Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: Potassium article.

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Hi

Came across this potassium article on another forum.

It is rather lengthy but very interesting!

Originates from http://www.joevialls.co.uk/

Beau.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

POTASSIUM DEFICIENCY SCAM KILLS AND MAIMS MILLIONS

Deliberately restricting your potassium intake makes

you very ill, and

thus vulnerable to hundreds of highly profitable

medical " cures "

Copyright Joe Vialls, 30 January 2004

Large graphics, please be patient while page loads

The title immediately suggests to the

reader that a giant pharmaceutical atrocity has been

inflicted on the poor natives of some far off

third-world country, by a predictably greedy drug

multinational, but this is simply not the case. By far

the largest number of deaths and permanent crippling

disabilities from potassium deficiency occur in

America, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and several

other western nations.

How this horrific state of affairs came

into being and was perpetuated thereafter, is a very

long and frequently confusing story, meaning that we

must start at the very beginning if we are to have any

real chance of understanding the lethal implications.

We first need to understand what potassium is, how

much our bodies need on a daily basis to stay healthy,

and what happens to us when our body's critical store

of potassium is inadvertently or deliberately

depleted.

Unlike toxic sodium [table salt],

potassium is essential to our health. Potassium is

present in all cells and is critical to cardiovascular

and nerve function, regulating the transfer of

nutrients into cells and facilitating muscle energy.

This wonder mineral also regulates water balance,

assists recuperative powers, and aids rheumatic or

arthritic conditions by causing acids to leave the

joints, thereby easing stiffness. At the same time

potassium is vital for the elimination of wastes, is a

natural pain desensitizer, helps control convulsions,

headaches and migraines, and promotes faster healing

of cuts, bruises and other injuries.

Because of its very high electrochemical

activity, potassium is on the move all the time, and

we need vast quantities to replenish that lost every

day. When we exercise and sweat, we lose potassium

through urine. When we are under extreme stress for a

variety of other reasons, potassium loss can treble

instantly. But as renowned nutritionist Adelle

points out, it is toxic sodium that causes the

greatest problems. " Persons eating [sodium] salt as

they wished excreted nine times more potassium than

when their salt intake was limited, and human

volunteers kept on diets deficient in potassium

retained so much salt that they developed high blood

pressure. "

If Mother Nature was to deprive you of

potassium completely, hard scientific evidence proves

you would be dead in less than three weeks. But in

many ways this would be a merciful release when

compared with the infinitely more painful and far

slower death caused by slow potassium deprivation, the

preferred method of the FDA and AMA. Proper scientists

agree the daily potassium requirements of an average

adult lie between 3,200 and 4,100 milligrams, but the

average potassium intake of Americans through the food

chain is only 1,500 to 2,100 milligrams per day,

representing an overall average shortfall of 1,850

milligrams.

Obviously humans can survive at these

savagely depleted levels, because Americans manage to

eke out about 70 years each, before this basic

potassium deficiency overwhelms them and they finally

die, sometimes in great pain from a number of directly

related illnesses including arthritis, osteoporosis,

hypertension [high blood pressure], angina, strokes

and so on. It is scientifically beyond question that

all would live longer and suffer less pain if they

received the necessary quantity of potassium each day,

which is where the American Food & Drug Administration

[FDA] should do a Wayne job, and ride gallantly

to the rescue.

Alas, the Food and Drug Administration has

not and will not do so, because of sustained lobby

pressure by the pharmaceutical multinationals. Despite

having full and unrestricted access to the real

scientific data providing hard proof of widespread

potassium deficiency bordering on a pandemic, the FDA

has deliberately avoided specifying a " Recommended

Dietary Allowance " [RDA], while simultaneously passing

a law restricting the potassium content of all

alternative medicines to a mere 100 milligrams.

This is your first clue to understanding

how it is that we get so ill, and then willingly

swallow billions of dollars worth of useless 'patent

medicines'. Remember, just to keep up with the average

shortfall of 1,850 milligrams of potassium per day,

you would need to swallow at least 19 pills from your

local health food shop, and no ordinary person could

possibly afford that in the long term.

