Guest guest Posted April 9, 2006 Report Share Posted April 9, 2006 On Behalf Of Carl E. Grimes I agree with your assessment of 's statement. It started back in the '50s with the advertising compaign of " Better Living Through Chemistry " and has continued through to today. Chemical exposures are particularly troublesome, especially with frequent or daily use of cleaning products and personal care products, due to " masking. " Masking could also be called " blocking, " meaning the bodys normal negative reaction stops despite the continued harm.>>>>>> Thank you Carl for joining this discussion and giving us your professional thoughts. I totally agree with you and have been trying to teach others " masking " syndrome. So often we think if we don't have an immediate reaction we are safe; but as you pointed out that is not the case. That's one of the reasons I've been teaching so many for a decade why they should use safer products both in the homes, toiletries, in the garden, maintenance with vehicles, etc. (thanks again for the GSE in my A/C system in the SUV). Good example is someone who used a great deal of perfume on a daily basis; the person can no longer smell the perfume on him/her but others might gag being around that person. Or those with MCS, have often heard they will go into a thrift store to purchase clothes, the clothes have no odor; once they've left the store, driven home they quickly detect the dry cleaning odors, fabric softeners, detergents, perfumes, etc on the clothes. By then they are reacting but the odors were masked in the stores. Masking is something we must all be aware of and Thank You so much for sharing with us. It's like an iceberg; we can see the top but not the massive bottom. Same applies to food intolerances and allergies. It's a cascade of internal symptoms and harm to the body without the " normal " immediate symptoms such as not assimilating foods, becoming deficient in nutrients due to loss of assimilation, degenerate diseases due to the chronic nutrient deficiencies, small intestine and large intestine permeability (leaky gut) causing auto-intoxication, etc. And the chemicals can and have been shown to cause neurological damage, brain damage often in the left brain function affecting math skills, recall, etc. >>>One reason Dr was able to attain statistical significance for her Quick Environmental Exposure Sensitivity Inventory (QEESI) when all others failed was because she accounted for masking.>>>> Now Carl you knew I'd ask you about the QEESI. And you know what my question is; do you have her QEESI which you could share with us or point us to a link? I think this is something we all will benefit from. >>This is one time when our direct experience with exposure cannot be solely relied on. For example, those of you who do not detect a reaction to ammonia may be experiencing " masking. " Therefore, I would suggest caution with ammonia, a known reactant. Perhaps an occasional specific use is effective, as with solvents, but I would never recommend frequent use for any of my clients.>> Thank you Carl for your gentle warning. We all really need to think before we use anything in our homes or bodies and weigh the pros and cons of everything. Dr. Kaye H. Kilburn wrote a good book called Endangered Brains, How chemicals threaten our future. It's quite a mind opener when we consider what " normal " chemicals in almost all homes can do to our brains and bodies. Dr. Kilburn states about ammonia: At home ammonia water is used to degrease and clean windows and ovens. It causes tearing of the eyes, and burning of the skin and of the respiratory tract that have been noted since 1887. when ammonia generated in the human body fails to be converted to urea in the liver, it poisons the brain producing coma as was recognized 50 years ago. Inhaled ammonia has the same effect---it poisons the brain. Symptoms report by Dr. Kilburn are cough, shortness of breath, poor endurance, lost muscular strength progressively, headaches, confusion, trouble with concentration, loss of memory, difficulty recalling even events of the day, irritable with muscle pain, difficulty sleeping, numb and pail fingers, mouth sores, rash on cheeks, sun sensitivity on skin and hair loss like SLE (Lupus). Respiratory distresses include burning and sloughing of the lining of airways which can lead to loss of breathing, pneumonia, small airways can be filled with puss and fibrosis deep in the lung's alveoli. And he states there are localized distinctive effects of ammonia on the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord, the same cells affected by polio, a well-known motor neuron disease. Ammonia inhalation also can cause coma and brain damage, encephalopathy just as surely as liver failure. Poisoning of the brain by ammonia is familiar to physicians because of the key role in the liver failure established over 50 years ago. During culminant liver failure, large amounts of ammonia are dumped into the blood together with phenols and tyramine that produce hepatic coma. Thus, ammonia and associated toxicants shut down the human nervous system. The threads of evidence braid into a coherent picture that puts the astrocytes, the non-neuron brain cells, in the center of responses to ammonia whether the source is inhalation or failure of urea in the formation of the liver. Inhaled ammonia produces encephalopathy. Ammonia resembles inhaled chlorine in producing lung damage (see Chapter 3). Safer substitutes for ammonia's risky household uses are many. End of quote from Dr. Kilburn. Thank you again Carl for your input and please do share the QEESI when you have time. Warmly, Rosie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.