Godshaer.co.uk :: Liverflush

Liver flush herbal programme

 

liver Flush

the liver and gall bladder programme for the safe removal of stones, sand and gravel in the gall bladder.
A safe programme for liver and gall bladder health even if you don't have gall stones.

Prevent the Removal of your Gall Bladder

"Dear Mr Hopking, thank you so much for your support during my liver flush programme. As you know some large gall stones had been confirmed by ultrasound and i had been told to have surgery. I admit I felt quite ill at times during your programme but I am very proud I completed it. A massive number of white spheres like slugs eggs came out and also green and brown gravel. I feel much better and very chirpy now! Thank you so much for helping me keep my gall bladder." Mrs J Oliver, Yorkshire. 3rd April 2006.

ABC LIVER FLUSH

Cleansing the liver of gallstones can dramatically improve digestion, which is the basis of your whole health. You can expect allergies you have to improve or even disappear. It also can help shoulder, upper arm, and upper back pain. Your energy can improve with an increased sense of well being.
The work of the liver to make bile, 1-2 litres in a day! Bile is secreted via a network of tubes to one large tube (the common bile duct). The gallbladder is attached to the common bile duct and acts as a storage reservoir. Eating fat or protein triggers the gallbladder to squeeze itself empty after about 20 minutes, and the stored bile finishes its trip down the common bile duct to the intestine.
For many persons, including children, the liver's biliary tubing can be choked with gallstones. All sorts of symptoms can arise as a result of these partial blockages which can be identified as specific allergies or rashes, digestive problems, energy and mental slackness, but others have no symptoms. When the gallbladder is scanned or X-rayed often no stones are seen. Typically, they are not in the gallbladder. Not only that, most are too small and not calcified, a prerequisite for visibility on an X-ray. There are over half a dozen varieties of gallstones, most of which have cholesterol crystals in them. They can be black, red, white, green or tan coloured. The green ones get their colour from being coated with bile. Other stones are composites - made of many smaller ones - showing that they may have regrouped in the bile ducts. At the very centre of each stone is found a clump of bacteria, according to scientists, suggesting a dead parasite might have started the stone forming. As the stones grow and become more numerous the back pressure on the liver causes it to make less bile. With gallstones, much less cholesterol leaves the body, and cholesterol levels rise. Gallstones, being porous, can pick up all the bacteria, cysts, viruses and parasites that are passing through the liver. In this way "nests" of infection are formed, forever supplying the body with fresh bacteria. No digestive condition such as ulcers or intestinal bloating can be cured permanently without removing the gallstones and the gravel from the liver.

[A further recommendation whilst you're doing the LiverFlush is to do a Kidney Stones Flush at the same time. You simply follow the directions for the LiverFlush and along with the WormLess and LiverDetox Tonics you also take the StoneLess Kidney Tonic. For more about this tonic click here. Or if you prefer, you can take the (Total) Detox Tonic instead. The dose for StoneLess or Detox is the same as WormLess and lasts 28 days (see below).]