In order to keep their medical doctors in

line, both the FDA and AMA have circulated a number of

truly frightening stories about potassium. Most common

among them is that the potassium will 'react' with one

of a wide range of synthetic pharmaceutical medicines,

frequently resulting in death. This is actually true,

but it is the poisonous synthetic medicine which

causes the lethal cross reaction that kills you, not

the natural potassium so essential to your health.

Then there is the even scarier rumor that 'too much'

potassium will kill you by stopping your heart from

beating, as in the case of a lethal injection

execution.

Too much of almost anything will kill you,

including simple water and air, especially if applied

too quickly or by the incorrect route. When

McVeigh was strapped to a gurney and put to death, the

third chemical injected directly into his vein was a

'chaser' containing 50 milliliters of concentrated

potassium chloride, which finally stopped his heart.

If you are stupid enough to try this at home, you will

die just as quickly, and in order to put this

deliberate FDA and AMA scare mongering into the proper

perspective, it is necessary to explain why.

The normal route for potassium to enter

the body is by way of the mouth, either in the form of

food, or sometimes as a solution made up of 100% water

soluble potassium chloride dissolved in fruit juice.

As the potassium passes through the digestive tract,

the cells extract what they need and any excess is

then passed out of the body, partly as solid waste,

but mostly through the kidneys as urine. It is a

perfectly normal biochemical process that the body

itself knows how to handle very well, without any

outside help from medical doctors. However, if you

inject the potassium directly into a vein, you bypass

the body's biochemical safety processes and stop the

heart.

Exactly the same can be said of

concentrated hydrochloric acid, always present in our

stomachs in order to digest food, but incapable of

harming us because of the body's sophisticated

biochemical defenses. However, if you injected this

same concentrated hydrochloric acid from the stomach

directly into a vein, you would die even more quickly

than you would from injecting potassium.

You can only be scared by a medical doctor

if you allow yourself to be scared, and you will no

doubt gain added confidence where potassium is

concerned later in this report, when we examine the

extraordinary case of the Yanomami Indians of South

America. The Yanomami were fortunate enough to escape

the attention of western medical 'science' for

thousands of years, and still shun it now. These

fascinating people receive virtually no sodium [table

salt] at all, but every adult consumes around 8,500

milligrams of potassium every day. They are incredibly

fit and have no history whatever of arthritis,

osteoporosis, hypertension [high blood pressure],

angina or stroke. We will return to the Yanomami a

little later on.

Far too many of the 'illnesses' we suffer

today can be laid at the door of potassium deficiency,

though hordes of pharmaceutical and medical apologists

will probably reject this, claiming that medical

'research' proved long ago that simple deficiency

cannot cause life-threatening conditions. Sadly the

apologists will be defeated by historical fact,

chronicled long before your local pharmaceutical

multinational decided to use your body as a private

playground for the benefit of its shareholders.

Scurvy is caused solely by Vitamin C

deficiency, and is thus predictably cured quickly by

large quantities of Vitamin C. There are thousands of

documented cases, especially in the British Royal

Navy, where sailors became known as " Limeys " because

of the vast amounts of citrus fruit provided free by

The Admiralty. Rickets is less well known, but is

caused by a deficiency of Vitamin D, rapidly corrected

by the generous application of Vitamin D and calcium.

Embarrassing though this may be for modern

pharmaceutical salesmen and medical doctors, these

bald facts are there in the history books for all to

see. So why not admit potassium deficiency?

The beginning of the end for obtaining

essential minerals from fruit and vegetables happened

in the middle of the 19th Century, when German chemist

Baron Justus Von Liebig analyzed human and plant ash,

and determined that nitrogen, phosphorus, and

potassium [NPK] were all the minerals plants needed.

