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Thursday, October 25, 2018

Why Enzymes Are Essential For Your Health


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Until very recently we’ve had three main methods for treating cancer. We’ve had surgery for at least 3,000 years. We added radiation therapy in 1896. Then in 1946, chemical warfare research led to the use of a mustard gas derivative to kill cancer cells. Those poisons were the foundation for chemotherapy.

These “cut, burn, and poison” techniques are currently estimated to be able to "cure" cancer in about half of the people who develop the disease.

These toxic treatments never last for very long and destroy the immune system so when the cancer returns the patient dies. Last year, in the United States alone, that translated to nearly 600,000 people who died of the disease. 

A new study from the National Institutes of Health finds that women who use permanent hair dye and chemical hair straighteners are at a higher risk of developing breast cancer — and the risk is particularly high for black women.

The study, published in the International Journal of Cancer, looked at hair product use over a 12-month period in more than 46,000 women ages 35-74 — all of whom have a sister diagnosed with breast cancer. The researchers found that permanent hair dye use in black women was associated with a 45 percent higher risk of breast cancer, while white women had a 7 percent higher risk, according to the study.

The best way to defeat cancer, and all illnesses, is to protect your immune system from all toxic chemicals, not just hair products. 

One way to do that is to make sure you get plenty of enzymes every day. What do enzymes do? In a nutshell, enzymes play a huge part in the day-to-day running of the human body. By binding to and altering compounds, they are vital for the proper functioning of the digestive system, the nervous system, muscles, and much, much more. Twelve foods that are rich in enzymes.