Virus  = Chromodacryorrhea



Chromodacryorrhea




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High Intensity Focused ULTRASOUND

 

                                                                          Ultrasound



Uses Of Ultrasound Waves



Applications In Medicine 






High Intensity Focused Ultrasound

5000 Times More Than Imaging


Mechanism Of Action




Theory To Practice

Tumour Ablation 





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Heart Break Grass

 

                                  Gelsemium and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the Self-Poisoner






Gelsemium 



On September 20th, 1879 the British Medical Journal published a letter entitled

.He concluded that healthy adults may take up to 90 minums, but that at doses of 90-120 the drug induces a sort of mild paralysis.

                                        Gelsemium (Heart Break Grass)


Gelsemium 
SLOWING OF HEART

Past To Present 

A Russian whistleblower who collapsed and died outside his home in Surrey after warning of death threats from the Kremlin had traces of a rare plant poison in his stomach, a pre-inquest hearing has heard.

An expert in plant toxicology found traces linked to an extremely poisonous species of gelsemium in the stomach of Alexander Perepilichnyy, the hearing heard, potentially contradicting police assurances that his death in 2012 was not suspicious. He died aged 44, having previously been healthy.

A Russian whistleblower who collapsed and died outside his home in Surrey after warning of death threats from the Kremlin had traces of a rare plant poison in his stomach, a pre-inquest hearing has heard.

An expert in plant toxicology found traces linked to an extremely poisonous species of gelsemium in the stomach of Alexander Perepilichnyy, the hearing heard, potentially contradicting police assurances that his death in 2012 was not suspicious. He died aged 44, having previously been healthy.



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