He claimed that if fed synthetically to plants,

farmers could force plants to grow and support healthy

humans. Thus Von Liebig became the father of synthetic

manure, which in turn spawned superphosphate, the

mother of all deceptive fertilizers. Though NPK and

superphosphate are able to create a synthetic soil

environment sufficient to stimulate plant growth, the

resulting fruits and vegetables are always seriously

deficient in trace minerals, with some containing none

at all. Baron Von Liebig watched the deficiencies his

invention caused with horror, and recanted before he

died, but it was all too late. By then, the big

investors had moved in for a quick kill.

Running in tandem with the depletion of

potassium in fruit and vegetables during the 19th

Century was an even bigger problem. Until then, salt

of any kind had been so highly valued on most

continents, that at one point in history it was

actually used as money. In Europe, Asia and Africa

most of the salt moved by the camel trains over

thousands of miles was sylvite, otherwise known as

potassium chloride. Great chunks of sylvite were

dotted along the trading routes for the beasts of

burden to lick at, thereby restoring their

electrolytes lost through sweating and other exertion.

But when the railroads opened up America from east to

west, they started carrying vast quantities of cheap

salt produced in giant pans on the two coasts.

Unfortunately for Americans this was sea salt,

comprised of 98.8% sodium chloride, the favorite of

fishes but a deadly enemy of man. And so it was that

in less than seventy years, western man had his

healthy potassium replaced almost entirely by

unhealthy sodium.

It was not until the early 20th Century

that medical 'science' started to determine what it

considered were healthy 'normal' levels for blood

pressure, serum potassium and so on, using data drawn

from the population as a whole. The problem is that

medical 'science' was by then dealing with seriously

damaged human beings, who had already been subjected

to the ravages of sodium for nearly fifty years. So

what seemed normal to American medical 'researchers'

in the early 20th Century, would have horrified the

Yanomami or any other self-respecting tribe one

hundred years earlier. But because American medicine

got off on the wrong foot, it stayed on the wrong

foot, and slowly built a giant pyramid of myths based

largely on ignorance and fatally flawed biochemistry.

Despite the best efforts of the fledgling

pharmaceuticals and medical 'science' in general to

belittle the problems, by the nineteen thirties it had

become obvious to most Americans that something was

seriously amiss with their soils, with their crops,

and with their rapidly deteriorating personal health.

During the 2nd Session of the 74th Congress in 1936,

the United States Senate published Document #264,

which really laid the problems facing American

nutrition on the line. Verbatim extracts from Document

264 are provided at the bottom of this page, but for

the specific purposes of this report, here are the

three most important paragraphs.

" The alarming fact is that foods [fruits,

vegetables and grains] now being raised on millions of

acres of land that no longer contain enough of certain

minerals are starving us - no matter how much of them

we eat. No man of today can eat enough fruits and

vegetables to supply his system with the minerals he

requires for perfect health because his stomach isn't

big enough to hold them. "

" The truth is that our foods vary

enormously in value, and some of them aren't worth

eating as food...Our physical well-being is more

directly dependent upon the minerals we take into our

systems than upon calories or vitamins or upon the

precise proportions of starch, protein or

carbohydrates we consume. "

" It is bad news to learn from our leading

authorities that 99% of the American people are

deficient in these minerals, and that a marked

deficiency in any one of the more important minerals

actually results in disease. Any upset of the balance,

any considerable lack or one or another element,

however microscopic the body requirement may be, and

we sicken, suffer, shorten our lives. "

So sixty-eight years ago, the American

Government knew full well the problems facing the

people, but the stuffed-shirt medical fraternity did

absolutely nothing to help. In fact, driven ever

onwards by the extravagant fiscal needs of

pharmaceutical shareholders, medical 'science' and its

subordinate doctors stood reality on its ear, and

proceeded to steadily undermine what little good

health the general community had left.

Learned doctors published papers on the

'potassium-sodium balance needed by all humans', when

a quick field trip to almost any Indian Reservation

would have reversed their absurd findings in seconds.

