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Writer's pictureKelly Bacher

A Closer Look At Live Blood Analysis

What is Blood Analysis?

Live Blood Analysis is essentially viewing live blood under a high powered microscope that is attached to a camera, and viewed on a screen. Through one drop of blood, extracted from your fingertip, we are able to view the individual red and white blood cells and various constituents in the plasma. This enables us to determine how the blood is behaving in the body and what factors may be negatively affecting your health. This process allows you to actually view your blood, and discuss the results immediately. Because of the sensitivity of this type of testing, issues can often be detected before they manifest as serious ailments.

Layered Blood Analysis involves letting 8 drops of blood dry on a microscope slide. As the blood dries, it undergoes a natural centrifugal action causing different toxins to spin out to different areas, depending on their weight. The resulting patterns allow us to determine issues such as: the development of degenerative disease, bowel inflammation, lymphatic sluggishness, adrenal stress etc.

How it Differs From Conventional Blood Testing

Conventional blood tests involve extracting blood and sending it to a laboratory.

Approximately a half hour after the blood has been extracted, it begins to die. This leaves the hematologist with the only option but to count the dead cells and measure the levels of the various constituents in the blood. They also alter the blood by adding stains or dyes in order to facilitate the analysis.

Live blood differs because the blood is unaltered and immediately viewed through the microscope, allowing the client to view their blood with the microscopist. It is qualitative rather that a quantitative analysis and enables us to determine how the blood is actually behaving in the body. For example, a conventional blood test can determine approximately how many white blood cells a person has, but because they are no longer alive, it is impossible to tell how well they are functioning. Live Blood Analysis gives us the opportunity to view the individual white blood cells, and actually watch them functioning!

History of Blood Analysis

Viewing live blood is almost as old as the microscope itself. However, early methods involved staining the blood, which greatly altered its living process, so that an accurate picture of how it actually behaved in the human body was impossible. With the invention of the Darkfield Microscope in the early 20th Century, scientists were able to view the blood without having to stain it. This advance in technology enabled German scientist, Dr. Gunther Enderlein, combined with the earlier findings of Bechamp, plus Rife, and Naessens to develop modern Live Blood Analysis.

In the 1920's, the Oxidative Stress Test, or Layered Blood Analysis was developed in Europe. In the mid-1930's it was brought to the States by the head of surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital Dr. H.L. Blowlen, MD, who learned the dry test from President Dwight D. Eisenhower's physicians, Drs. Heitlan and LaGarde. Now there is over 80 years of accumulated data by hundreds of microscopists worldwide.

Benefits of Dynamic Blood Analysis

Evaluates:

  • Nutrient Deficiencies           

  • Circulation Issues

  • Parasites

  • Organ Stress (eg. liver/gallbladder, kidney, thyroid, adrenals etc.)

  • Levels of Toxicity

  • Immune System Functioning

  • Bowel Functioning.....and so much more!

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