A protocol for bladder irrigation in cases of cancer, embedded pathogens, prostate issues, or other localized ailments.
This should be administered by a medical professional to prevent injury or infection.
This is the same dilution as an enema, but it is done on a smaller scale because the bladder is smaller than the colon and will hold less fluid. Also, in the bladder, we would use saline instead of plain water for dilution.
Instillation of 50-70 ml is the amount of fluid typically used for the bladder. The protocol should also include adding 5 or 10 drops of DMSO to the solution.
To make 50 mL of the solution:
-Put 50 mL of sterile saline in a glass.
-Add 5 to 10 drops of the DMSO.
-Add a half a milliliter of CDS (the yellow, premade, 3000 ppm liquid).
-Draw this mixture into the catheter syringe and use it ASAP, so that no potency is lost into the air.
DO NOT leave the solution in the bladder longer than 15 minutes. This procedure can be done once per day. Each 50 mL batch of treatment solution should be made “fresh,” for optimal potency.
This will not interfere with any antioxidant therapies that are being taken by mouth.
Usually when cancer cells start to die and the body’s immune system and healing response start taking effect, the tumor can begin to “slough off” of the bladder wall, creating some bleeding or discharge. This is normal.