More and more sodium found its way into every kind of

food imaginable, and blood pressures started to rise

sharply. By the nineteen-forties, relatively new

diseases such as arthritis, hypertension and angina

started to climb through the roof, to be met with a

veritable shock wave of expensive 'patent medicines'

to help with the new 'disease' problems.

A handful of alert doctors recognized the

problem for what it really was, and started giving

their patients massive doses of potassium [between

5,000 and 20,000 milligrams per day] in order to bring

their blood pressures back down to normal, and to

relieve problems with angina and other heart

complaints. In fact these treatments were entirely

successful, but the use of a basic mineral that could

not be patented by the pharmaceutical companies was

frowned on, and medical research grants in this field

mysteriously started to dry up. By the late sixties

such research has been suppressed, as you can see from

the [limited] general references provided at the

bottom of this page.

The pharmaceutical multinationals were by

now exerting increasing pressure on the medical

fraternity, providing all kinds of 'assistance' during

their university training, with copious quantities of

fancy-sounding scholarships and research grants. Both

were vital in helping to get medical doctors to " see

things the right way " , meaning of course that

profitable drugs were the answer to all ills. As more

doctors peddled more drugs to their patients,

pharmaceutical corporate profits rose sharply,

allowing perks for the doctors to be extended to

include 'training seminars' at luxury hotels and golf

complexes, along with other varied forms of discreet

bribery.

By the seventies, all meaningful

references to serious mineral deficiencies had been

removed from the curriculum, with medical students

taught that patients could obtain all the minerals

they needed from a diet rich in fruit and vegetables,

although their university tutors knew this was a

complete lie. Deficiencies manifesting as cramps,

arthritis, osteoporosis, hypertension, angina and

strokes etc, became 'diseases' that could be treated

by a truly dazzling array of brightly colored and

highly profitable pharmaceutical drugs.

It was all a terrible illusion of course,

but the show had to go on. As toxic sodium

increasingly overwhelmed healthy potassium, the

resulting potassium deficiency caused hardening of the

cardio vascular system, and 'essential hypertension'

[high blood pressure of 'unknown' origin] became the

order of the day. Incidences of angina, stroke and

heart attack increased dramatically, as did stress,

with the latter feeding on the former. Because of a

lack of space, this report will only cover the effects

of potassium deficiency on the cardio-vascular system.

Other directly related horrors such as arthritis,

osteoporosis, diabetes etc. will have to wait for

another day.

Modern medical 'science' has tried to

explain away the critical and frequently lethal human

sodium-potassium imbalance with an artfully designed

theoretical model generally referred to as the

'Potassium Pump', in which the medical buzzword is

'balance'. To quote one medical article, " Potassium is

pumped into the cell by active transport systems,

which concomitantly pump sodium out of the cell. The

preferential segregation of sodium and potassium

across the cell's biological membrane is important in

maintaining osmotic balance " . What osmotic balance?

The Yanomami and other tribes prove that ancient man

had no need for toxic sodium, proving to all but a

certifiable cretin that the potassium pump is an

emergency one-way biochemical protective mechanism,

designed to drive toxic sodium out of the cells before

it can cause mayhem and premature death

Despite the Yanomami's overall levels of

sodium being incredibly low, researchers who examined

more than 10,000 of these cheerful people found that

there was a direct correlation between marginally

increased sodium intake and increased blood pressure.

" ... a highly significant statistical relationship was

observed between sodium excretion and systolic blood

pressure for the 10,079 participants. The higher the

urinary sodium excretion [and, therefore, the sodium

intake], the higher the blood pressure. "

The reader should remember that for the

Yanomami Indians, normal blood pressure averages out

at 95/60 and does not increase with age. Try comparing

this with the AMA western 'normal' blood pressure of

120/80, which then goes up in incremental steps as you

ingest more sodium and lose more potassium while

getting older. Of course, the medical apologists will

claim this is because we are more civilized, have

evolved, and are thus 'different', but rest assured

this is pathetic rubbish.

