Coffee Enemas
- At April 08, 2016
- By ImplantORama
- In Health Topics
0

Coffee Enemas – History
Coffee enemas have been used as an analgesic or pain medicine going way back. As the story goes, in World War I nurses had coffee pots going around the clock. Surgeons drank it to stay awake working long shifts. Enema bags hung around as some patients needed help moving their bowels. There was a severe shortage of pain medication. So they were forced to save the analgesics for surgical procedures with little or none for follow-up. When surgical patients woke up from operations without the benefit of further morphine injections they were in extreme pain. One nurse, instead of fetching more water from the water truck just grabbed a pot of cold coffee, dumped it in the patients bag, undid the released clamp and on into the patient it flowed. “I’m not in so much pain,” he said. He experienced a drastic reduction in pain. It was a coffee enema moment in history. Thus began the use of coffee enemas to help control pain.
Coffee Enemas and the Liver
The intestine has a portal system that draws fluid out and up into the liver. It does this every 4 minutes. Notice that when it gets to the liver it fans looking like the tiny branch’s in tumbleweeds. Coffee is a smooth muscle dilator. It expands and contracts veins and arteries. In the same way that plaster doesn’t stick to a balloon that’s inflating and deflating, using the coffee enema procedure will flex the portal system and encourage toxins to flake away from the inside walls of this very important venous structure and be removed.
The haustra is a neurological net, like a fishnet stocking all the way around the colon. It is designed to contract and release propelling the feces toward the anus. Many times, through injury, trauma, or neglect the haustra can become chronically constricted. If you introduce a large volume of fluid up to 72 ounces in the rectum, you can expand all of the haustra. It is like yoga in the colon. Eventually, the haustra can retain the original shape and remain without constriction state. This is possible with larger volume bottles.