Im desperate….Can any doc out there help me or any specialist–10 pts best answer!?
took 3200% more than the daily recommended value for vitamin C orange flavored chewables. And the effect was, so much of it was in my blood that it clouded my natural skin complection. 6 months later, using colon cleanses along with drinking tons of water, my complection is ((almost)) back to its natural color, but not quite. Is there something the doctor could give me to clear out the remaining vitamin c toxins in my blood.
Will the BLOOD CLEANSE help remove the remaining toxins out of my blood stream and replenish my natural skin tone?
and please no answers regarding can’t take too much vitamin c, because it’ll pass thru your urine. My nurse already told me I overdosed on vitamin c and the colon cleanse was needed to get it out. thanks.
Number one — you have succeeded at doing something that is almost impossible. You are indicating that you took between 32000 and 64000 mgs of vitamin C in a single dose –or at least a single day — that’s… impressive. Still, it is extremely unusual that it would not pass straight through, one way or another. I’ve never heard of a bona fide case where a person was poisoned by vitamin C — but I see it as possible, so…
Number two. Colon cleanse is mostly a racket. I’m truly amazed that an actual RN or Nurse Practitioner told you to do such a thing. Blood cleanse almost certainly must refer to chelation of some sort. Chelation works strictly with things like zinc and copper. You cannot chelate Ascorbic acid.
Number Three. Your skin should return to normal eventually, as I cannot imagine that much long term damage could result from a single overdose of something that is nearly totally non-toxic.
Number Four. I would recommend that you leave the practice where you were told to use colon cleanse and go to a regular medical practice and get help.
This is a personal recommendation, and does not constitute advice.
Kind thoughts,
Hermes
September 26th, 2009 at 6:56 am
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AoarJdipgV50NrEX5DI1bjLsy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20080626234537AAc35Ak
HELP PLEASE!
I WILL BRING MORE PPL TO YOURS!
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PLZ HELP ANYONE,AND EVERYONE!
September 26th, 2009 at 7:26 am
http://www.doctor.com
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September 26th, 2009 at 7:40 am
You have had an organic acid overdose and should have been treated accordingly. A colon cleanse only cleans your system of existing waste products- that much vitamin C would have killed off the flora that exist in your intestines, causing that enormous case of Diarrhea that you had that day, which purged your system the old-fashioned way.
Additional colon evacuation is unnecessary and unhealthy.
Your skin complexion will mostly return over time without a doubt, but it might be a long wait. You may have caused some permanent changes, but a single exposure is unlikely to do this. See a doctor with toxicology experience. Call a poison-control center or look online.
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September 26th, 2009 at 7:50 am
go to webmd.com
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September 26th, 2009 at 8:37 am
go to http://www.medicalteamsint.org
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September 26th, 2009 at 9:19 am
Number one — you have succeeded at doing something that is almost impossible. You are indicating that you took between 32000 and 64000 mgs of vitamin C in a single dose –or at least a single day — that’s… impressive. Still, it is extremely unusual that it would not pass straight through, one way or another. I’ve never heard of a bona fide case where a person was poisoned by vitamin C — but I see it as possible, so…
Number two. Colon cleanse is mostly a racket. I’m truly amazed that an actual RN or Nurse Practitioner told you to do such a thing. Blood cleanse almost certainly must refer to chelation of some sort. Chelation works strictly with things like zinc and copper. You cannot chelate Ascorbic acid.
Number Three. Your skin should return to normal eventually, as I cannot imagine that much long term damage could result from a single overdose of something that is nearly totally non-toxic.
Number Four. I would recommend that you leave the practice where you were told to use colon cleanse and go to a regular medical practice and get help.
This is a personal recommendation, and does not constitute advice.
Kind thoughts,
Hermes
References :
September 26th, 2009 at 9:50 am
WEBMD.COM
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