The only significant difference between

the Yanomami and Americans or Australians, is that the

Yanomami are stuffed full of healthy potassium, while

we are stuffed full of toxic sodium. The researchers

also noted that another benefit for the Yanomami

related to their lack of obesity. " Adults of

industrialized populations have an increase in weight

with age. The Yanomami Indians did not increase their

weight with age. " Short, but to the point. Somebody

remind me to add " obesity " to my shopping list of

potassium deficiency-related ailments.

Those western ladies with a slight weight

problem, should resist the temptation to pack their

bags and rush off to the headwaters of the Orinoco

River. Yanomami husbands are hot on protocol, and do

not take kindly to the lady of the house sneaking off

into the bushes for a quickie with one of the young

bucks. If caught in such a situation, the wife can

expect her husband to fire a sharp hunting arrow into

the fleshy part of her buttocks. Not enough to kill,

but certainly enough to stop her lying on her back for

several weeks thereafter. Some choose to call this

behavior " barbaric " , while others suggest that it

merely reinforces strong family values. And oh, yes,

before I forget, the favorite supper dish is barbecued

frog.

Of course, to prove that any of this

Yanomami potassium stuff is relevant to western folk,

medical 'science' demands that you must have western

guinea pigs for 'controlled trials'. I am one of those

guinea pigs, though the trial was controlled strictly

by me without independent medical observers, which

means that my testimony is suspect at the very least,

and I should probably not to be believed. Quite

frankly I don't give a damn about that, but the

information might be of use to someone out there who

either already has cardio-vascular problems, or is

seriously interested in avoiding cardio-vascular

problems at any time in the future.

For more than 25 years I suffered from

'essential hypertension', in other words high blood

pressure that the medical fraternity cannot explain.

During that period about eight different medical

doctors gave me a staggering variety of 'patent

medicines', none of which produced a steady reduction

of blood pressure, though on two notable occasions the

medicines caused 'bad reactions' which dropped my

blood pressure so low and so suddenly, that my wife

could barely get a reading. At no time during this

25-year period did any of the medical doctors suggest

that it might be a good idea to measure my serum

electrolyte levels, in order to check for potassium

deficiency. As you might expect, this entire sequence

put me off the medical profession in a very big way.

Towards the end of 2003 I started getting

the classic signs of 'angina', which, over the next

six weeks, rapidly progressed into 'unstable angina',

a textbook case involving an accelerating or

" crescendo " pattern of chest and back pain that

lasted longer than ordinary 'angina'. This was

accompanied by acute breathlessness, especially after

even moderate exertion or a small carbohydrate meal.

The fact that the medical profession did not know the

cause of 'angina' infuriated me, because everything on

the planet is caused by something else.

My basic knowledge of chemistry indicated

that I might be suffering from a sodium overdose, so

although in extreme pain and at times barely

conscious, I managed to hook up to the Internet and do

a few basic Google searches. The only sodium overdoses

I could find were those caused by various synthetic

drugs, so I reversed my search pattern and tried

" potassium deficiency " instead. It was then that I

discovered my medical 'angina' symptoms precisely

matched those exhibited by a person suffering from an

acute potassium deficiency. This information came as

no great surprise. On the face of it, I had uncovered

the underlying cause of medical 'angina', the latter

credited with the sale of more than a billion dollars

worth of synthetic 'patent medicines' every year.

The problem was knowing what to do next.

In Australia I was limited to 100-milligram potassium

pills from the health food shops, or to a product

called " Slow K " available from some pharmacies.

Basically Slow K is a slow-release 600-milligram chunk

of potassium chloride, which allows a 'non-lethal'

dose of potassium to be administered under the direct

control of the pill, rather than under the control of

its recipient. The problem here is that all chunks of

salt are biochemically " hot', meaning that as the

sugar coating wears off the outside of the pill, the

chunk of undissolved salt is exposed, and can then

come into direct contact with delicate internal

tissues. In my casual view, this could easily cause

some sort of perforation or an ulcer.

