Guest guest Posted February 17, 2004 Report Share Posted February 17, 2004 It is usually alright to take ALA right away unless there is a problem with copper (in the red on the hair test) or if there have been amalgam fillings in the teeth within the last 3 months. Dagmar. [ ] Please don't shout..... ...cos I KNOW this question must have been asked before. I have searched and read the files but I can't seem to find the answer to this specific question. My daughter is high in aluminium, antimony, arsenic, and lead (as per hair test) and, I believe, mercury (not QUITE based on counting rules but the hair test was done after 18 months of intensive supplentation and her original test - not DDI so diffcult to compare - showed many more irregulartities (sp?)). Can I start DMSA and ALA together or should I definately do DMSA alone first due to lead? I'm eager to introduce the ALA to get the brain stuff out asap but have read that the lead needs to go first or it will slow things down? If I need to do just DMSA first when would I introduce ALA? I understand you can get a urine test but, being in the UK, these can take AGES to come through and Dr McCandless' book seems to say that after 12 rounds (3 days on 11 off) it's pretty safe to introduce ALA anyway? Thanks Jacqui ======================================================= Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2004 Report Share Posted February 18, 2004 I don;t stop or I would never have gotten past 3 rounds (51 in the bag) - you control it as best you can and as long as the child is not uncomfortable keep going However it can mask improvements of chelation - they are still there its just difficult to see GSE with NO Fenol or Candex Enzymes are good - you can give the Candex with the night doses of chelators and often stop a flare before it really starts. Cheapest place to get it in the UK is through the same people that sell Houston Enzymes - tel number on www.houstonni.com HTH Mandi in UK > Dr McCandless states in her CSB book that if there is a flare up of yeast > whilst chelating chelation must stop till iit is brought under control. > > What does everyone else do? Is it necessary to stop - surely this would > slow chelation right down? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2004 Report Share Posted February 18, 2004 In a message dated 2/18/2004 8:17:40 AM Eastern Standard Time, jacqui@... writes: > Dr McCandless states in her CSB book that if there is a flare up of yeast > whilst chelating chelation must stop till iit is brought under control. > > What does everyone else do? Is it necessary to stop - surely this would > slow chelation right down? > I couldn't get the yeast under control before chelation, so if that was a requirement we wouldn't be doing it at all. I'm just chugging along on my way to Dana's Magic Round when the yeast is finally beaten...And really, here anyway, yeast/bacteria is no worse than before chelation started. Only done 7 rounds, and he's already tolerating more foods... Nell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2004 Report Share Posted February 18, 2004 Thanks for that - I also meant to ask - Dr McCandless states in her CSB book that if there is a flare up of yeast whilst chelating chelation must stop till iit is brought under control. What does everyone else do? Is it necessary to stop - surely this would slow chelation right down? BW Jacqui [ ] Please don't shout..... > > > ...cos I KNOW this question must have been asked before. I have > searched and read the files but I can't seem to find the answer to > this specific question. > > My daughter is high in aluminium, antimony, arsenic, and lead (as > per hair test) and, I believe, mercury (not QUITE based on counting > rules but the hair test was done after 18 months of intensive > supplentation and her original test - not DDI so diffcult to > compare - showed many more irregulartities (sp?)). Can I start DMSA > and ALA together or should I definately do DMSA alone first due to > lead? I'm eager to introduce the ALA to get the brain stuff out > asap but have read that the lead needs to go first or it will slow > things down? > > If I need to do just DMSA first when would I introduce ALA? I > understand you can get a urine test but, being in the UK, these can > take AGES to come through and Dr McCandless' book seems to say that > after 12 rounds (3 days on 11 off) it's pretty safe to introduce ALA > anyway? > > Thanks > > Jacqui > > > > ======================================================= > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2004 Report Share Posted February 18, 2004 > Dr McCandless states in her CSB book that if there is a flare up of yeast > whilst chelating chelation must stop till iit is brought under control. Depends if you can get the yeast under control. If using GSE or something similar can get it under control, then I don't see a reason to stop chelation. However, if you can't seem to get yeast under control no matter how hard you try, then yes, stop chelating until you can find what your child needs to keep it under control. For my son, yeast almost always flared during chelation, but GSE knocked it back in 2-3 days. So I only really had to stop chelating about 2-3 times in 2 years, when he needed an extra week for the yeast to go away. After about round 50 or so, he never got yeast again [except when I let him eat lots of sweets, like at Christmas], even during rounds. Dana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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