Oxy-Pro 2 can be used by anyone and everyone, very safe and very effective. Oxy-Pro 2 ensures the individual trying to clean their small intestine, large intestine, and colon really gets the job done. Oxy-Pro 2 has the power to rid the intestines and colon from larger parsites, parasites and viruses hiding in the "walls" or ganglia of the intestine/colon walls. Many Viruses for example reach areas of the intestines and colon than 99% of products or pharmaceutical drugs simply cannot reach. Oxy-Pro 2 can easily reach these areas and simply clean them out while you sleep!
So why exactly use Oxy-Pro 2 with or without Oxy-Pro 1 ? Oxy Pro 1 completely flushes your small intestine, large intestine, and colon of all harmful organisms or simple waste that has been collecting over the years on the walls of the colon and intestines. While Oxy-Pro 2 can go "Into" the walls/ganglia of the intestines and colon to get all remaining "issues" out as well as being able to remove any larger type of parasites found in your colon or intestinal areas.
Oxy-Pro 2's 6 Powerful Ingredients will work together in perfecting a perfect intestine and colon, ensuring they are healthy and clean while filling your body with an abundance of Minerals.
Parasitic infections, caused by intestinal helminths and protozoan parasites, are among the most prevalent infections in humans in developing countries. In developed countries, protozoan parasites more commonly cause gastrointestinal infections compared to helminths. Intestinal parasites cause a significant morbidity and mortality in endemic countries.
Helminths are worms with many cells. Nematodes (roundworms), cestodes (tapeworms), and trematodes (flatworms) are among the most common helminths that inhabit the human gut. Usually, helminths cannot multiply in the human body. Protozoan parasites that have only one cell can multiply inside the human body. There are four species of intestinal helminthic parasites, also known as geohelminths and soil-transmitted helminths: Ascaris lumbricoides (roundworm), Trichiuris trichiuria (whipworm), Ancylostoma duodenale, and Necator americanicus (hookworms). These infections are most prevalent in tropical and subtropical regions of the developing world where adequate water and sanitation facilities are lacking . Recent estimates suggest that A. lumbricoides can infect over a billion, T. trichiura 795 million, and hookworms 740 million people . Other species of intestinal helminths are not widely prevalent. Intestinal helminths rarely cause death. Instead, the burden of disease is related to less mortality than to the chronic and insidious effects on health and nutritional status of the host . In addition to their health effects, intestinal helminth infections also impair physical and mental growth of children, thwart educational achievement, and hinder economic development .
The most common intestinal protozoan parasites are: Giardia intestinalis, Entamoeba histolytica, Cyclospora cayetanenensis, and Cryptosporidium spp. The diseases caused by these intestinal protozoan parasites are known as giardiasis, amoebiasis, cyclosporiasis, and cryptosporidiosis respectively, and they are associated with diarrhoea .
*** G. intestinalis is the most prevalent parasitic cause of diarrhoea in the developed world, and this infection is also very common in developing countries. Amoebiasis is the third leading cause of death from parasitic diseases worldwide, with its greatest impact on the people of developing countries. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that approximately 50 million people worldwide suffer from invasive amoebic infection each year, resulting in 40-100 thousand deaths annually .
Cryptosporidiosis is becoming most prevalent in both developed and developing countries among patients with AIDS and among children aged less than five years. Several outbreaks of diarrhoeal disease caused by C. cayetanensis have been reported during the last decade . Spread of these protozoan parasites in developing countries mostly occurs through faecal contamination as a result of poor sewage and poor quality of water. Food and water-borne outbreaks of these protozoan parasites have occurred, and the infectious cyst form of the parasites is relatively resistant to chlorine.
203 stool samples were examined from children aged 12-60 months and found that 85.7% of them had at least on parasite. The overall prevalence of intestinal protozoan parasites were: E. histolytica/E. dispar 57.1%, Escherichia coli 34.0%, G. intestinalis 21.1%, C. parvum 8.9%, and C. mesnili 1.7%, while the prevalence of intestinal helminthic parasites in this study were: A. lumbricoides 35.5%, T. trichiura 0.5 %, H. diminuta 1.0%, and S. stercoralis 0.7%.
Latest estimates indicate that more than 880 million children are in need of treatment for these parasites.
Morbidity is directly related to worm burden: the greater the number of worms in the infected person, the greater will be the severity of disease.
Soil-transmitted helminths impair the nutritional status of those infected in many ways, sometimes causing death by:
- negatively affecting nutritional status (causing intestinal bleeding, loss of appetite, diarrhoea or dysentery, and reducing absorption of micronutrients);
- worsening school performance;
- causing complications that require surgical intervention (i.e. intestinal obstruction and rectal prolapse).
