Guest guest Posted October 11, 1999 Report Share Posted October 11, 1999 Copper is no more toxic than iron, which when is 'taken' in organic form and in the right amount will not be toxic to the human body. As a matter of fact, zinc and copper have an absorption relationship. How many people are taking zinc as a supplement and not balancing it with copper (50 mg/2 mg is about right). The only sensible way is to obtain an RBC copper from a lab. This is not a serum measurement but rather the amount of copper contained in a red blood cell. For instance, if I put a patient on zinc and they must continue on it for many months, I will check for RBC copper after about 4 months to see if the RBC copper is too low. Then I will balance out the supplementation if necessary. At 08:27 PM 10/10/1999 +1000, you wrote: >Dr. advises readers of her books not to drink water from copper pipes older than 15 years as copper is toxic. My house is 10 years old and has PVC pipes bringing the water to the house but there are copper pipes inside the house connected to the taps. When a PVC pipe underground leaked , it had to be replaced with a copper pipe. Every office and house I checked had some copper pipes. I saw beer being brewed in copper vats at breweries and I saw jam being boiled in copper vessels in a jam factory. > Wallach and Ma Lan in their book " Rare Earths:Forbidden Cures " state that copper deficiency is widespread and appears in many forms. " Symptoms of copper deficiency include gray hair, aneurisms,varicose veins,low blood sugar,anemia etc. Copper is essential to all living organisms and is a universally important cofactor for many hundreds of metalloenzymes. >Is copper really toxic? ________________________________________________________ R. Sooley, DC Gerald F. Sooley, DC Sooley Chiropractic Health Center 11 E. Fairchild St. Danville, IL 61832 (217) 431-3290 voice (209) 797-6521 fax Drgeorge@... " Let thy food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food. " --Hippocrates, the Father of Modern Medicine A cheerful heart is good medicine... Prov 17:22a Get paid for surfing the web! AllAdvantage.com pays you while you surf the net. It's free to join and it takes about a minute (no survey to fill out). Just go to http://alladvantage.com/go.asp?refid=BEC162 ____________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 11, 1999 Report Share Posted October 11, 1999 I would like some more information about this issue also. I know that mentions that copper is one of the eight common denominators in tumors. I'm hoping that her new book The Cure for All Advanced Cancers will have some more information about this. I'm not sure that PVC pipe meets plumbing code when used inside the house in the state that I live in. Copper Dr. advises readers of her books not to drink water from copper pipes older than 15 years as copper is toxic. My house is 10 years old and has PVC pipes bringing the water to the house but there are copper pipes inside the house connected to the taps. When a PVC pipe underground leaked , it had to be replaced with a copper pipe. Every office and house I checked had some copper pipes. I saw beer being brewed in copper vats at breweries and I saw jam being boiled in copper vessels in a jam factory. Wallach and Ma Lan in their book " Rare Earths:Forbidden Cures " state that copper deficiency is widespread and appears in many forms. " Symptoms of copper deficiency include gray hair, aneurisms,varicose veins,low blood sugar,anemia etc. Copper is essential to all living organisms and is a universally important cofactor for many hundreds of metalloenzymes. Is copper really toxic? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 1999 Report Share Posted October 24, 1999 At 08:51 AM 10/26/1999 -0500, you wrote: >From: " R. Sooley, D.C. " <Drgeorge@...> > >Is Dr. Pfeiffer's book still in print? > >I forgot to mention hair analysis. If done appropriately, it can yield >some good results though it should be interpreted with a degree of >skepticism in some cases (the lab analysis provided, in my opinion, >stretches a little far). > > Dear , I have great hesitation about hair analysis. I've seen a high Cu/Zn ratio show up in someone we know isn't Cu deficient. Just because Cu doesn't show up in the hair doesn't mean the body isn't storing elsewhere. Do you agree? