
Breathing system
There is a popular belief that saturated fats are found only in animal-derived products. However, they are also present in plant fats, for example, coconut oil and cocoa butter. Saturated fatty acids differ from unsaturated ones in that at room temperature, saturated fatty acids are solid in consistency.
Animal fats are solid, but plant fats are liquid and are referred to as oils. From a biochemistry perspective, saturated fats are less reactive because all their carbon bonds are fully saturated, which results in about an 80% assimilation rate. Fats with a melting point higher than human body temperature, primarily animal fats, are more difficult to assimilate.
The exchange of gases between blood capillaries and alveoli occurs via diffusion, with oxygen entering the blood. The surfactant layer covering the surface of the pulmonary alveoli includes saturated fatty acids; therefore, for normal respiration, saturated fats play a crucial role.
Plant-based fats should not be used for frying, as they oxidize very quickly at high temperatures and turn into trans fats, which are potent carcinogens. An exception is coconut oil, which contains more than 90% saturated fats, compared to 65% in butter, about 40% in pork fat, about 15% in olive oil, and about 10% in sunflower oil. For comparison, the content of saturated fatty acids in atherosclerotic plaques is only 30%, with the remaining 70% being unsaturated fatty acids.
The melting point of coconut oil is +24°C, while for animal-derived fats, it ranges from +36°C to +50°C, indicating that their assimilation requires a significant amount of the enzyme lipase. The organ most affected by the Covid-19 virus is the lungs, hence coconut oil could serve as one of the preventive measures.
To accomplish this, one must stop consuming solid food and chewing, thereby halting the production of digestive enzymes. The stomach will not secrete hydrochloric acid and pepsin. Pancreatic juice containing amylase, lipase, trypsin, etc., will not be secreted. Bile and intestinal juice with proteases will also not be released.
Along with laxatives, it is recommended to cleanse the small and large intestines of food residues, while drinking plenty of water. When digestive enzymes are no longer secreted, the activity of tissue proteolytic enzymes, which break down the body's protein structures, rapidly increases. Initially, diseased, deficient, and dead tissues are broken down, including on the bronchial capillary mucosa, where tissue-lysing enzymes peel off the pus-containing tissue. The ciliary movement of the mucosa and the contraction of the bronchial walls push the pus upwards. The cough reflex activates, and the pus-filled sputum is expelled.
Approximately a day after stopping solid food intake, the activity of lysosomal enzymes begins. An indicator of this is a white coating on the tongue, which later turns greenish, similar to what happens in the esophagus and intestines, indicating the intensive elimination of pus-containing products from the tissues through the lymphatic system. This also occurs through the liver, kidneys, and intestinal tract.
Not only the bronchi but also the walls of the stomach, large and small intestines, blood vessels, bile ducts, brain membranes, joints, intervertebral discs, etc., are cleansed.
Obstructive bronchitis is a condition where the small bronchi are filled with pus, blocking the path for oxygen. With air not entering, the pulmonary alveoli collapse, and putrefaction processes begin, creating an ideal environment for staphylococci and other bacteria, viruses, parasites, such as toxoplasma, tuberculosis bacillus. Thus, lung cancer or tuberculosis can be seen as a continuation of this process.
Obstructive bronchitis acquired in childhood is dangerous because pus from the lower bronchi can reach the kidneys, leading to glomerulonephritis or pyelonephritis with even a minor chill, progressing to a chronic form because it is difficult to diagnose. Frostbite of the feet also promotes this process. The consequences can be hypertension in young adults and kidney failure in middle age.
In eco-medicine, obstructive bronchitis is treated with general body detoxification, as well as using ground horseradish root mixed with lemon juice, a few teaspoons a day. Thanks to the dissolving and cleaving enzymes in horseradish, which penetrate into the smallest bronchi in the lower part of the lungs, where there is a dense network of branches, these enzymes break down dead cells. Pus is dissolved, irritating the bronchial mucosa and causing coughing, thereby expelling the pus-filled sputum. Runny noses also help.
If pus is dissolved and dispersed with medications, fought with antibiotics, but not expelled from the body, it can lead to gangrene, leukemia, oncology, etc.
The sinuses are designed to warm and filter the air before it enters the bronchi. The bones in these sinuses have a porous structure and are covered with mucous membrane. However, the paranasal sinuses have another important function. The mucous membrane covering the frontal paranasal sinuses absorbs light ions (negatively charged) and partially oxygen from the air through diffusion, directing it all directly to the brain. This acts as a stimulator for full brain function and helps avoid headaches, for example, in cases of arachnoiditis, or possibly prevents life-threatening problems. It also penetrates the gums and nourishes their tissues.
If the breathing process is disrupted, children can become irritable, their appetite is affected, and they struggle with learning materials. The list of potential problems for adults is much longer.
In all 4 sinuses of an adult, more than a glass of pus can accumulate, solidify, and become invisible in X-ray images over time, resembling bone.
The immune system reacts with a counter-reaction in areas of intoxication, trying to neutralize the foreign substance. If the neurohumoral system can control the immune system, the reaction will be adequate. If not, instead of protection, we get excessive tissue aggression in the form of undifferentiated cell synthesis, leading to the synthesis of a large number of cells or a tumor. Any prolonged intoxication irritates the immunity, leading to tumors, increased blood pressure, migraines, Alzheimer's disease, cerebral arteriosclerosis, stroke, and other complications.
In cases of thermal and chemical burns, as well as frostbite, if the surface area is large, hypoxia begins, and if the injuries are very severe, the person may not survive. The same would happen if a person were covered with air-impermeable paint. Cold also reduces the skin's breathing ability, affecting the entire respiratory system as a whole.
Possible causes of snoring include obesity, alcohol consumption, cerebral vascular atherosclerosis, deviation of the nasal septum, nasal polyps, and enlarged tonsils (adenoids).
The first target of the virus is pus in the respiratory organs, which suffer first. Complications then affect the heart, brain, kidneys. Essentially, the patient is sick because accumulated toxins and wastes, damaged by the virus, enter the blood. Feeding on accumulated wastes, viruses cleanse us and are an excuse rather than the cause. The best prevention against the flu is to detoxify and avoid contamination. This also applies to coronaviruses. If the virus has no nutritional base, it will enter the body and perish. If the immune system is strong, the person does not get sick with the flu, because a strong immune system tries to rid itself of toxins on its own, intensively synthesizing aggressive cells, which is already a direction towards oncology.
When sick with the flu, general detoxification should be carried out, as described in the 'detoxification' section, i.e., removing the nutritional base from the viruses. In this way, blood vessels will be cleansed, blood pressure normalized, and risks of heart attack and stroke avoided; in the future, children will not be threatened by, for example, glomerulonephritis, pyelonephritis, as well as other unpleasant and dangerous diseases.
The influenza virus, in the open air, oxidizes and dies within less than a minute, so it is very important for flu patients to ventilate rooms. Medications cannot destroy the flu virus.