Concomitant infections with other parasite species are frequent and may have additional effects on nutritional status and organ pathology.
Pinworms, giardia, head lice, and cyclospora hardly ever kill people in industrialized countries. You'd be correct, too, in thinking that most parasites—like intestinal worms—are more of a developing-country problem than a developed-country problem. But there are five in the US that you probably haven't heard of, which the Centers for Disease Control calls the neglected parasitic infections: Chagas disease, cysticercosis, toxocariasis, toxoplasmosis, and trichomoniasis. They aren't household names, they're much more serious than an itch, and according to the CDC, there are more than 100 million cases of these five in Americans right now.
With the perennial story of someone pooping out a five foot long tapeworm appearing in your feed, you may wonder how 100 million people could not know they've become human hotels to creatures wiggling through their bodies. One reason is that monster parasites—like those five-footers—are outliers. Most are sneaky and very small. “Some of these parasites have evolved along with us for millennia,” says Bobbi Pritt, director of the Mayo Clinic's Clinical Parasitology Laboratory. “They don't cause symptoms or they cause very minimal symptoms, so they're not likely to come to medical attention until it's too late.”
Toxocariasis is one such parasite you can catch in the US. It's a roundworm that lives in the intestines of dogs and cats, and it thrives when owners don't get their pets de-wormed on a regular basis, Pritt says. “To put it bluntly, the parasite doesn't really know what to do in our bodies,” she says. It knows it's not inside a dog or a cat, where it'd rather be, so it spends its life in a continual larval phase roaming through the body, boring holes in any organ it runs into, including eyeballs and brain matter, as it looks for a place to settle down. Once it cuts tunnels through your eyeballs, the damage is irreparable and you can lose your vision, Pritt says. If it goes to the brain, it can be fatal. Forty-six million people—14 percent of the US—have toxocariasis, although the CDC says true numbers are higher because people rarely connect eventual blindness with roundworms slithering undetected through the body.
Pregnant women who catch toxoplasmosis will likely be fine, she says, but the baby doesn't have the same immune responses and defenses. For a baby, it could be fatal. Once you're infected with toxoplasmosis, she adds, you're infected for life. Your body keeps it in check, but if you ever come down with an immunity problem, the parasite can reactivate and travel to the brain, and that too can be fatal. About 800,000 Americans catch toxoplasmosis every year, Pritt says, and more than 60 million have it currently, according to the CDC. That's 18 percent of the US population.
Less common, but harder to avoid, is trichomoniasis. You could avoid mice and outdoor cats to guard against toxoplasmosis, but are you willing to be celibate to avoid trich? “Here's a fun fact,” Pritt says cheerfully. “ Trichomoniasis, [a sexually transmitted parasite], is more common than chlamydia, syphilis, or gonorrhea.” Every year, 1.1 million Americans contract trich, but hardly anyone knows because 70 percent of the people with it show no symptoms, according to the CDC.
More than 300,000 Americans have caught the parasite trypanosoma cruzi from the kissing bug, says the CDC. Some people may never know they have it as long as they live, but about a third of infections remain permanent, and a third of those develop serious chronic disease, Pritt says. It can cause intestinal tract problems, swelling of the esophagus, and swelling of the colon. “The cardiac manifestations are probably the worst,” she says. “Those can kill you.” When the parasites live in the heart walls, the tissue becomes so thin that the heart eventually can't function, and the person dies from cardiac arrest.
Cysticercosis is also called the pork tapeworm. In countries with a less-secure supply of pork, people eat the adult tapeworms in a meal. As it lives in them, they keep excreting the tapeworm's eggs in their stool like a walking parasite factory, and then the eggs make it back into peoples' food supply and drinking water. The Food and Drug Administration ensures that the US pork supply is safe, Pritt says, and we don't have to worry about it here. The CDC doesn't know how many people in the US have cysticercosis, Parise says, but at least 1,000 people are hospitalized each year in the US because it's spread into their brains.
85% of Americans have parasites in their small intestine, large intestine, and colon. Has your Immune System been compromised ? Of course it has! Always tired? Hard to loose weight ? Are you overweight ? Do you have Arthritis ? Do you have constant pain? Just a few clues to know you maybe one of the 85%.
It's Time For Oxy-Pro 2, how can you fight your disease/issue if your immune system is already overwhelmed and compromised ? Do your body a favor and take Oxy-Pro 2 for 2-3months and get your body back!