Kidney Failure Recovery Stories



Kidney Failure Recovery Stories

This blog is made for the purpose of sharing some remarkable Kidney failure recovery I have witnessed in my country. I hope to share some tips and the herbal remedies they using that make them well and recovered.
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Recovery Story 1.



It happened last December of 2014, I went on vacation that month in my hometown Digos City, Philippines.


               
            Learn what they take to recover. Visit my blog at http://forprohealthliving.blogspot.com

A friend of mine Ruby, who is a driver of this Dialysis patient relayed to me the story. He said he was serving the Guy patient, driving for him from his home to the Dialysis Center and back to his home for four years.



One day the Sister of this Patient went home from abroad, from Indonesia. She went home with an friend an Indonesia Guy. This Indonesian Guy told the brother (the patient), " In Indonesia there is this one type of grass or herb which have been known for it healing ability for Kidney decease", we can look for thisplant here in your place. Its a common grass in Asian countries like Philippines."


The following day,7am in the morning they starting looking for this kind of grass. Luckily they found lots of them along the provincial road sides. The patient was told that " he must boil the leaves and the stem of the grass with half to a liter of water, afterwards remove the leaves and put it in a small container. Saying "make this as you drinking water for 4 months and observe what will happen.



To their amazement, he has been urinating more and more each month, his Doctor started to notice it and they keep on monitoring his blood chemistry, uric acid levels turned to normal level, potassium and phosphorus are getting normal after the succeeding month. Until, the fourth month came, he was very very happy and thankful because the lab results shows that he has fully recovered from a renal failure. And now he is back to his normal life.



Here are some facts about the plant:


Scientific names Common names 
Phyllanthus niruri Linn.Kurukalunggai (Bik.)
Phyllanthus carolinianus BlancoMalakirum-kirum (S. L. Bis.)
Phyllanthus kirganelia BlancoMalakinum-kirum (Bis.)
Ku wei ye xia zhu (Chin.)Ngingihel (If.)
Sampasampalukan (Tag.)
San Pedro (P. Bis.)
Surusampalok (Bik.)
Talikod (Ilk.)
Taltalikod (Ilk.)
Turutalikod (Bik.)
Seed-under-leaf (Engl.)
Stone-breaker (Engl.)
Ye xia zhu (Chin.)
The following names could be applicable to Phyllanthus niruri Thunb. (which may be Phyllanthus urinaria L.), an Asian species, instead of Phyllanthus niruri L. which appears to be rather from the Americas. MMPND
There seems to be much disagreement in scientific names synonyms for Phyllanthus niruri L. Phyllanthus amars Shumacher et Thonning.

Other vernacular names
CHINESE: Zhu zi cao, Yue xia zhu, Be bei cai, Xiao fan hun, Ba be cai, Xiao fan hun
FRENCH: Quinine creole.
HINDI: Bhuiaonla.
PORTUGUESE: Quebrapedra.
SANSKRIT: Ajata, Amala, Bbumyamalaki, Sukshmadala, Vituntika.
SPANISH: Chanca piedra, Quinina criolla.

UsesFolkloric
- Decoction of entire plant used as tonic for the stomach.
- Bitter fruit used for tubercular ulcers, wounds, sores, scabies, and ringworm.
- Used for kidney stones and gallstones.
- Fresh root used as remedy for jaundice.
- Used as emmenagogue and febrifuge.
- Also used for genitourinary problems: renal colic, cystitis, prostate problems, jaundice, constipation, dyspepsia, gonorrhea.
- Young leaves used for fevers.
- Chewing of fresh leaves used for hiccups.
- Used for baths in newborns.
- Decoction used for coughs in infants.
- Infusion of root and leaves used as tonic and cold, taken cold in repeated doses.
- In Santo Domingo and Puerto Rico, bitter decoction of leaves and roots used for intermittent fevers.
- Infusion of young shoots and leaves given for dysentery.
- Salted poultice of leaves used for scabby affections; without salt, applied to bruises and wounds; and made with rice water, poultice lessens edematous swellings and ulcers.
- As a Tamil galactagogue, root bruised with a little water and administered with milk.
- In Indo-China, used as diuretic, depurant, and 
antisyphilitic.
- In the Konkan rubbed down with rice-water and used as a remedy for menorrhagia.
- In La Reunion, used for blenorrhagia, dropsy, and diarrhea.
- In Haiti, decoction of roots and leaves used for stomachaches.
- In the Gold Coast and India, pounded leaves used for gonorrhea.
- In Sind, roots, leaves, and young shoots are much employed in gonorrhea and other genito-urinary affections.
- Bark used as purgative.
- Milky juice applied to offensive sores.
- In Unani medicine, used for sores and chronic dysentery; fruits used for tubercular ulcers, sores, scabies and ringworm.
- In Ayurveda, used for asthma, bronchitis, leprosy, anemia hiccups and as diuretic.
- In different parts of India, used for snake bites.
- In South America, used to treat excess uric acid.
Others
Dye: In India, decoction of leaves and stem used for dyeing cotton black.
Fish poison: From the phyllanthin, plant is used as fish poison.


Courtesy of:


reference : http://www.stuartxchange.com/SampaSampalukan.html




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