Essential Preparation for the Liver and Gall Bladder Flush

Preparation (read right through this so you’re properly prepared at each stage)
You can’t clean a liver with living parasites in it. You won’t get out many stones.
1. For three weeks before your liver flush start taking our herbal WormLess Tonic, which is specific for clearing parasites, and the LiverDetox Tonic, to begin the detoxification process from the liver. Continue these tonics for a week after the flush (i.e. each of these tonics 5ml three times daily in a little water).
2. Two weeks before the liver flush itself begin our specific herbal GallStoneLess Tonic at a dose of 2tsp (10ml) two times daily in a little water; continue the WormLess and LiverDetox Tonics as before. This will prepare the liver and gall bladder for the liver flush programme by relaxing the liver and gall bladder systems, build up bile, and soften the stones.
3. Three days before the liver flush (Wednesday) go on a fresh food diet. That is, do not eat any oily foods. A typical day: Breakfast: an egg boiled or poached, toast (no butter), or cereal with fat free milk or soya milk, fruit and fruit juice, herbal tea. Lunch: baked potato with salad, chicken salad (no dressing). Dinner: grilled cod or chicken, with boiled veg. Drink water, juice, tea, coffee. Increase the dose of the GallStoneLess to  2tsp (10ml) each 3x/day (keep to the same dose as before with WormLess and LiverDetox, viz. 1tsp three times per day). You may drink water, cartoned apple, grapefruit or grape juice, and herbal teas. If you have a juicer: carrot, celery, apple beetroot, cucumber, and fresh ginger may be drunk mixed according to taste, ad lib.
4. Liver Flush Day (Saturday). This takes all day so don’t even think of going out! Take your herbal tonics as follows: GallStoneLess 2tsp (10ml) each before each dose of the olive oil mixture, then at 6pm and again last thing at night (i.e. 2tsp 6 times today); WormLess and LiverDetox, viz. 1tsp three times per day, as before. If you’re taking Epsom Salts: take 1-2tsp in a cup of lemonade along with 2tsp vitamin C powder (or 3-5 1000mg tablets) after each olive oil dose. Breakfast time: drink freshly squeezed grapefruit juice 1 cup mixed with ½  cup organic olive oil (shake in a jar first). Go lie down for 20-30 minutes with a mug of LiverFlush Herbal Tea ready-made with peppermint and other herbs, see below. Do this 4 times 1 hour apart, e.g. 9am 10am 11am and 12 noon. (You can also do this programme from 6-10pm if preferred instead). Don’t eat or drink anything else.
 [Optional addition: whilst you’re doing the LiverFlush is to do a Kidney&Bladder Flush as well. The StoneLess Tonic has the major anti-stone herbs for the kidney and bladder to clear the build up of sand deposits or to break larger stones down and flush them out safely as fine sand. The dose of StoneLess Tonic for the month is 1tsp twice daily. Or you can take the (Total) Detox Tonic (to totally detox the whole system) instead.]
Look out for your gallstones, which may number up to 300 with each stool. They usually float in the pan. They can be small like mustard seeds, peas or large like grapes or even golf balls. There will be no pain involved. Collect them if you want & photograph them.
Repeat this programme in a fortnight if necessary, or make another appointment for further advice.
5. Days following your Liver Flush. Continue your tonics at 1tsp (5ml) 3x/day until the bottles are empty. Eat a normal healthy diet.

Summary. What you need to get:
ABC Herbal Tonics: WormLess 555ml, LiverDetox 555ml GallStoneLess 555ml [plus StoneLess (Kidney & Bladder flush) and/or (Total) Detox 555ml - optional]
1 bottle of organic extra virgin olive oil (500ml) (not supplied by me)
6-8 grapefruit (lemons as well if you want)
Epsom salts (If required you’ll need 75g - I supply)
Powdered (or tablets) Vitamin C (I supply)
LiverFlush Herbal Tea (peppermint, chamomile, fennel, fenugreek, mate, flax) (100g) (I supply)
Cartons of juice: apple, grapefruit, grape, apricot (if you have a juicer: carrot, celery, apple beetroot, fresh ginger)
Bottled water.
Camera to photograph your health cleansing achievement

I recommend you repeat this ABC LiverFlush at least once a year. For complete nutrient support for health take ABCDailyHerbalNutriPowderPlus.

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LiverDetox Herbal Tea
If you'd like to take a tea daily for your liver you can buy our LiverDetox Herbal Tea. This includes dried liver herbs and chamomile flowers, peppermint leaves, stevia leaf, comfrey leaves, with linseed.
"Hi Alan. Your LiverDetox Tea is fantastic, it really makes me feel good and so does my friend think so who loves it whenever she comes to visit and will order from you herself. I just have a mug of it a day." Jen Hayes, Oxford. May 2006.

------------------------------------------------

Hi Alan,
I've just completed my first successful liver flush
using your liver detox herbs! I've done 3 in the past (not yours)
with little success.
I got about 200 bright green stones out this time &
was really excited!
16th August 2004 [more]
-------------------------------------------------

… the detox, liver cleanse etc I did it all to the letter and felt marvellous - afterwards! … I didn't have any big stones just 'grains of rice'. Vivien [more]

For safe maintenance of the gall bladder after the Liver Flush take the GallStoneLess Tonic.
Take StoneLess Kidney Tonic for clearing the kidneys of sand and gravel.
For healthy liver function take the LiverDetox Tonic.