Clearly what I needed was an industrial

quantity of potassium in free flowing 100% water

soluble form, which would allow me to first dissolve

the potassium in water and fruit juice, thereby

ensuring that no salt 'hot spots' could later cause

problems in my digestive tract. In the end I settled

for a kilogram of AR [Analytical Reagent] grade

potassium chloride salt from a chemical warehouse,

mercifully not yet under the direct control of the

American FDA, or the Australian AMA.

Cost wise this was also a plus, because

the whole kilogram set me back a mere US$30.00

including taxes, which is cheap enough when you

realize that my potassium chloride purchase contained

approximately 620 grams [or 620,000 milligrams] of the

same potassium the FDA has restricted to

100-milligrams per dose in the health food shops. You

do the math. Pop down to your local health food

provider and ask for a quote on 6,200 x 100-milligram

potassium supplements. Be ready to write a very large

check.

By this stage there was so much pain so

often, that I made a personal executive decision to

attempt to slowly try to absorb a minimum of 50 grams

or 50,000 milligrams of potassium, representing about

1/5th of the 250 grams total that an adult male

should contain within his body. Simple common sense

suggested that such an acute deficiency, with the

extreme symptoms I was suffering, could hardly be

caused by a minor reduction in whole body potassium,

and, quite frankly, I also wanted the stop the

overwhelming pain before it had a chance to accelerate

into a fatal stroke or heart attack.

With this in mind, I dissolved 4 grams

[4,000 milligrams] of potassium chloride in water and

fruit juice, slowly swallowed the lot, and then kept

grimly repeating this process every eight hours. After

about five days [or 60,000 milligrams] most of the

pain had gone, but I was still incapable of truly

coherent thought. It was not until I was well past the

110,000-milligram mark that my faculties truly

returned, though by then I was so exhausted I could no

longer write or use the computer.

Expressed in the same terms used by the

FDA, in ten days I had slowly ingested 68.2 grams of

dissolved potassium [68,200 milligrams], or

sixty-eight times the maximum quantity permitted under

American law. However, it should also be noted that

this figure represents only five days of the maximum

quantity administered by licensed American doctors to

their hypertensive patients during the nineteen

forties, before their research funding was

mysteriously and abruptly withdrawn. When viewed in

the latter context, my actions do not seem

unreasonable.

At the end of the ten day period, all of

my 'unstable angina' pain and breathlessness had

vanished completely, and along with it most of the

'essential hypertension' that plagued me for more than

twenty-five years. Nowadays I take a daily maintenance

dose of 2,000 milligrams potassium per day [3,200

milligrams of AR grade potassium chloride salt], plus

200 milligrams of magnesium orotate to minimize

losses.

Though medical doctors might rave about me

illegally 'giving medical advice without a license', I

am doing no such thing. In the first place potassium

is a naturally-occuring mineral essential in our diets

for normal development, which places it firmly in the

'nutrition' rather than 'medical' basket. Secondly

there is no way that any government agency can prevent

determined people from getting their hands on

potassium chloride if they really wish to do so. The

material is produced in bulk and used for hundreds of

applications. For example, about every third oil rig

drilling in the Rocky Mountains probably has about

25,000 pounds of the stuff, neatly stacked in sacks at

the edge of the rig site.

There are less difficult ways of obtaining

potassium, especially in America where there are a

range of " No Salt " products, most of which simply

replace sea salt with potassium chloride. Fruit and

vegetables grown in strict organic rotation on

properly maintained soil will probably contain

significant quantities of potassium, though it is very

difficult to check precisely. Although I have the

necessary knowledge required to test for potassium in

a range of different substances, I lack the laboratory

equipment needed to do so consistently.

On a closing note, try not to believe the

advertising garbage that keeps telling you the banana

has the highest level of potassium known to man,

because it is a lie. If grown side by side on suitable

soils, the humble jacket potato has more than four

times as much potassium as the banana, weight for

weight. This might bring a wry smile to the face of

many an Irishman, whose ancestors were forced to live

on a 'poor' diet of potatoes in Ireland more than a

century ago. The reality is that those potatoes, so

very high in potassium, gave the Irish the huge

strength and endurance they needed to build bridges

and lay railroads half way round the world. Looking

back briefly on the Yanomami Indians, it is not hard

to see why.

