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Mucoid plaque

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Mucoid plaque or mucoid rope is claimed to be a thick coating of plaque in the colon. Despite the absence of scientific evidence of its existence, it has acquired urban myth status as a phenomenon widely believed within holistic health circles.

Background

A concept promoted in particular by naturopath Dr. Richard Anderson N.D. N.M.D, it is said to develop from unhealthy, usually Western, lifestyle factors such as eating meat and processed foods, taking pharmaceutical medicine, caffeine and stress.

Some point to pasteurized milk and refined flour and how they form a glue as another form of mucoidal plaque, but due to the stomach's digestion of these foods, it is unlikely they would remain intact long enough to form it, or that the glue could not be broken down.

Mucoid plaque is said to inhibit the body's ability to properly digest food and metabolize toxins by blocking digestion, constricting the passage of stools and accumulating toxins that pass into the bloodstream. A variety of claimed symptoms result, such as constipation, lethargy, and weight gain. Pharmaceuticals are also said to become lodged in the plaque, active ingredients leaching into the body years after they were taken.

However, there is no mention of the phenomenon in scientific literature, and doctors who view the interior of the colon regularly (via colonoscopy, bowel surgery and pathology) have never reported seeing anything like it. Neither is any such material expelled by the strong laxatives used routinely to purge the colon before colonoscopy.

Ideas for treatment

Enemas, rigorous fasting and herbal treatments are said to expel the plaque, which appears as a rope-like rubbery stool matching the shape and length of the large intestine.

Edward Thuman, M.D., a practicing pathologist and Adjunct Assistant Professor of Pathology at the University of Texas School of Medicine, has said on the basis of never having seen it in several thousand intestinal biopsies: "This is a complete fabrication with no anatomic basis".

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