Find out about herbal medicine for treatment of this condition

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Our herbal tonic medicines are carefully prepared on a personal and individual basis for your healing by medical herbalist Alan Hopking MA MNIMH MRCHM FINEH. Only whole herbs are used in our herbal medicines. Nothing else is added. If you have symptoms which you consider might be helped with herbal medicine please contact herbal practitioner Alan Hopking for a friendly confidential professional consultation. Telphone using our freephone 0500 90 96 97.
Once you have received your herbal prescription you can contact Alan Hopking at any time for more free advice (preferably by email). When you have completed your bottle of herbal medicine and if you want a repeat prescription you are requested to phone or email so that your progress can be assessed and adjustments made if necessary so that there is no break in your treatment. To order or re-order, click here.

UK Government Dept - MHRA

General advice to consumers on the use of herbal remedies from the Medicines Healthcare products Regulatory Agency

From the website of the Medicines Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (www.mhra.gov.uk) Department of Health, UK

• Remember that herbal remedies are medicines. As with any other medicine they are likely to have an effect on the body and should be used with care.
• Herbal remedies may sometimes interact with other medicines. This makes it particularly important to tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are taking a herbal remedy with other medicines such as prescribed medicines (those provided through your doctor or dentist).
• Treat with caution any suggestion that a herbal remedy is '100% safe' or is 'safe because it is natural'. Many plants, trees, fungi and algae can be poisonous to humans. It is worth remembering that many pharmaceuticals have been developed or derived from these sources because of the powerful compounds they contain. Any medicine, including herbal remedies, which have an effect on the body should be used with care.
• Treat with caution any herbalist or other person who supplies herbal remedies if they are unwilling or unable to provide written information, in English, listing the ingredients of the herbal remedy they are providing.
• If you are due to have a surgical operation you should always remember to tell your doctor about any herbal remedy that you are taking.
• Anyone who has previously experienced any liver complaint, or any other serious health complaint is advised not to take any herbal remedy without speaking to their doctor first.

PRECAUTIONS:

Pregnant/Breast-feeding mothers
Few conventional medicines have been established as safe to take during pregnancy and it is generally recognised that no medicine should be taken unless the benefit to the mother outweighs any possible risk to the foetus. This rule should also be applied to herbal medicinal products. However, herbal products are often promoted to the public as being “natural” and completely “safe” alternatives to conventional medicines. Some herbal ingredients that specifically should be avoided or used with caution during pregnancy. As with conventional medicines, no herbal products should be taken during pregnancy unless the benefit outweighs the potential risk.

Volatile Oils

Many herbs are traditionally reputed to be abortifacient and for some this reputation can be attributed to their volatile oil component.(6) A number of volatile oils are irritant to the genito-urinary tract if ingested and may induce uterine contractions. Herbs that contain irritant volatile oils include ground ivy, juniper, parsley, pennyroyal, sage, tansy and yarrow. Some of these oils contain the terpenoid constituent, thujone, which is known to be abortifacient. Pennyroyal oil also contains the hepatotoxic terpenoid constituent, pulegone. A case of liver failure in a woman who ingested pennyroyal oil as an abortifacient has been documented.

Uteroactivity

A stimulant or spasmolytic action on uterine muscle has been documented for some herbal ingredients including blue cohosh, burdock, fenugreek, golden seal, hawthorn, jamaica dogwood, motherwort, nettle, raspberry, and vervain. Herbal Teas Increased awareness of the harmful effects associated with excessive tea and coffee consumption has prompted many individuals to switch to herbal teas. Whilst some herbal teas may offer pleasant alternatives to tea and coffee, some contain pharmacologically active herbal ingredients, which may have unpredictable effects depending on the quantity of tea consumed and strength of the brew. Some herbal teas contain laxative herbal ingredients such as senna, frangula, and cascara. In general stimulant laxative preparations are not recommended during pregnancy and the use of unstandardised laxative preparations is particularly unsuitable. A case of hepatotoxicity in a newborn baby has been documented in which the mother consumed a herbal tea during pregnancy as an expectorant. Following analysis the herbal tea was reported to contain pyrrolizidine alkaloids which are known to be hepatotoxic.

