Guest guest Posted February 4, 2007 Report Share Posted February 4, 2007 Our son is 10 and we are going to start the detoxamin soon. What schedule are you doing with them? Our practitioner said to try a Monday/Wed/Fri schedule but I have also read 3/11 or 2 days on and 6 off. What has worked best for your daughter? Dwayne wrote: , Our daughter is 12 and we have used and still use Detoxamin suppositories. They are expensive - I think we paid over $200.00 for 30 suppositories. You can order them without a prescription on the internet. They are Calcium Disodium EDTA 750mg for adults and less for children. www.detoxamin.com 1- Salt Lake City, Utah. Our daughter doesn't resist very much. I don't know if you need a prescription for DMSA suppositories. I know you can buy the capsules without a prescription. Shari Re: re suppositories MORE INFO ON SUPPOSITORIES: TTFD suppositories cause irritation of the anus and I don't believe are made any more - the transdermal works very well, and the Authia that Dr. Lonsdale invented hides the horrible skunk odor that the prescription causes (available from Ecological Formulas and other places on the internet without prescription). My protocol for DMSA is 10mg/kg, with 800mg max no matter what the weight, three nights on inserted at bedtime one time for 3 nights in a row, then 11 nights off. For DMPS is 1.5mg/kg, usually 30-100 up to 200 for kids, max 500 for adults, again once at bedtime for 3 nights and 11 nights off. EDTA is also 10mg/kg, 1000mg max, and I usually do those on two nights in a row in the middle of the week every week, with 6 days off in-between. I have these done at Coastal, and your doctor can contact them at to find out the carriers used in the supps for the chelation elements - I do not know that. Dr. Neubrander has pointed out the importance of inserting the suppositories if possible soon after the child has a bowel movement. If the supp is inserted into stool it will not be effective - maybe a bit with diarrhea but not at all in constipation; none will reach the mucous membranes. This may necessitate the supp being given at some other time other than bedtime, and as long as it is generally the same time each day it doesn't matter. The reason we usually say bedtime is that that is the time that many parents insert the supp after the child goes to sleep. For kids still in diapers there's no problem, change the diaper after a stool and use that opportunity to insert supp. For a cooperative child, it does not matter when - the challenge is with the kids that are resistant. All of us feel that if an older child is extremely resistant that this method should not ever be forced. Dr. JM --- wrote: > Dr JM, > we are with a doctor in New Zealand, Dr Fewtrell, we > would like to try suppositories of edta, dmps, dmsa, > ttfd and glutathione - our child is 12 years, and > has done iv chelation, and pulled out metals etc and > had some good gains, however we would rather use > suppositories, and have used them when he was > younger with no problems etc. > Dr Fewtrell has asked me to find out what the > contents and amounts of the suppositories are and > what the protocol for giving them is. > Thanks for your time - we are able to get them made > up in USA with a NZ doctors license. > thanks for your time > regards > > [Non-text portions of this message have been > removed] > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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