Guest guest Posted June 11, 2005 Report Share Posted June 11, 2005 After reading through some of the responses to your post I must urge caution. Dealing with mercury is important. I was 121 when first tested last year. I believe 50 is considered " toxic " on this scale. In my case my reading led me to removal of mercury fillings by a biological dentist and IV chelation with DMPS. Mercury removal of any kind can be very dangerous as drilling fillings increases chances for absorbption and chleation (IV or otherwise) can overwhelm your elimination related organs. Alpha Lipoic Acid taken without careful attention to liver and kindneys can simply move mercury around without achieving elimination. No doubt those giving advice mean well BUT, do your own research. I was tested several months back and was 0.47. I believe the correct amount of mercury to be found in the human body is ZERO regardless of what some consdier " aceptable levels " . I just passed a year on LDN and after over 20 chelations I am feeling almost normal with many symptoms, for the most part, almost gone. I do supplement heavily, no wheat, sugar, pop or coffee (also no shellfish or pork) and inject B12 (methylcobolomin) daily under doctor (an out of the box Doc) supervision. Fish oil, vitamin C, cucurmin, and other stuff focused on proper nutrition and digestion round things out for me. Certainly pay attention to comments you recieve to your posts (thats how I ended up on LDN) but always do your own research so that you can make an INFORMED descision based on the best and most recent info you can find. We are not all the same and MS (or Lyme or Mercury poisoning or Syndrome or ....what ever we all have) does not effect any 2 of us in exactly the same fashion. Best Alan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 11, 2005 Report Share Posted June 11, 2005 i agree with this warning. i earlier posted about low Glutathione and its relation to increased mercury levels. but you have to be very careful if you try to rebuild Glutathione when you have high mecury levels because cysteine - which is one of the precursors to glutathione - can also move mercury into places where you don't want it....like the brain. thanks bill --- In low dose naltrexone , " alanms1579 " <alanms@c...> wrote: > After reading through some of the responses to your post I must urge > caution. Dealing with mercury is important. I was 121 when first > tested last year. I believe 50 is considered " toxic " on this scale. > > In my case my reading led me to removal of mercury fillings by a > biological dentist and IV chelation with DMPS. Mercury removal of any > kind can be very dangerous as drilling fillings increases chances for > absorbption and chleation (IV or otherwise) can overwhelm your > elimination related organs. Alpha Lipoic Acid taken without careful > attention to liver and kindneys can simply move mercury around without > achieving elimination. > > No doubt those giving advice mean well BUT, do your own research. > > I was tested several months back and was 0.47. I believe the correct > amount of mercury to be found in the human body is ZERO regardless of > what some consdier " aceptable levels " . > > I just passed a year on LDN and after over 20 chelations I am feeling > almost normal with many symptoms, for the most part, almost gone. I do > supplement heavily, no wheat, sugar, pop or coffee (also no shellfish > or pork) and inject B12 (methylcobolomin) daily under doctor (an out > of the box Doc) supervision. Fish oil, vitamin C, cucurmin, and other > stuff focused on proper nutrition and digestion round things out for me. > > Certainly pay attention to comments you recieve to your posts (thats > how I ended up on LDN) but always do your own research so that you can > make an INFORMED descision based on the best and most recent info you > can find. We are not all the same and MS (or Lyme or Mercury poisoning > or Syndrome or ....what ever we all have) does not effect any > 2 of us in exactly the same fashion. > > Best > Alan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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