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Lymphatic Drainage

Lymphatic Drainage (LBG)

About LBG®

The LBG® is an essential tool in Lymphatic System Detoxification Therapy, helping your body restore and maintain proper functioning of its immune system defense. In working to relieve lymphatic congestion and toxicity issues, the LBG is an effective aide in battling chronic disease conditions or simply executing a strong preventive health care program.

Advanced Technology

Cells have an electromagnetic charge that either helps to bind them together or keep them apart. Overburdened cells in the lymph system can clump together and bond electrically with water, potentially resulting in chronic inflammation – which in turn may lead to serious disease conditions in the body.

The LBG® works by helping to rebalance the charge of the cells’ electromagnetic fields. Using cold-gas light photons and extremely low-energy electromagnetic frequency patterns, the LBG® helps separate these cells from each other and their accumulated fluids. This enables the body to rapidly rid itself of inflammation, swelling, abnormal growths, and other lymph blockages.

The LBG® also helps in removing from the body unnatural additives in our food, including steroids that mimic hormones and attach to proteins. With proper lymphatic drainage, they can be rapidly flushed out of your system.

Pricing

  • $48.00 per session (usually 1 hour)
  • Package of 5 sessions 10% off: $ 216..00
  • Package of 10 sessions 20 % off: $ 384.00

Uses of LBG

The lymphatic system and chronic inflammation play a critical role in many disease conditions. Since 1989, the LBG® has been used for the preventive care and symptom reduction of:

 
  • Pain and Inflammation

  • Tissue Swelling from Acute Injury

  • Acne and other Skin Disorders

  • Lymph Congestion in Breast Cancer (following surgery or radiation

  • Migraines and Headaches

  • Sinus infections (acute and recurrent)

  • Prostate Enlargement

  • Scars and Scar Tissue

  • Pre and Post-Surgical Care

  • Fibromyalgia

  • Burns

  • Chronic Illness

The Lymph System

The Lymph System is a vital circulatory system and the body’s primary immune defense and waste eliminator system; it is critical to managing the elimination of toxins from our body. It contains over 600 ‘collection’ sites called ‘lymph nodes’ and has a network of collecting vessels, making it even more extensive than the venous system. Our Lymphatic System is primarily responsible for carrying disease-fighting material to cells attacked by germs, transporting the dead germs away, and supplying protein-rich plasma fluid back to the heart. When this system is blocked, we become defenseless against attacks by viruses, fungi, and bacterium.

Primary System

Medical research explains the Lymphatic System as the primary system used by all immunological support elements (such as macrophages, T-Cells, B-Cells, lymphocytes, etc.) to fight the virus, fungus and bacteria attacking our body. It is also composed of over 50% plasma protein and is the major system carrying nutrition-rich plasma protein back into our blood. When the Lymph System is blocked, the infection-fighting material is prevented from destroying germs, and cell-nourishing elements are prevented from reaching our blood. As a result, germs grow, our blood loses needed protein, the immune system falters, and infectious diseases march in.

Blocked Lymph System

With the Lymphatic System blocked, an engorged (swollen) condition may result in our lymph nodes. In a recent AIDS study by Dr. Fauci, NIH Allergy and Infectious Disease Center, a blocked lymphatic system “results in providing a breeding ground (especially for the HIV virus) for pathogenic material. The Lymph System acts as a reservoir of infection churning out billions of HIV-infected immune-system cells that eventually spill into the blood stream, where they travel to other parts of the body. Much later, after enduring years of viral proliferation, the immune system begins to falter, and infectious disease marches in.” Studies reveal that “up to 10 times as much virus may reside in the Lymph System as in the blood.”