The author is an independent investigator working

alone, and receiving only an inadequate disability

pension. If you feel that this report has helped you

in any way, or if you would simply like to contribute

towards future research costs, please do so by

clicking one of the buttons below and making a

donation. Thank youScroll down page for Senate quotes

and further referencesVerbatim Unabridged extracts

from the 74th Congress 2nd Session, Senate Document

#264, 1936

:

" Our physical well-being is more directly dependent

upon minerals we take into our systems than upon

calories or vitamins, or upon precise proportions of

starch, protein or carbohydrates we consume. "

" Do you know that most of us today are suffering from

certain dangerous diet deficiencies which cannot be

remedied until depleted soils from which our food

comes are brought into proper mineral balance? "

" The alarming fact is that foods (fruits, vegetables

and grains) now being raised on millions of acres of

land that no longer contain enough of certain minerals

are starving us - no matter how much of them we eat.

No man of today can eat enough fruits and vegetables

to supply his system with the minerals he requires for

perfect health because his stomach isn't big enough to

hold them. "

" The truth is that our foods vary enormously in value,

and some of them aren't worth eating as food...Our

physical well-being is more directly dependent upon

the minerals we take into our systems than upon

calories or vitamins or upon the precise proportions

of starch, protein or carbohydrates we consume. "

" This talk about minerals is novel and quite

startling. In fact, a realization of the importance of

minerals in food is so new that the textbooks on

nutritional dietetics contain very little about it.

Nevertheless, it is something that concerns all of us,

and the further we delve into it the more startling it

becomes. "

" You'd think, wouldn't you, that a carrot is a carrot

- that one is about as good as another as far as

nourishment is concerned? But it isn't; one carrot may

look and taste like another and yet be lacking in the

particular mineral element which our system requires

and which carrots are supposed to contain. "

" Laboratory test prove that the fruits, the

vegetables, the grains, the eggs, and even the milk

and the meats of today are not what they were a few

generations ago (which doubtless explains why our

forefathers thrived on a selection of foods that would

starve us!) "

" No man today can eat enough fruits and vegetables to

supply his stomach with the mineral salts he requires

for perfect health, because his stomach isn't big

enough to hold them! And we are turning into big

stomachs. "

" No longer does a balanced and fully nourishing diet

consist merely of so many calories or certain vitamins

or fixed proportion of starches, proteins and

carbohydrates. We know that our diets must contain in

addition something like a score of minerals salts. "

" It is bad news to learn from our leading authorities

that 99% of the American people are deficient in these

minerals, and that a marked deficiency in any one of

the more important minerals actually results in

disease. Any upset of the balance, any considerable

lack or one or another element, however microscopic

the body requirement may be, and we sicken, suffer,

shorten our lives. "

" We know that vitamins are complex chemical substances

which are indispensable to nutrition, and that each of

them is of importance for normal function of some

special structure in the body. Disorder and disease

result from any vitamin deficiency. It is not commonly

realized, however, that vitamins control the body's

appropriation of minerals, and in the absence of

minerals they have no function to perform. Lacking

vitamins, the system can make some use of minerals,

but lacking minerals, vitamins are useless. "

" Certainly our physical well-being is more directly

dependent upon the minerals we take into our systems

than upon calories of vitamins or upon the precise

proportions of starch, protein of carbohydrates we

consume. " " This discovery is one of the latest and

most important contributions of science to the problem

of human health. "

Further References

, J.M. Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med. 67, 557, 1948

Burnett RB Yeap BB Chatterton BE Gaffney RD 1996

Chronic fatigue syndrome: is total body potassium

important? Med. J. Aust. 164; 384.

