Colon Cleanser
Commercial for Colon Cleanse the all natural herbal high colonic.
Duration : 0:0:50
Colon Cleanse serving Coeur d’alene, Liberty Lake, Spokane Valley, Spokane
WEBSITE – http://healthycda.com/colon_therapy
WATCH PART 2 – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UPsSYw1BMGA
Healing Waters Colon Therapy
(part of Lake City Naturopathic Care)
Servicing Coeur d’ alene and surrounding areas. Please call us today for a free consultation.
208-651-7491
info@healthycda.com
Duration : 0:1:45
Natural Remedies & Cleanses : How to Colon Cleanse With Safe Results
Cleansing the colon with safe results can be done through a gentle process of eating higher-quality foods, using a high-quality cleansing product, staying hydrated and exercising lightly each day. Cleanse the colon gently and safely with helpful information from a nutrition consultant and clinical herbalist in this free video on alternative medicine.
Duration : 0:2:15
Colon Cleanse Review – Colonix Day 46
http://www.ColonixReview.com – Day 46 of my Colonix colon cleanse review and I passed another very strange stool today. While I wasn’t able to capture the entire thing in a picture, I did manage to get a shot of a very large chunk of it. This is really nasty stuff…
Duration : 0:1:11
Incoming search terms for the article:
Intestinal Cleansing Parasitosis
Parasite: An organism that lives in or on and takes its nourishment from another organism. A parasite cannot live independently.
Parasitic diseases include infections by protozoa, helminths, and arthropods:
Protozoa — Malaria is caused by plasmodium, a protozoa, a single-cell organism that can only divide within its host organism.
Helminths — Schistosomiasis, another set of very important parasitic diseases, is caused by a helminth (a worm).
Arthropods — The arthropods include insects and arachnids (spiders, etc.), a number of which can act as vectors (carriers) of parasitic diseases.
The term “parasite” came from the Greek “parasitos” (para-, along side of + sitos, food) meaning “eating at the side of, as at the same table.” The sense of the term later changed to that of a poor friend or relative who lived at the expense of another. Not until the 18th century did “parasite” come into English as a biologic term.
Duration : 0:7:2