Many people today suffer from Raynaud’s phenomenon. Symptoms include skin discoloration, sometimes accompanied by tingling and numbness, most often in the extremities. This is due to toxins that are returned to the bloodstream from the liver, a phenomenon known as dirty blood syndrome . Not everyone who suffers from chronic dehydration develops Raynaud’s phenomenon. This is because the toxins that accumulate in this case are of a specific type – viral waste material .
While some toxins, such as mercury and other heavy metals , undoubtedly contribute to liver problems and also feed viruses that generate additional toxic waste, in Raynaud's syndrome the main culprit is a specific liver resident— the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) . Even if it's not detected in standard blood tests of Raynaud's syndrome patients, EBV is present in the body. Although much of it may have moved to the thyroid and other organs, remnants of the virus remain in the liver.
When this waste material, containing traces of heavy metals, leaves the liver, it circulates near the skin, altering pigmentation and causing dark spots—a characteristic symptom of Raynaud’s syndrome. Thick, contaminated blood and the presence of the virus in the liver cause circulatory problems. When neurotoxins, dermatotoxins, and other harmful substances from the liver enter the bloodstream, they tend to travel to areas with poorer blood circulation—the fingers and toes. The more toxins in the blood, the lower the oxygen content—hence the discoloration. Tingling and numbness are often the result of neurotoxins freely circulating in the blood.
If a patient with Raynaud's syndrome consumes foods that stimulate the virus, the symptoms will worsen. Doctors often associate the syndrome with an autoimmune disease . It is important to know the truth: it is a virus in the liver that changes the composition of the blood - a problem that can be fixed. The body does not attack itself, as the autoimmune theory mistakenly suggests.
Dietary Supplement Protocol for Raynaud's Syndrome
- 5-MTHF : 1 capsule daily;
- Dried amla fruit: 2 tsp. daily;
- Ashwagandha : 1 dropper daily;
- Barley grass juice powder : 2 tsp daily;
- Cat's claw : 1 dropper daily;
- Chaga mushroom : 2 tsp daily;
- Lemon balm : 2 droppers daily;
- Licorice : 1 dropper (take once daily for 2 weeks, rest for 2 weeks);
- L-lysine : 6 capsules of 500 mg daily;
- Nettle : 2 droppers daily;
- Olive leaf : 2 droppers daily;
- Spirulina : 2 h. l. daily;
- Vitamin B12 (adenosylcobalamin with methylcobalamin) : 1 dropper daily;
- Vitamin C (in the form of Micro-C) : 6 capsules of 500 mg Micro-C or 1 and ½ scoops of Micro-C powder;
- Zinc (liquid zinc sulfate) : up to 2 droppers daily.