Dall JLC ose S & Ferguson JA 1971 Potassium intake

of elderly patients in hospital. Gerontol. Clinic 13;

114

, Adelle. (1965) 'Let's get well'. Unwin

Paperbacks.

del Castillo, E. B., et al., Medicine 6, 471, 1945

Egeli, E.S. et al., Am. Heart J. 59, 527, 1960

Grim ce et al 1970 On the higher blood pressure of

blacks: A study of sodium and potassium intake and

excretion in a bi-racial community. Clinical Research

18; 593

, N.M., et al., Am. Heart j. 5, 80, 85, 1943

, N.M., et al., Proc. Staff Meet. Mayo Clin. 21,

385, 1946

Mancilha-Carvalho, Jairo de Jesus and Silva,

Albuquerque de Souza e. The Yanomami indians in the

INTERSALT study. Arq. Bras. Cardiol., Mar. 2003,

vol.80, no.3, p.295-300. ISSN 0066-782X.

Oliver WJ Cohen EL Neel JV 1975 Blood pressure, sodium

intake, and sodium related hormones in the Yanomamo

Indians " no salt culture " . Circulation 52;146151.

LV Dinan TG 1999 Small adrenal glands in chronic

fatigue syndrome: a preliminary computer tomograph

study psychoneuroendocrinology 24; 759-768.

Sharpey-Scafter, E. P., Brit. Heart J. 5, 80, 85, 1943

United States Senate, Document No. 264, 74th Congress

2nd Session, 1936

Weber CE 1974 Potassium in the etiology of rheumatoid

arthritis and heart infarction. Journal of Applied

---

Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.

Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).

Version: 6.0.593 / Virus Database: 376 - Release Date: 20/02/2004

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Re: Potassium article.

> Hi

>

> Came across this potassium article on another forum.

>

> It is rather lengthy but very interesting!

>

> Originates from http://www.joevialls.co.uk/

>

> Beau.

Beau,

I want to thank you for bringing this to our attention.

This article is a GEM. With the vastly increased amounts of information in the

media and on the internet, it's easy to get lost and not know how to sort

through and use what's valuable.

I spent about 45 minutes formatting this in Microsoft Word (and reading it at

the same time). This is a keeper. I know many people who can be helped by this,

including myself.

Best regards,

Nenah

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Re: Potassium article.

> Hi

>

> Came across this potassium article on another forum.

>

> It is rather lengthy but very interesting!

>

> Originates from http://www.joevialls.co.uk/

>

> Beau.

Beau,

I want to thank you for bringing this to our attention.

This article is a GEM. With the vastly increased amounts of information in the

media and on the internet, it's easy to get lost and not know how to sort

through and use what's valuable.

I spent about 45 minutes formatting this in Microsoft Word (and reading it at

the same time). This is a keeper. I know many people who can be helped by this,

including myself.

Best regards,

Nenah

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

>

> Re: Potassium article.

>

>

> > Hi

> >

> > Came across this potassium article on another forum.

> >

> > It is rather lengthy but very interesting!

> >

> > Originates from http://www.joevialls.co.uk/

> >

> > Beau.

>

>

> Beau,

> I want to thank you for bringing this to our attention.

>

> This article is a GEM. With the vastly increased amounts of

information in the

> media and on the internet, it's easy to get lost and not know how

to sort

> through and use what's valuable.

>

> I spent about 45 minutes formatting this in Microsoft Word (and

reading it at

> the same time). This is a keeper. I know many people who can be

helped by this,

> including myself.

>

> Best regards,

> Nenah

Hi Nenah and all

I also found this on another list and reformatted for word as well, .

I didn't take as long as I have a utility called " text-soap " which is

a sharware program that goes a long way towards reformatting. I

recommend this if you do a lot of this type of work You can find

this with a yahoo search.

If you do it occasionally, you can download a free-ware called e-mail

stripper from

http://www.papercut.biz/emailStripper.htm

If you find a " must-have " where the host no longer exists, you may

want to try Internet Archive at

http://www.archive.org/

to check and see if the stuff you are looking was archived.

Best regards

Glen Halina

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...