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A basic treatment: the perinodular injection
The basic 714X treatment is always the perinodular injection. This technique proposes to reach the large lymphatic circulation. The perinodular injection (which literally means in the peripheral area of the nodes) is performed in the right groin area to assure the best accessibility of the 714X product into the large lymphatic circulation (a liquid product).
Here are the five basic steps of the perinodular injection:
- Preparing the material for injection regimen
- Preparing the syringe
- Preparing the person receiving the injection (freezing the injection site)
- The injection itself: passive injection or self-administered injection
- Discarding the used material.
- Preparing the material for the injection regimen
Ideally, the material required to perform the daily injection should be gathered in one tray to facilitate the injection routine and avoid spreading out the material. Also, the tray and its content should be kept safely, out of small children’s reach at all times (during and after the injection session).
- The basic material to perform the perinodular injection is the following :
- A watch or clock which displays seconds (not only minutes).
- A comfortable recliner chair (or many pillows placed under your head in your bed).
- A CD/DVD player.
- The material to ice the injection site:
- One small frozen “Ice Pak” (or a small plastic bag, “Ziploc” type, filled with ice cubes).
- One box of tissue paper or paper towels.
- The material to sterilize the injection site:
- Sterile cotton balls.
- 94% grain alcohol (or vodka if not available at the liquor store). Never use isopropyl alcohol.
- One alcohol dispenser to prevent spilling and water of alcohol.
- Material to perform the injection.
- One 6.5 ml vial of 714X (note: one cycle requires two vials of product, both packaged in one box).
- A 1cc Tuberculin syringe (graded by 1/100) with a needle of 26G gage and a 3/8’’ length.
- Material to discard safely the used material.
- A jar containing a mixture of bleach and water (approximately one litre/4 cups to dispose used material such as needles, syringes, cotton balls, etc.
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