Guest guest Posted May 6, 2004 Report Share Posted May 6, 2004 > If there are no metals, the only real drawbacks would be if there was > an intolerance to the chelator. How would one make this determination? The muscle pull test? Wondering how often you see this to be a problem? > > > >>Isn't it hard on the liver? Only if metals are moving thru. So really this is a " good " thing if you have metals? I guess I had thought of chelation/DMSA use primarily for mercury, but am now grasping it could be used for some of the other problems such as antinomy, aluminum, bismuth. Is this true, do these often come out? I do recall seeing mercury is usually the hardest to get out. When you did chelation, did you test your child's urine frequently to see what was coming out? > > >>Is it recommended to do some sort of liver stress test first? > Yes, especially with DMSA. With ALA there is less need. I understand ALA crosses the blood/brain barrier, but wondering why it would be less possible stress on the liver. Does it not pull the metals out through the kidneys/liver like DMSA? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2004 Report Share Posted May 7, 2004 > > an intolerance to the chelator. > How would one make this determination? The muscle pull test? > Wondering how often you see this to be a problem? > I don't know about the muscle test, but you can ask someone about that if you want. The only real way I know about it is to try the chelator at low dose and see what might happen. There are " a few " kids who don't seem to tolerate the chelator, based on my reading of email and message boards, but not many. > > >>Isn't it hard on the liver? > Only if metals are moving thru. > So really this is a " good " thing if you have metals? I guess I had > thought of chelation/DMSA use primarily for mercury, but am now > grasping it could be used for some of the other problems such as > antinomy, aluminum, bismuth. Is this true, do these often come out? So far as I know, DMSA is good for lead and many other metals, altho it only pulls from the body organs [except lead, which leaches from the brain]. Most people recommend ALA for antimony and aluminum. > I do recall seeing mercury is usually the hardest to get out. When > you did chelation, did you test your child's urine frequently to see > what was coming out? No, I don't have access to testing. > I understand ALA crosses the blood/brain barrier, but wondering why > it would be less possible stress on the liver. Does it not pull the > metals out through the kidneys/liver like DMSA? ALA pulls out thru the bm. DMSA pulls out thru the urine, so the kidneys are involved. So far as I remember the research I did, ALA is beneficial for the liver, plus pulling thru the bm does not involve the liver quite so much as pulling thru the urine, so it does not stress the liver nearly so much. Dana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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