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 1999 Report Share Posted October 24, 1999 >> >The patient you said that you " know " isn't Cu defiicient, what sort of >testing did you do to determine that? And are you sure the high Cu/Zn >ratio does not mean that they are severely deficient in Zinc? Dear ....duh....meant to say high Zn/Cu ratio. > > > > >>>_ >> >>Subscription URL: /subscribe.cgi/Dr >> >>Send blank message to this e-mail address if you want to: >> >> TO UNSUBSCRIBE !!!!!!!!! : >> >> Dr-unsubscribeonelist >> >>To change status from normal to digest: >> Dr-digestonelist >> >>To change status from digest to normal: >> Dr-normalonelist >> >>To subscribe: >> Dr-subscribeonelist >> >>List Archives: >>/archives.cgi/Dr >> >>Web sites: >>http://home.sol.no/~dusan/hypothyroidism.html >>http://home.sol.no/~huldakli/ >>http://home.sol.no/~dusan/ >>http://www..ch/ >>http://home.sol.no/~dusan/cancer2.html >>http://home.sol.no/~huldakli/cancer2.html >>http://home.sol.no/~dusan/gallstones/ >>http://home.sol.no/~dusan/ER4YT/ >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >________________________________________________________ > R. Sooley, DC >Gerald F. Sooley, DC >Sooley Chiropractic Health Center >11 E. Fairchild St. >Danville, IL 61832 >(217) 431-3290 voice >(209) 797-6521 fax >Drgeorge@... > > " Let thy food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food. " > --Hippocrates, the Father of Modern Medicine > >A cheerful heart is good medicine... Prov 17:22a > > >Get paid for surfing the web! AllAdvantage.com pays you while you >surf the net. It's free to join and it takes about a minute (no survey to >fill out). Just go to http://alladvantage.com/go.asp?refid=BEC162 >____________________________________________________________ > > > > >>_ > >Subscription URL: /subscribe.cgi/Dr > >Send blank message to this e-mail address if you want to: > > TO UNSUBSCRIBE !!!!!!!!! : > > Dr-unsubscribeonelist > >To change status from normal to digest: > Dr-digestonelist > >To change status from digest to normal: > Dr-normalonelist > >To subscribe: > Dr-subscribeonelist > >List Archives: >/archives.cgi/Dr > >Web sites: >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/hypothyroidism.html >http://home.sol.no/~huldakli/ >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/ >http://www..ch/ >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/cancer2.html >http://home.sol.no/~huldakli/cancer2.html >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/gallstones/ >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/ER4YT/ > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 1999 Report Share Posted October 26, 1999 Is Dr. Pfeiffer's book still in print? I forgot to mention hair analysis. If done appropriately, it can yield some good results though it should be interpreted with a degree of skepticism in some cases (the lab analysis provided, in my opinion, stretches a little far). I find no value in milk either. It has been too polluted and God meant it for baby CALVES--not adolescent or fully grown or even baby HUMANS. For zinc supplementation I recommend aqueous zinc (zinc sulfate heptahydrate in a base of distilled water). I grew up in a rural area, and my dad was a chiropractor. We were strictly prohibited from drinking the well water. My dad bought a water distiller and attached several carbon filters AFTER the distiller process. The distiller and filters required constant maintenance because of the scales of minerals (certainly copper included) that would form. The carbon filters would block any pesticide residues that could possibly get through the distiller. I feel confident that it was well worth his effort to keep us from the poisons lurking in farm water wash-off and our copper piping. The schizophrenics you mention are probaby excreting less copper because they are unable to chelate (or separate) it out. Dr. At 10:33 PM 10/25/1999 +0000, you wrote: >I've been out of town for 2 weeks and just now saw the posts re. >copper. We live in a rural area and use spring water, which goes to >our barn and house via PVC pipe, but the house is a manufactured home >so I feel sure some of the pipes are copper. Thanks to Dr. 's >books, I no longer drink and cook with the house water or use ice >from the ice maker, which has a copper tube behind the refrig. If >water drips from faucets within the house for any length of time a >blue/green stain forms on the porcelain. If water drips into the sink >in the barn there is no stain, so I carry jugs from the barn to the >house for drinking and cooking. > >As I enjoy research on such things, I looked in my book, Mental and >Elemental Nutrients by Carl C. Pfeiffer, M.D and Ph.D., which >includes a chapter called Copper: The Fourth Heavy-Metal Intoxicant >and another on Zinc. His research shows that the whole human >populace is borderline deficient in zinc, and that when used with >vitamin B-6 therapy a number of physical problems have lessened or in >some cases gone away completely. Eating oysters is not recommended >because along