Whitish-gray smeary clouds and plaque throughout the iris indicate an abnormal uric acid metabolism.
This whitish-gray plaque is mostly hereditary, and this “constitutional” type of iris is known as the uric acid diathesis (or urinary diathesis, uratic diathesis, or rheumatic-uric diathesis).
This type of iris indicates potential or functional gout, gouty arthritis, underactive kidneys, or kidney stones.
Readers of my blog know I have this diathesis and was diagnosed with “incurable arthritic gout” and told I would be on medication “the rest of my life.”
Thanks to apple cider vinegar and honey in an eight-ounce glass of water twice a day with lunch and dinner, I took my prescribed pills for only one month back in 1970.
Vitamin C supplements can make you vulnerable to the formation of calcium oxalate kidney stones.
The average human body produces 40 milligrams or less of oxalic acid per day.
Vitamin C supplementation can cause oxalate production to increase tenfold.
If you MUST use supplements instead of NATURAL FOOD, vitamin B-6 helps prevent vitamin C-induced oxalate formation.
Alien yellow pigments in the iris often show functional kidney disorders.
Uro-roseines, produced when protein putrefies in the lower bowel, and thiochrome, created when vitamin B-1 (thiamine) oxidizes in the lower bowel, are both toxic to the kidneys.
These yellow pigments, sometimes associated with a rose-colored pigment, are TOPOLABILE – topographically mobile; they can be found anywhere in the iris.
Most kidney markings in the iris refer to the renal medulla – the innermost part of the kidney.
Cortex markings – in the outer portion of the kidney – 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.
Remember, HEREDITY IS A BLUEPRINT AND NOT THE FINISHED PRODUCT.
We build from our hereditary blueprint out of HABIT, not destiny.
Or, as Adano Ley (Swami Nitty-Gritty) phrased it ..
“You can’t take a bath in a blueprint tub.”
Black tar pigments in the renal zone, especially associated with defect markings and/or transversals, suggest cancer.
Pupillary abnormalities above the renal zones may indicate functional kidney disturbances.
These “pupillo-dystoniae” can relate to the reno-lumbar syndrome, meticulously researched by J. Deck and W. Lorenzen.
Iris signs for the heart are often associated with kidney markings.
This association was labeled the cardio-renal syndrome by J.Deck.
Adano said the kidneys are a “shunt” for the heart, and people who survive heart attacks are likely to end up on dialysis.
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I’m currently a professional iridologist devoid of equipment to practice or teach scientific iris analysis. :(
'Iridology Markings for Potential Kidney Problems' has 1 comment
August 19, 2012 @ 2:45 pm atomb
Some of our readers are familiar with the “Gurwitsch effect,” discovered by Professor Alexander Gurwitsch in 1923, but they may not know the greatest iridologist of all time – Dr. Josef Deck of Germany – was an expert in MGR (mitogenetic radiation) too, especially its “sending” and “receiving” faculties from and to the anterior chamber of the eye.
Tantric evolution (Tologomy), anyone?