Dr. Clark's Syncrometer Science Laboratory Manual
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There are seven kinds of investigations that can be made with a Syncrometer so far.
1. You can detect entities in your body, taken as a whole. For example, mercury, aflatoxin, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Epstein Barre virus, orthophosphotyrosine, benzene. Such a test is not as sensitive as the organ test, described next, but for this reason allows you to select those entities most abundant in the body and therefore of special significance. Called by Dr. Clark, 'whole body test'.
2. You can identify which organs contain a particular entity. For example, the mercury may be in the kidney, the streptococcus in the joints, and so on. This allows you to embark on a clean-up program for your body in a focused way such as improving kidneys or liver, etc. The SyncrometerŽ lets you monitor your progress with any health improvement program.
3. You can further refine your investigation of organs to include:
a) Searching for entities in the white blood cells (WBCs) of a specific organ. This is your local immunity. For example, ferritin on WBCs of the liver.
b) Searching for specific regions within an organ, such as a tumor, calcification, infected area, to identify entities here. For example, finding clostridium in a breast tumor when it is not present in remaining breast tissue.
c) Searching for entities in the immune system of a part of an organ. For example, finding ferritin on the white blood cells of a tumor in the liver.
d) Searching for an organ near another organ. For example, finding a problematic lymph node near the tongue.
4. You can identify and analyze a particular skin site and what is directly under it, for example, what is happening inside and under a mole, blemish, painful spot, swelling, or discoloration.
5. You can search in a saliva sample for entities in a particular organ of the donor. Even the above refinements can be applied to saliva testing.
6. You can detect entities in products. For example, lead in your household water, thulium in your reverse osmosis water, asbestos in your sugar.
7. The search for entities can be pushed to the subcellular level. For example, heavy metals in the microsomes, lanthanides in the lysosomes, ferritin on the cell surface, and DNA in the nucleus. Viruses can be detected within chromosomes, namely in the latent form. This allows monitoring of the virus' presence after experimenting with different kinds of antiviral treatment.
All of these investigations require a Syncrometer. Make or purchase one. Then embark on the most fascinating detective job of your life.
Please note, that it takes some training to get used to using the Syncrometer. If you prefer we can try to find someone who knows how to operate it. Courses are also available.
Hulda Regehr Clark
is an independent research scientist. Dr. Clark has a Bachelor of Arts, Magna Cum Laude, and the Master of Arts with High Honors from the University of Saskatchewan, Canada. Then she studied for two years at McGill University before attending the University of Minnesota and obtaining her doctorate degree in physiology in 1958. After doing government sponsored research for almost ten years at Indiana University, she began private consulting in nutrition in 1979. She continued her studies to earn a Naturopathy Degree and an amateur radio license. The freedom to follow her most promising observations led to the breakthrough discoveries described in this book.
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