Where can I learn more about ICs having no side effects? How is it determined what is what (main vs. side effect)?
For example, cortisone: Using cortisone (pharmaceutical) you get fatigued muscles, because insulin is lowered to keep glucose available in the blood stream. From a physiological perspective, this makes total sense - but from a pharmaceutical perspective it is a side effect. Hence, if I gave for example the... Zobacz więcej
For example, cortisone: Using cortisone (pharmaceutical) you get fatigued muscles, because insulin is lowered to keep glucose available in the blood stream. From a physiological perspective, this makes total sense - but from a pharmaceutical perspective it is a side effect. Hence, if I gave for example the... Zobacz więcej
Where can I learn more about ICs having no side effects? How is it determined what is what (main vs. side effect)?
For example, cortisone: Using cortisone (pharmaceutical) you get fatigued muscles, because insulin is lowered to keep glucose available in the blood stream. From a physiological perspective, this makes total sense - but from a pharmaceutical perspective it is a side effect. Hence, if I gave for example the IC complex „cortisone mix“ to my highly allergic son to mitigate his allergic asthma when he plays with his soccer-team, would I expect him to have „no side effects“ like raised blood sugar/tired muscles - or would that still be the case?
Thank you everyone!
For example, cortisone: Using cortisone (pharmaceutical) you get fatigued muscles, because insulin is lowered to keep glucose available in the blood stream. From a physiological perspective, this makes total sense - but from a pharmaceutical perspective it is a side effect. Hence, if I gave for example the IC complex „cortisone mix“ to my highly allergic son to mitigate his allergic asthma when he plays with his soccer-team, would I expect him to have „no side effects“ like raised blood sugar/tired muscles - or would that still be the case?
Thank you everyone!
Also, it would be more correctly to say ICs do not cause "negative effects" rather than "side effects".
I tried to explain it to my kids as a „spiral of self-suggestions“: First suggestion is the consideration of symptoms/goals; then the choosing and preparing of the specific IC, and third the actual application of the signal. While the „idea“ gets more and more specific throughout this, so does the resonance or „fit“ - and... Zobacz więcej
I tried to explain it to my kids as a „spiral of self-suggestions“: First suggestion is the consideration of symptoms/goals; then the choosing and preparing of the specific IC, and third the actual application of the signal. While the „idea“ gets more and more specific throughout this, so does the resonance or „fit“ - and will not include anything that isn’t intended.
This worked for my family :-).