Breast-feeding mothers

A drug substance taken by a breast-feeding mother presents a hazard if it is transferred to the breast milk in pharmacologically or toxicologically significant amounts. Limited information is available regarding the safety of conventional medicines taken during breast-feeding. Much less information exists for herbal ingredients, and generally the use of herbal remedies is not recommended during lactation.

Paediatric Use

Herbal remedies have traditionally been used to treat both adults and children. Herbal remedies may offer a milder alternative to some conventional medicines, although the suitability of a herbal remedy needs to be considered with respect to quality, safety and efficacy. Herbal remedies should be used with caution in children and medical advice should be sought if in doubt. Chamomile is a popular remedy used to treat teething pains in babies. However, chamomile is known to contain allergenic sesquiterpene lactones and should therefore be used with caution. The administration of herbal teas to children needs to be considered carefully and professional advice may be needed.

Perioperative use

The need for patients to discontinue herbal medicinal products prior to surgery has recently been proposed. The authors considered eight commonly used herbal medicinal products (echinacea, ephedra, garlic, ginkgo, ginseng, kava, St John’s Wort, valerian). On the evidence available they concluded that the potential existed for direct pharmacological effects, pharmacodynamic interactions and pharmacokinetic interactions. The need for physicians to have a clear understanding of the herbal medicinal products being used by patients and to take a detailed history was highlighted. The American Society of Anaesthesiologists (ASA) has advised patients to tell their doctor if they are taking herbal products before surgery and has reported that a number of anaesthesiologists have reported significant changes in heart rate or blood pressure in some patients who have been taking herbal medicinal products including St John’s Wort, ginkgo and ginseng. MCA is currently investigating a serious adverse reaction associated with the use of ginkgo prior to surgery. In this case, the patient who was undergoing hip replacement experienced uncontrolled bleeding thought to be related to the use of ginkgo.

From the website of the Medicines Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (www.mhra.gov.uk) Department of Health, UK

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Godshaer Herbalist
Advanced Botanical Centre of Medicine
Ampress Business Park
7 Ampress Lane
Lymington
Hampshire
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Disclaimer and pledge

As a professional herbal practitioner I am in practice in conformity with the laws of England and the 1968 Medicines Act. The UK legislative provisions for herbal medicine are to be found in the Medicines Act 1968, Section 12, paragraphs 1 & 2, and Section 56, paragraphs 1 & 2.

Section 12:1 specifies exemption for herbal medicines from licensing provided that they are supplied subsequent to private personal consultation. Section 12:2 exempts herbal medicines provided that they are produced according to standard traditional, non-industrial methods. It also specifies that no written claims may be made for the use of the remedy.

Therefore at Godshaer Herbalist no claims about any medical condition regarding the herbal medicines prescribed by Alan Hopking are made. Indeed, be it a doctor, surgeon or herbal practitioner, the successful outcome of our treatments cannot with any certainty be predicted, let alone guaranteed. Further, following UK and EU law, the information on this web site attach no medical claims and no claims concerning the medicinal herbs mentioned relating to any medical conditions listed. All the herbal prescriptions are unlicensed and made by Alan N. Hopking at the address of Godshaer Herbalist for patients of Alan N. Hopking.

I pledge that, I shall do all I can, using my knowledge of herbal medicines and natural treatment, to help you regain your deserved health.
Alan Hopking
MA MNIMH MRCHM FINEH

All our herbal medicines are made from the raw herb at our dedicated clinic and dispensary at Godshaer Botanicals. We collect the fresh herbs, or import the dry herb. They are organic if at all possible. We only use whole herbs. We are against the use of standardized extracts, or the concentration of herbs by adding more of the active constituent. We recommend you do not use such products in any form (dry, in capsules or as tincture extracts). To use our herbal tonics you should follow the prescribed dose. Any side effects or problems should be reported to us.