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Episode 4: Spoiled Rotten<br />
bloody toxic and <strong>the</strong>y’ve been backing up waste for years. So when you<br />
start cleansing out <strong>the</strong> colon and you rebound you’re moving that stuff. If<br />
you move <strong>the</strong> circulation it’s like if <strong>the</strong> water doesn’t move you better not<br />
drink it because it’s going to kill you because it has to circulate. So<br />
rebounding also exercises every cell individually toning it.<br />
Dr. Irvin Sahni: Yeah. So <strong>the</strong> lymphatic system is something that I<br />
think people aren’t as aware of as <strong>the</strong>ir lungs and <strong>the</strong>ir heart. The<br />
lymphatic system is basically to some degree and overflow valve for <strong>the</strong><br />
body. So what happens is we all know our heart pumps blood out to our<br />
distal extremities. They go from arteries and <strong>the</strong> arteries go to capillaries<br />
and <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> capillaries—so most of <strong>the</strong> blood that pumps through your<br />
body is constantly bumping through your body goes from arteries to<br />
capillaries and passes back into your heart through veins and goes in a<br />
circuit through your heart and your lungs. There is some bleed off, okay,<br />
and that’s what we call interstitial pressure in tissues. And <strong>the</strong>re’s some<br />
bleed off where fluid, and a lot of it has to do with osmotic forces. I don't<br />
know if you remember—people remember osmosis and basically tissue<br />
pressure gradients and some of this fluid will bleed off into that<br />
interstitial pressure because <strong>the</strong> pressure inside <strong>the</strong> vessels is greater<br />
than <strong>the</strong> pressure outside of <strong>the</strong> vessels and <strong>the</strong>re’s some bleed off,<br />
some loss of fluid.<br />
Well, that fluid doesn’t jump back into your veins. It has to go<br />
somewhere. That’s why some people get edema. They’ll get swelling in<br />
<strong>the</strong>ir ankles and swelling in different parts of <strong>the</strong>ir bodies. Well, how<br />
does that—where does that fluid go Does it just disappear Is goes<br />
into your lymph system so your lymph system is a system of vessels.<br />
There’s different components to it but your lymph system is a system<br />
of—its like—its kind of like vessels. They don’t have muscular walls like<br />
bigger arteries but <strong>the</strong> lymph system grabs this fluid and <strong>the</strong>n returns it<br />
back into <strong>the</strong> system, ultimately back into <strong>the</strong> venous system through a<br />
large duct in your chest called your thoracic duct. But this extra fluid sort<br />
of bleeds out through <strong>the</strong>se capillaries will <strong>the</strong>n feed back into that<br />
system. It also passes through o<strong>the</strong>r parts of your body including your<br />
spleen. Okay. That’s also sort of considered part of your lymphatic<br />
system, your thymus, your tonsils, and your adenoids what a lot of<br />
people have removed as a child. There’s lymph tissue or <strong>the</strong>re’s<br />
lymphocytes and those lymphocytes recognize pathogens, viruses,<br />
bacteria, or things that are considered non-self that your body builds<br />
immunity through those lymphocytes which is what’s effective when<br />
someone has an immune deficiency disorder whe<strong>the</strong>r you believe in HIV<br />
virus or not. There’s certain immune deficiency disorders and T4 cells<br />
and helper cells, different classes of cells are effected when <strong>the</strong> immune<br />
The Quest for The Cures Page 105