with the zinc in the oyster there occurs copper in >large amounts and cadium in great excess if the oyster is grown in >contaminated waters. Evidently, the amount of zinc is insufficient to >attack the copper, so there is still an imbalance, especially when >humans are now deficient in zinc and ingesting between 3 to 5 mg. of >copper per day rather than the recommended 2 mg. Why? > >Dr. Pfeiffer states that serum zinc deficiency and serum copper >excess have become evident only since the change from galvanized >water pipes to copper plumbing. Before copper plumbing man obtained >zinc from zinc-lined water pipes. But with copper plumbing and the >slight acidity of most drinking water, the excess of copper we are >getting may be antagonizing the zinc we obtain from food, especially >if water is pumped from shale or loam. In some areas of New Jersey, >well water will produce pin holes in copper piping in 10 years time. >Where does the copper go? Into the drinking water, of course. > >Dr. Pfeiffer found that schizophrenic patients excreted less urinary >copper than normal patients. The liver, via the bile, however, is the >main route of excretion of excess copper. Liver, whether in humans or >animals, has the highest copper content, the brain second, and other >organs and tissues contain much less. Fetal liver at term, contains >about 7 times as much copper as adult liver and it takes five to 15 >years to bring the level down to the adult level. Since copper is a >stimulant to the brain, this excess may be a factor in the >hyperactivity of children. Excess copper may also be a possible cause >of autism in children. Serum copper is high with use of the birth >control pill, and the copper level of the heart is higher than normal >in those dying from heart attacks. Copper is also high in patients >with high blood pressure and in those who smoke. The smoking woman, >on oral contraceptives, drinking well water and under stress, which >dissipates zinc, and has borderline zinc deficiency may have the >greatest susceptibility to early heart attacks or strokes. > >This book was published in 1975, and even in 1956 a study concluded >that it was extremely unlikely that copper deficiency could occur in >man, even on suboptimal diets. Since 1975 our food chain has >continued to decrease in the amount of minerals essential for health, >including zinc, manganese, molybdenum and pyridoxine (B-6) from >wheat, while enriching white flour with more iron. More iron without >zinc and manganese will result in a higher incidence of gray-skinned >patients. Rather than " enriched " bread, the zinc, manganese and >magnesium content should be restored to the original level found in >the wheat grain. > >For all the above reasons I must hold with Dr. as to the >importance of ridding our bodies of excess copper, which I feel is >very difficult to attain. Dr. Sooley is correct in that a lab test >would be the way to discover one's copper level, and if he believes a >red blood cell test is more accurate, I'll go along with that. >Unfortunately, the usual heavy metal test is only for lead and >mercury, and one cannot walk into a lab and request any kind of test >without getting a doctor to order it. If someone has more updated >info. on copper studies that does not come from the Public Health >Service (they lie), I would be interested in reading it. There is >much more in Dr. Pfeiffer's book; I've given only a brief review, so >hopefully you can find it in your library system. I disagree >completely with his short chapter on fluoride treatment, however, as >I disagree with Dr. re. the value of milk. > >Yours for better health, Bernice in Oregon, USA > ________________________________________________________ R. Sooley, DC Gerald F. Sooley, DC Sooley Chiropractic Health Center 11 E. Fairchild St. Danville, IL 61832 (217) 431-3290 voice (209) 797-6521 fax Drgeorge@... " Let thy food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food. " --Hippocrates, the Father of Modern Medicine A cheerful heart is good medicine... Prov 17:22a Get paid for surfing the web! AllAdvantage.com pays you while you surf the net. It's free to join and it takes about a minute (no survey to fill out). Just go to http://alladvantage.com/go.asp?refid=BEC162 ____________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 26, 1999 Report Share Posted October 26, 1999 At 06:27 AM 10/24/1999 -0500, you wrote: >From: Raskin DC <lraskin@...> > >At 08:51 AM 10/26/1999 -0500, you wrote: >>From: " R. Sooley, D.C. " <Drgeorge@...