Blood transfusion can cause complications

Hi, this question relates to blood transfusion and whether it  is useful for recipients and for the person who is giving or donating the blood.

I have written about blood transfusion in my book “TIMELESS SECRETS OF HEALTH AND REJUVENATION” but I would like to point out that the recipient of the blood transfusion is always at a greater risk of developing infection or recurrence of the very disease that they are treated with. In fact there is a up to four-five times, fourfold increase of recurrence rate of cancer after blood transfusions, also there is a much higher reoccurrence or an infection that otherwise would not occur if the blood transfusion had not taken place.

So, I am very, very careful recommending blood transfusion and there are alternatives such as hemo-dilution for example, that means giving saline solution or sugar solution to the patient which has similar or even better effects without the side effects, and then there is auto-transfusion which is used in a way that the blood is taken from the patient before the operation and is simply transferred back into the patient… which are much more safe and better practices.

For the person who is donating the blood there is… that is a double-edged sword… you do not know whether it can affect you negatively or positively. I have recommended in the past for people who have very high blood pressure or suffered from congestive heart problems or blood poisoning that they give all that blood and it is getting down the hemoglobin value dramatically, which benefits the patients’ that may save the person actually from heart attack. So, there are individuals that benefit from donating blood on a regular basis if they have  such problems, but for the regular person who does not suffer from a particular health problem, it may put an extra stress on the system because it is pretty much unnatural to let one’s own blood and it is an injury that then requires a lot of effort on behalf of the body, the liver, the spleen and the blood forming organ, the small intestine, to actually have to put all their energy on that and that means there is very little energy for other things. So, temporarily this can cause  some difficulties, in the long term there is no real damage from that… from giving blood… but I would not give my blood to anyone else because there are DNA codings in my blood that may interfere with that of the person’s blood and the recipient’s body because you are transplanting something form someone who is very unique into someone who is also very unique and the two, they do not match, even if there is a genetic match it does interfere because there are other things in the blood that are close to what you can call cellular memories that are interfering or not harmonizing with the cellular memories and the blood of the recipient.

So, there can be complication for the patient and we have seen that many times many doctors are shying away from blood transfusions now because of the high incidence of serious complication and potential death as a result of blood transfusion so I hope this answers your question and I hope you have a beautiful day.

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