Yeast Infection No More PDF / Book Linda Allen's System Free Download | Page 52
2BChapter 3 – Diagnosis of Candida Yeast Syndrome
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How Is Candida Diagnosed?
Yeast infection, especially when it becomes systemic, is not limited to the area
where the symptoms occur, such as the vagina. That is why treating the
symptoms with conventional medicine will never eliminate the problem
because Candida does not only live in the vagina or around the penis area, it
lives in the mouth, on the skin and in the intestinal tract. When Candida
overgrows, it can find its way into many areas in your system besides the
vagina such as the joints, organs, sinuses and other body tissues and it can
manifest itself in a variety of other symptoms. That is why self-diagnosis of
yeast infection must include a large checklist of symptoms in addition to the
common unpleasant symptoms related to the sex organs.
It’s true that there are no unequivocal objective tests to verify the existence of
Candida infection. Since skin tests, blood tests, muscle testing, radionics,
serum antibody complexes and stool analysis are used to detect the presence
of Candida and Candida is normally an inhabitant of the gastrointestinal tract
and skin even among healthy people, these tests have their many false
positives and negatives.
While a blood test can show elevated uric acid in the body (the presence of
Candida has been proven to produce extra amounts of uric acid), normal
levels of uric acid are no guarantee that you have no infection.
Copyright 2004-2013 Linda Allen – Yeast Infection No More
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