> >> >>Is Dr. Pfeiffer's book still in print? >> >>I forgot to mention hair analysis. If done appropriately, it can yield >>some good results though it should be interpreted with a degree of >>skepticism in some cases (the lab analysis provided, in my opinion, >>stretches a little far). >> >> > >Dear , > >I have great hesitation about hair analysis. I've seen a high Cu/Zn ratio >show up in someone we know isn't Cu deficient. Just because Cu doesn't >show up in the hair doesn't mean the body isn't storing elsewhere. Do you >agree? > > > Dear , I agree that hair analysis that does not rule out copper toxicity. Hair is an excretory organ. If the body is not excreting copper because it's unable or has not been challenged (ie, vit C or some sort of oral or IV chelation) the hair analysis may not be of benefit. The patient you said that you " know " isn't Cu defiicient, what sort of testing did you do to determine that? And are you sure the high Cu/Zn ratio does not mean that they are severely deficient in Zinc? I don't view hair analysis as the one and only answer....just as a screening. And it may help to guide your interpretations. Hair analysis is only definitive, in my book, when it comes to heavy metals such as lead. >>_ > >Subscription URL: /subscribe.cgi/Dr > >Send blank message to this e-mail address if you want to: > > TO UNSUBSCRIBE !!!!!!!!! : > > Dr-unsubscribeonelist > >To change status from normal to digest: > Dr-digestonelist > >To change status from digest to normal: > Dr-normalonelist > >To subscribe: > Dr-subscribeonelist > >List Archives: >/archives.cgi/Dr > >Web sites: >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/hypothyroidism.html >http://home.sol.no/~huldakli/ >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/ >http://www..ch/ >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/cancer2.html >http://home.sol.no/~huldakli/cancer2.html >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/gallstones/ >http://home.sol.no/~dusan/ER4YT/ > > > > > > > ________________________________________________________ R. Sooley, DC Gerald F. Sooley, DC Sooley Chiropractic Health Center 11 E. Fairchild St. Danville, IL 61832 (217) 431-3290 voice (209) 797-6521 fax Drgeorge@... " Let thy food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food. " --Hippocrates, the Father of Modern Medicine A cheerful heart is good medicine... Prov 17:22a Get paid for surfing the web! AllAdvantage.com pays you while you surf the net. It's free to join and it takes about a minute (no survey to fill out). Just go to http://alladvantage.com/go.asp?refid=BEC162 ____________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 27, 1999 Report Share Posted October 27, 1999 You wrote: Is Dr. Pfeiffer's book still in print? I have no idea, Dr. . The Library of Congress Catalog Card Number is 75-19543 and ISBN is 0-87983-114-6. The publisher is Keats Publishing, Inc., of New Canaan, Connecticut. He was Director of Princeton's Brain Bio Center at that time. The book is hard cover and over 500 pages. On the jacket back it states: " The Brain Bio Center is a unique research-educational organization and out-patient clinic for the diagnosis and treatment of specific biochemical imbalances. The Center's small team of skilled physicians, research scientists, laboratory technicians and staff writers cooperate in an effort to provide patients with the best possible nutritional care and guidance and to advance public understanding of the biochemistry of physical and mental illness. Physicians determine patients' individual needs for certain vitamins and trace elements on the basis of specialized laboratory tests for biochemical imbalances. Research scientists investigate the action of essential nutrients in man and the editorial staff prepares educational material on all aspects of the Center's work. The Brain Bio Center, located in Princeton, New Jersey, has been in operation since 1972. It is sponsored by the Schizophrenia Foundation of New Jersey and the New Jersey Mental Health Research and Development Fund. " hmmm... Maybe they have a Web site? Bernice Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 1999 Report Share Posted October 28, 1999 They must be doing something right. Mr Quack himself, Barret, has something to say about them. http://www.quackwatch.com/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/ortho.html Other hits reveal that Pfeiffer is associated with the Orthomolecular approach... http://www.orthomed.org/jom/op76.htm At 02:50 PM 10/27/1999 +0000, you wrote: >You wrote: Is Dr. Pfeiffer's book still in print? > >I have no idea, Dr. . The Library of Congress Catalog Card >Number is 75-19543 and ISBN is 0-87983-114-6. The publisher is Keats >Publishing, Inc., of New Canaan, Connecticut. He was Director of >Princeton's Brain Bio Center at that time. The book is hard cover >and over 500 pages. On the jacket back it states: > > " The Brain Bio Center is a unique research-educational organization >and out-patient clinic for the diagnosis and treatment of specific >biochemical imbalances. The Center's small team of skilled >physicians, research scientists, laboratory technicians and staff >writers cooperate in an effort to provide patients with the best >possible nutritional care and guidance and to advance public >understanding of the biochemistry of physical and mental illness. >Physicians determine patients' individual needs for certain vitamins >and trace elements on the basis of specialized laboratory tests for >biochemical imbalances. Research scientists investigate the action of >essential nutrients in man and the editorial staff prepares >educational material on all aspects of the Center's work. The Brain >Bio Center, located in Princeton, New Jersey, has been in operation >since 1972. It is sponsored by the Schizophrenia Foundation of New >Jersey and the New Jersey Mental Health Research and Development >Fund. " > >hmmm... Maybe they have a Web site? > >Bernice > > > ________________________________________________________ R. Sooley, DC Gerald F. Sooley, DC Sooley Chiropractic Health Center 11 E. Fairchild St. Danville, IL 61832 (217) 431-3290 voice (209) 797-6521 fax Drgeorge@... " Let thy food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food. " --Hippocrates, the Father of Modern Medicine A cheerful heart is good medicine... Prov 17:22a Get paid for surfing the web! AllAdvantage.com pays you while you surf the net. It's free to join and it takes about a minute (no survey to fill out). Just go to http://alladvantage.com/go.asp?refid=BEC162 ____________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2000 Report Share Posted July 19, 2000 P.S. : I remember Andy talking about something NOT to do if your kid's copper levels are high, you need to make sure you know about this, I don't remember, look in the archives (the new files that were just started) and/or ask Andy again, he's so good about answering questions again and again for all of us. Tina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2000 Report Share Posted July 19, 2000 In a message dated 07/19/2000 12:18:39 PM Eastern Daylight Time, TMS1000@... writes: << P.S. : I remember Andy talking about something NOT to do if your kid's copper levels are high, you need to make sure you know about this, I don't remember, look in the archives (the new files that were just started) and/or ask Andy again, he's so good about answering questions again and again for all of us. Tina >> Don't use L.A. if copper levels are high. Carole Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2000 Report Share Posted July 19, 2000 << I remember Andy talking about something NOT to do if your kid's copper levels are high, you need to make sure you know about this, I don't remember, look in the archives (the new files that were just started) and/or ask Andy again, he's so good about answering questions again and again for all of us. >> High (as in out of normal range) hair copper means don't use lipoic acid until you get the copper levels back down. Andy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2000 Report Share Posted August 25, 2000 << The reason I'm asking is what is the " right " chelant for copper? >> You don't chelate it. You reduce absorption with zinc, molybdenum and exclusion of high copper foods from the diet. Andy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2001 Report Share Posted January 5, 2001 pumpkin seeds also high in zinc if I remember correctly -------------------------------------------------------------- My son also has high copper. Is there something that will help remove it? I recently found out that pumpkin seeds are high in it....there goes one more GF/CF treat. Do nuts have copper?? Someone please tell me that pistachio's don't....that's his best reinforcer at school. Does anyone know of a food that is high in zinc? