Author
|
Author
|
This is the very very handy Image Color Summarizer tool address...Go there, upload a NIDI result photo, wait...Mess with the controls if you feel like experimenting with results...Increase number of Colors shown...Increase precision of the output by pixel number...Each alteration takes more time though...I alter the Precision to High when I use a complicated Nidi result like the one I get from Phixr that checks for Phosphorus...
http://mkweb.bcgsc.ca/color-summarizer/?analyze Note for web techy people(developers etcetera): The author of the image color summarizer tool provided code to automate this action, where you throw in your image url and it should process...but I could not get it to work, so I am ignoring this, because I feel that handy new tools should make things easier not harder...Half an hour of my time, to try to make things faster, and still not succeeding at getting one line of code to work, is kindof not worth it to me...But you are welcome to try-the tool page linked above takes you as well to directions on the coding...Be my guest...If you get it to work actually, feel free to share! This is the basic idea of the code: http://mkweb.bcgsc.ca/color-summarizer/?url=IMAGE&precision=low&text=1&histogram=1&pixel=1 Get your Image url:https://flic.kr/p/wekhYE Stick Image url into the code: http://mkweb.bcgsc.ca/color-summarizer/?url=https://flic.kr/p/2hWwcYF/&precision=low=1&histogram=1&pixel=1 doesn't work for me...not sure why not...could be a problem on his end...
0 Comments
![]() Hi Z., I have attached imaging done on the approximate 2 cm lump found near --------------'s nipple area... The specimen when seen close up-I used an MRI image done (breast MRI machine), and enhanced the image using my own imaging method(called NIDI for non invasive diagnostic imaging), is a spiculated molecule that very closely resembles the Clostridium Botulinum molecule... When comparing Botulism molecules then to common cancer molecules, the similarity continues... It would be very easy to mistake a Botox lump of inert Botulinum toxin with a common cancer marker found in pathology labs using biopsy specimens... I believe this is what happened with ----------------... The specimen looks so much like cancer, it was called cancer and treated as such... The excerpt from the Allergan clinical trials on Botox, shows also, several dropouts due to breast cancer(3)... Though these were not investigated further for some reason, it is very possible, that these were also false positives for cancer... I am sending you this email and pictures quickly right now-but I will send another email with the pictures with captions organized-it might be hard possibly for your medical team to understand what they are looking at... What is important to note: Is if a woman has had Botox, and a lump appears somewhere afterwards, that doctors and radiologists and pathologists in laboratories are taught to do a differential diagnosis between what could be an inert lump of Botulism toxin as Botox, and an actual living parasitic infection like cancer-malignancy... I will follow up this email... Let us first see if it gets to you? Sari Grove Alzheimer's brain versus Normal brain using NIDI.help LP filter tool, and Colour Summarizer tool!25/11/2019 I grabbed a picture of a normal brain and then an Alzheimer's brain, MRI images, from the internet... I ran them through the LP filter at NIDI.Help ... Then I took the resulting images, and ran each through the Colour Summarizer located at http://mkweb.bcgsc.ca/color-summarizer/?analyze So...The LP filter looks for cancer as a purple colour(in excess amount)...
The neat thing about the Colour Summarizer tool is it quantifies colours as percentages... The healthy brain has 12.1 of the purple colour(this is probably estrogen, or phosphorus, which normally occurs in the body and brain)... The Alzheimer's brain has double at 24% purple... There is a link between Multiple Myeloma, and Alzheimer's, and this study shows that Alzheimer's is not just a condition of deficit in memory, but more likely, an active parasitic infection like cancer... To learn more about NIDI non invasive diagnostic imaging, join our NIDI course at NIDI.work |