There are iris signs associated with potential and functional kidney dis-ease.
Whitish-gray smeary clouds and plaque throughout the entire iris indicate an abnormal uric acid metabolism.
This whitish-gray plaque is hereditary (I have it), and this “constitutional type” of iris is known as the uric acid diathesis.
Other names include …
(1) urinary diathesis,
(2) uratic diathesis, or
(3) rheumatic-uric acidic diathesis.
This type of iris is indicative of potential or functional gout, gouty arthritis, underactive kidneys, or kidney stones.
(Regular readers of my blog know I “beat” my case of “incurable arthritic gout” way back in 1970.)
Alien yellow pigments (back to “yellow” again!) in the iris often denote functional kidney disorders.
Uro-roseines, produced when protein putrefies in the lower bowel, and thiochrome, created when vitamin B-1 oxidizes in the colon, are both toxic to the kidneys.
These yellow pigments, sometimes accompanied with a rose-colored pigment, are topolabile (topographically mobile – not confined to a specific reflex point; they can be found anywhere on the iris).
Most kidney markings in the iris refer to the renal medulla.
Cortex markings are few and far between.
Lacunar, cryptoform, honeycomb, linear, or punctate markings located in either the renal nephron zone or renal pyelon zone indicate hereditary kidney conditions.
Black tar pigments in the renal zone, especially when associated with defect markings and/or transversals, suggest cancer.
Pupillary abnormalities above the renal zone may indicate functional kidney disturbances.
These “pupillo-dystoniae” can relate to the reno-lumbar syndrome, meticulously researched by J. Deck and W. Lorenzen.
By the way, the “reno-lumbar syndrome” is a significant validation of the relationship between the kidneys, lumbar vertebrae, and the Manipuraka chakra.
Iris signs for the heart are often associated with kidney markings.
This association has been labeled the cardio-renal syndrome by J. Deck.
Adano Ley (Swami Nitty-Gritty) referred to the kidneys as a “shunt” for the heart, and that people with cardiac disorders are likely to end up on dialysis.
TheTHUMB is in the Sonic Zone and is in “geometric body resonance” with both the EAR and the KIDNEY.
Mythumb/ear/kidney reflexology chart will be available to the future students of Atom’s School of Self-Healing.
Iridology (iris analysis) will – of course – be part of the curriculum.
My e-books and e-booklets are available at …
Wellness-Wagon.com
FB: Atom’s School of Self-Healing at Wellness-Wagon.com
'Iridology (Iris Analysis) & the Kidneys' have 8 comments
April 19, 2012 @ 1:14 pm atomb
Re: Is jogging hard on the kidneys?
Yes No Maybe. Most folks don’t know “how” to jog.
Swami Nitty-Gritty told me, “Thank God for pizza-eaters and joggers. They keep us reflex therapists in business!”
April 19, 2012 @ 2:02 pm atomb
Re: Why is spinach better eaten raw than cooked? Is low heat sauteing not good either?
Adano Ley (Swami Nitty-Gritty) advised, “Don’t eat cooked spinach. It contains oxalic acid.”
Low-heat “dextrinization” is OK, but sauteing is not.
Adano recommended eating raw spinach at a time (1970s and 1980s) when everyone else was teaching that oxalic acid is destroyed by cooking spinach.
When asked why, Adano said the oxalic acid in spinach, unlike the oxalic acid in rhubarb and most other foods, crystallizes when exposed to heat.
Health researchers are catching up to Adano …
Denise Mortimore (The Complete Illustrated Guide to Nutritional Healing, 1998) wrote …
“When spinach is cooked, the oxalic acid forms into crystals and the spinach’s beneficial properties are lost. Always eat spinach raw.”
Incidentally, spinach doesn’t really contain as much iron as most folks think.
Dale Robertson (“Truth about spinach,” Mount Pleasant Daily Tribune, Jan. 18, 2004) wrote …
“It’s a Little Known Fact that it was an error in printing a simple error in the placing of a decimal point in that official government nutrition document [“The United States Government Food Source Official Reference Manual” of 1870] which mistakenly showed that spinach had nearly 10 times more iron than other vegetables.”
Spinach is going high-tech …
Scientists are experimenting with spinach juice (and also green tea) as a liquid laser lens.
Photosystem I biopigments from spinach may soon partially restore the sight of people with degenerative diseases of the retina such as macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa.
Duncan Graham-Rowe (“Popeye cure for blindness,” New Scientist, May 1, 2004) wrote …
“A truly extraordinary cure for some forms of blindness is being proposed. The idea is to add light-absorbing pigments from spinach to nerve cells in the retina, to make the nerve cells fire when struck by light. Eli Greenbaum’s team at the Oak Ridge National Laboratories in Tennessee has been exploring this possibility for several years. In their latest experiments, the researchers have shown that adding plant pigments to human cells makes the cells respond to light. The technique would restore only limited vision at best people would be colour-blind, for instance but Greenbaum thinks it could provide far better resolution than the electronic retinal implants being developed.”
April 19, 2012 @ 2:18 pm atomb
Re: You mentioned that eating foods from 2 zones at the transition time (i.e., cacao and strawberries between 12:30-1:00 p.m.) is not good if you always do it? Is it the cacao that’s bad and the strawberries are ok because it’s “better to be early for the train?”
Cacao (Zone 1) and strawberries (Zone 2) combine from 11:30 a.m. to noon.
ANY combination of Growth Zones eventually attenuates our internal clockworks – mostly in the ventromedial nuclei and the liver.
The ventromedial nuclei and the liver are associated with …
(1) satiety,
(2) play behavior, and
(3) sexual arousal.
Overlapping Growth Zones too often can interfere with all three of the above. :(
April 19, 2012 @ 2:40 pm atomb
Re: How many minutes should I stare at the X on the strings that I pull and how many times a day?
Visual processing exercises have the best results when done in all three Growth Zones.
15 minutes of eye exercises (string-pulling plus “figure-eights”) is more than enough for most people.
April 20, 2012 @ 2:28 pm atomb
Re: colon cancer?
As an adjunct to conventional cancer therapy, The Nitrogen Theory of Cancer has a list of foods that can help.
Not Cancer … CANCEL is the best bet but requires professional assistance.
Emotional release techniques sometimes work better than physical techniques.
Folks have beat cancer with hypnosis alone, although hypnosis plus ENGRAM RESTRUCTURING provides the best and long-lasting results!
April 20, 2012 @ 3:22 pm atomb
Re: What can she do to prevent the tumors from growing back?
If these are benign pancreatic tumors, they often evolve into cancerous ones.
The list of nitrogen-rich foods in The Nitrogen Theory of Cancer can help.
(This list could be greatly expanded, and will be, once I have a LOCATION – Atom’s School of Self-Healing – and the tech support to enlarge it.)
Cancer Strategies From A to Z contains a large list of anti-cancer foods.
One of the psychological disadvantages of criticizing other cancer options (the Rife machine, baking soda, Essiac tea) is …
CRITICISM ACTUALLY ATTRACTS MORE PEOPLE TO THEM. :(
Dr. Robert Cialdini’s 2001 book on COMPLIANCE – Influence: Science and Practice, Fourth Edition – provides numerous examples.
December 30, 2017 @ 1:19 am Amber
Seemingly related.. working on a abstract, imagination art piece; I drew a bit that I knew was a kidney after I laid the pencil outlines and part of it I colored yellow and later my bf said, “hey that part looks like eyes.”
HHmmm
December 30, 2017 @ 9:07 pm Atom
Artists often learn anatomy better than anatomists.
They have a better eye for the gestalt (whole).