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2001 Report Share Posted January 6, 2001 Nuts have copper :-( You don't remove copper, you prevent its absorption by giving him LOTS of zinc. For an adult, 50 mg 4 times a day. Molybdenum also reduces the effects of copper, say 500 mcg 4 times a day for an adult. Assume an " adult " weighs 135# and scale by weight more or less. Andy > My son also has high copper. Is there something that will help remove it? I recently found out that pumpkin seeds are high in it....there goes one more GF/CF treat. Do nuts have copper?? Someone please tell me that pistachio's don't....that's his best reinforcer at school. > > Does anyone know of a food that is high in zinc? > > Thanks, > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2001 Report Share Posted January 6, 2001 Vita-Chart lists the following as sources of copper: almonds, avocado, brazil nuts, buckwheat, cauliflower, dry split peas, hazelnuts, lamb chops, legumes, liver, molasses, millet, nuts, organ meats, raisins, peanuts, pecans, seafood (especially oysters), soybeans, walnuts, and whole grains S -------------------------------------------------------------- My son also has high copper. Is there something that will help remove it? I recently found out that pumpkin seeds are high in it....there goes one more GF/CF treat. Do nuts have copper?? Someone please tell me that pistachio's don't....that's his best reinforcer at school. Does anyone know of a food that is high in zinc? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2001 Report Share Posted January 6, 2001 pumpkins seeds are high in zinc too, which % is more copper or zinc I don't know. I just suppliment with zinc and do not try to remove copper from the diet with things like pumpkin seeds which my son also eats occasionally. I only use citramin II which has no copper , but zinc. kelly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 8, 2001 Report Share Posted January 8, 2001 My son also has high copper. Is there something that will help remove it? I recently found out that pumpkin seeds are high in it....there goes one more GF/CF treat. Do nuts have copper?? Someone please tell me that pistachio's don't....that's his best reinforcer at school. Does anyone know of a food that is high in zinc? Thanks, Oysters are high in zinc. Also I think pumpkin seeds. I didn't know pumpkin was also high in copper. I'd try to give zinc supplement if possible if high in copper. Bernie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2001 Report Share Posted April 11, 2001 Dear Tari, It's my understanding that you don't chelate copper; you interfere with it's absorption by supplementing with zinc and molybdenum. At the same time, try and find out the source of the high copper and reduce your child's exposure. [ ] copper > Hi all, I have been searching the archives for info on copper. > Unfortunately, I wasn't able to find much. Is there anyone out there > that has had to chelate high levels of copper that can tell me how it > affects little ones (know it is neuro toxic) and what chelation > methods you have used. Thanks. Tari Jordan > > > ======================================================= > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2001 Report Share Posted April 11, 2001 , What is molybdenum? Tari [ ] copper> Hi all, I have been searching the archives for info on copper.> Unfortunately, I wasn't able to find much. Is there anyone out there> that has had to chelate high levels of copper that can tell me how it> affects little ones (know it is neuro toxic) and what chelation> methods you have used. Thanks. Tari Jordan>>> =======================================================> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2001 Report Share Posted April 11, 2001 Dear Tari, it's a mineral. most found in wheat, those children who are off wheat lose a significant source for it. I buy Solgar's; my daughter's been on it for years at a low dose (I low dose everything after upsetting her systems too many times with "typical" doses) [ ] copper> Hi all, I have been searching the archives for info on copper.> Unfortunately, I wasn't able to find much. Is there anyone out there> that has had to chelate high levels of copper that can tell me how it> affects little ones (know it is neuro toxic) and what chelation> methods you have used. Thanks. Tari Jordan>>> =======================================================> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2001 Report Share Posted April 11, 2001 ----- Original Message ----- From: <tjordan@...> > Hi all, I have been searching the archives for info on copper. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to find much. Is there anyone out there that has had to chelate high levels of copper that can tell me how it affects little ones (know it is neuro toxic) and what chelation methods you have used. Where did you find high levels of copper? Was it in the hair? I've heard of a research study conducted at Harvard. They took the academic bests and subjected them to hair analysis tests. Those students had high amounts of copper in their hair and somehow, in error, the researchers decided a diet high in copper promotes better intellectual abilities. Later they changed their minds and said it was the body's ability to detoxify copper out of the brain that had helped those students to become