
LIVE BLOOD ANALYSIS (MICROSCOPY)
Blood caries oxygen, vitamins, minerals, and nutrients to every organ tissue, gland, and cell in order to nourish, feed, and energize the body. Therefore it is vital that the blood be in perfect health. If the blood is compromised then this will compromise your body's health.
With traditional medical blood testing, preserved blood samples are sent to a laboratory where it is analysed for cell counts and chemical composition. With Live Blood Analysis, we view your blood within 20 minutes, giving us a clear and immediate picture of how your blood is behaving within your body and what changes can be made to improve its function.
During our Live Blood Analysis we examine a small drop of your blood under a high-powered microscope to study your red and white blood cells, plasma, and other details to determine the health of your blood and your body overall. We display your blood sample on a large screen and explain everything we see in detail. This is an amazing test and our findings are often very surprising!
Live blood analysis is not used as a diagnostic tool we don’t look at a live blood sample and make a diagnosis of a specific medical condition from what we are observing in the blood. What we are concerned with is the underlying imbalances that preceded the medical condition and allowed for it to develop in the first place.
Live blood analysis is especially helpful as part of a preventative approach to healthcare. It is very useful for prevention and is a valuable test to those who are proactive about their health. Many so-called preventative measures are really just early detection measures. For example, having a regular blood sugar test is not part of prevention. The test will only show an imbalance once the body has failed at all it’s attempts to regulate the blood sugar. When you get an abnormal blood sugar reading, it is at quite a late stage already and one should really have had a preventative measures in place years before the abnormal result.
So live blood analysis detects imbalances that may lead to disease and one can then implement measures to help minimise the likelihood of serious conditions developing in the future.
What a Live Blood Analysis can detect:
• Dehydration
• Acidity / Alkalinity
• Lack of enzymes
• Poor fat intake or digestion
• Poor red blood cell formation
• Liver stress or congestion
• Bowel toxicity
• Thyroid imbalance
• Hormonal Imbalance
• Heavy metals, chemical load
• Plaque, platelet aggregation
• Bacterial infection
• Fermentation
• Poor motility of white blood cells
• Basophils

The Oxidative Stress Test
According to research which dates back to the 1920s, by European medical practitioners, they began looking at dried blood samples. Later, refined and confirmed by American Medical practitioners, concluded that the dry blood spot is considered to be a map of the human body. The chart shows 8 rings in the sample each representing a different part of the body. Therefore, wherever the abnormality appears in the bloodspot tells us approximately where the problem is occurring in the body.

These are some of the findings we view when assess
Live Blood Analysis Session

Bowel Pattern: Observed in Layers 4 – 8
This indicates bowel challenges that may include bowel inflammation (colitis,
enteritis), leaky gut syndrome, strictures, diverticula, irritable bowel syndrome,
and poor tissue integrity. The presence of bowel patterns in more than 3 layers
indicates that supporting the digestive system is a high priority.

Dark Centre: Observed in Layers 4 – 8

Blistering: Observed in Layer(s)
cardiovascular health challenges, including circulation problems, stress on the heart,
high blood pressure, irregular heartbeats, narrowing of blood vessels, etc.

Target Cells

Rouleau

Schistocytes
are sliced by fibrin strands inside blood vessels and are connected to microvascular
disturbances (such as narrowing of the arteries and/or turbulent blood flow (e.g. high blood pressure).
