Denver, CO (PRWEB) August 11, 2010
Westminster, Colorado’s Colloids for Life, LLC, is launching a blog to promote discussion on its customers’ experience, resulting from the therapeutic use of its supplemental metallic colloid products; in particular, customers recounting results experienced following use of Colloids for Life’s products, Mesosilver® and Mesogold®. There’s a branch of dietary supplements we don’t hear about a whole lot, by the name of colloids. A colloid is a stable mix of two substances, one dispersed evenly throughout the other, in a form in which they do not separate. So colloids as a genre are everywhere; smoke is a colloid of carbon and air; milk is a colloid of butterfat particles in a water-based serous liquid.
In the days before the Second World War and advances in antibiotics, which function by preventing the propagation of infection, colloids were seen as being strongly beneficial in the clinical field, promoting overall wellness and benefiting the body’s ability to cope with a variety of stresses. Today, they are used as a supplement, as part of a healthy regimen to promote a beneficial lifestyle and a general feeling of well-being. Users on the blog tell their own stories of how these products and others have given good results, especially in terms of taking an active role and being in charge of their own care choices at all life stages. Optimal wellness needs an active approach; we are told through the media that we need to make good food choices, exercise and monitor our body’s needs. The use of supplemental aids such as colloids are just such a choice.
The web page hosting the blog, http://blog.colloidsforlife.com/, also has a wealth of information about chronic diseases, including how they can be contracted, how the medical profession typically treats them and where supplemental and clinical treatments can be part of a fitness and wellness regimen.
Some ailments, like hepatitis-C, are generally regarded by the medical profession as incurable. For this ailment, standard medical treatment used is mostly therapeutic interferon, with other drugs used to treat often-heavy side-effects of the main treatment, such as depression. Other chronic diseases, which often prove equally obstinate in their medical treatment, such as ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, are also featured in the blog, with discussion and histories from persons who have experience-based contributions to make, following use of colloids.
Stories from these colloid-users, in their own words, confirm that though there are diseases often regarded medically as a life-sentence, they do not have to be a death-sentence. There are stories in the blog that encourage us all to seek life-improvement, with colloids as a valuable contribution to that improvement. They speak of choices. They speak of good outcomes. Theirs are stories of hope.
To read these stories, and add useful contributions and information, more information can be found at http://www.colloidsforlife.com, and access to the related contributor blog http://blog.colloidsforlife.com/ .
# # #