successful. I do not know if phatin in brown rice can detoxify copper in particular, but thought I would share one of my favorite stories in natural medicinal practices. When the Americans bombed Hiroshima, nearly all of the hospitals attending to radioactive patients had great problems with their doctors and nurses becoming ill from contact with them. A multitude had to leave work due to nasea, headaches and vomitting and it was a distressful time. In all of Japan, there was only one hospital wherein none of the doctors and nurses became ill and no one could understand why. The government sent researchers to that hospital and after a carefully detailed examination of their environment, it was disclosed that the only variable was the fact that hospital cafeteria served brown rice instead of white. So researchers took to the study of brown rice. They learned it contained a molecule called " phatin " and phatin was such a powerful detoxifier that the doctors and nurses had better immune systems at that time. It was a little miracle that lead to the introduction of brown rice as a staple in The Japanese Macrobiotic Diet, said to have cured some forms of cancer. I make Lacey's protein shake with homemade brown rice and looking back in a more educated manner now, I cannot find another reason besides an intensive gymnastics program geared for autism that could have detoxified the lead from her brain. (She rendered a 6.2 on her hair analysis and the " norm " in America is 2.2. While we were caught in an immediate overly-emotional state to learn she had been lead poisoned, we later realized a 6.2 was a good thing. It meant the lead had safely left the brain and settled into her hair.) Perhaps this story is helpful to some of you. What I do is put the washed brown rice into a crockpot with an abundant amount of water. I turn it on in the evenings and the next morning it is similar to oatmeal, so I serve it as such at that time and place the remainder in a blender with water or soy milk, some fruits and a protein amino acid mix, and serve as a shake after school (with her vitamins placed inside.) Lacey loves it and it has been convenient to make and to serve. I feel it just might be helpful and cannot harm them (unless they are allergic to rice, which seems to be a very slim chance - I've only heard of one person who is allergic and it was not to brown rice, but to white ... perhaps they weren't washing the rice, however, as most Americans do not seem to be doing that like we do in Japan.) My point is, if the copper was in the hair, I wouldn't worry but instead be happy! In any case, perhaps this is helpful. Evidently science is now researching the phatin molecule in America. Years ago I ran a Medline search and discovered this to be true. Minc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2001 Report Share Posted April 11, 2001 Dear Minc, Thanks for the reply. My sons copper level was found in the blood. Thanks, Tari Re: [ ] copper ----- Original Message -----From: <tjordan@...>> Hi all, I have been searching the archives for info on copper.Unfortunately, I wasn't able to find much. Is there anyone out there thathas had to chelate high levels of copper that can tell me how it affectslittle ones (know it is neuro toxic) and what chelation methods you haveused.Where did you find high levels of copper? Was it in the hair?I've heard of a research study conducted at Harvard. They took the academicbests and subjected them to hair analysis tests.Those students had high amounts of copper in their hair and somehow, inerror, the researchers decided a diet high in copper promotes betterintellectual abilities.Later they changed their minds and said it was the body's ability todetoxify copper out of the brain that had helped those students to becomesuccessful.I do not know if phatin in brown rice can detoxify copper in particular, butthought I would share one of my favorite stories in natural medicinalpractices.When the Americans bombed Hiroshima, nearly all of the hospitals attendingto radioactive patients had great problems with their doctors and nursesbecoming ill from contact with them. A multitude had to leave work due tonasea, headaches and vomitting and it was a distressful time.In all of Japan, there was only one hospital wherein none of the doctors andnurses became ill and no one could understand why.The government sent researchers to that hospital and after a carefullydetailed examination of their environment, it was disclosed that the onlyvariable was the fact that hospital cafeteria served brown rice instead ofwhite.So researchers took to the study of brown rice. They learned it contained amolecule called "phatin" and phatin was