Guest guest Posted September 22, 1998 Report Share Posted September 22, 1998 The only caution I would add regarding is that iron for most men and post menopausal women may contribute to arteriosclerosis. One of the theories associated with the successful use of chelation therapy is that EDTA removes not only heavy and toxic metals but also other metals that contribute to adverse oxidation. Iron is apparently the biggest culprit in the " other metal " category. For those of you who are unaware, intravenous chelation therapy using EDTA and the ACAM protocols is the only know approach to reversing arteriosclerosis other than angioplasty and bypass surger. It is used extensively throughout the world and even here in the USA, but it is not approved for circulation only for the removal of toxic heavy metals. (This may change as chelation therapy is considerably cheaper than surgical approaches and appears to give better results. Unfortunately, EDTA is not a patented drug so it is an " orphan " to the pharmaceutical industry and the medical profession.) ______________________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 22, 1998 Report Share Posted September 22, 1998 , I am getting so confused reading all the different mail in regards to hyper and hypo.......I can't seen to get it straight in my mind, what a hypo-T person needs to take to get straightened out? could you please reply with just the hypo amounts? How much kelp? copper? Zinc? what else should we be taking......? Chris ______________________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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