such a powerful detoxifier that thedoctors and nurses had better immune systems at that time.It was a little miracle that lead to the introduction of brown rice as astaple in The Japanese Macrobiotic Diet, said to have cured some forms ofcancer.I make Lacey's protein shake with homemade brown rice and looking back in amore educated manner now, I cannot find another reason besides an intensivegymnastics program geared for autism that could have detoxified the leadfrom her brain. (She rendered a 6.2 on her hair analysis and the "norm" inAmerica is 2.2. While we were caught in an immediate overly-emotional stateto learn she had been lead poisoned, we later realized a 6.2 was a goodthing. It meant the lead had safely left the brain and settled into herhair.)Perhaps this story is helpful to some of you.What I do is put the washed brown rice into a crockpot with an abundantamount of water. I turn it on in the evenings and the next morning it issimilar to oatmeal, so I serve it as such at that time and place theremainder in a blender with water or soy milk, some fruits and a proteinamino acid mix, and serve as a shake after school (with her vitamins placedinside.)Lacey loves it and it has been convenient to make and to serve. I feel itjust might be helpful and cannot harm them (unless they are allergic torice, which seems to be a very slim chance - I've only heard of one personwho is allergic and it was not to brown rice, but to white ... perhaps theyweren't washing the rice, however, as most Americans do not seem to be doingthat like we do in Japan.)My point is, if the copper was in the hair, I wouldn't worry but instead behappy!In any case, perhaps this is helpful. Evidently science is now researchingthe phatin molecule in America. Years ago I ran a Medline search anddiscovered this to be true.Minc ======================================================= Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2001 Report Share Posted April 11, 2001 ----- Original Message ----- From: tjordan > What is molybdenum? Molybdenum is the vital nutrient contained in wheat products. When we place our children on a gluten-free diet, it is recommended molybdenum be supplemented. Molybdenum also serves well to assist healing during bouts of Candida albicans infestation (I like that description better than "infection.") Candida albicans emits aldehydes into the brain. You can find molybdenum on the shelves of health food stores. Quite possibly you can do some research and find what other food sources contain molybdenum; it's been a long time since I designed Lacey's diet in that fashion - I went to a website that listed the top 10 nutrient-rich foods and made a list of which of those foods Lacey would agree to eat. I'd heard many children were getting better once liver was introduced into the diet and later learned why - it is nutrient-rich and in some cases pernicious anemia (iron deficiency of the brain, not the body) was involved. Everyone absorbs nutrients easier from foods rather than supplements, which is why a close watch on the nutrient intake within the dietary protocol is rather important. Other countries that have healthier populations as a whole, do not take vitamin supplements as a rule and the diet in America has led towards various illnesses plus the foods are in many cases carrying a level of contamination by heavy metals and the like. Some other countries such as Japan do not ingest large amounts of wheat products but then we do not know whether they are eating Candida albicans or not, so it is difficult to say why America suffers so much. I have not heard from cases wherein a parent suspected molybdenum supplementation was harmful. Minc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2001 Report Share Posted April 13, 2001 Hi all, I have been searching the archives for info on copper. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to find much. Is there anyone out there that has had to chelate high levels of copper that can tell me how it affects little ones (know it is neuro toxic) and what chelation methods you have used. Thanks. Tari Jordan ******************* Zinc is an antagonist of copper and mercury, so zinc supplementation brings down copper levels. Levels should be monitored occassionally for both. Bernie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 21, 2001 Report Share Posted July 21, 2001 > Andy/others, > Is a mineral supplement which has2.65 mg of copper per serving a bad > idea? Yes. that is too much copper. >I am waiting for our protocol from Dr. Amy and had been using > these in the past. > Cece Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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