Guest guest Posted October 31, 2006 Report Share Posted October 31, 2006 Hi Anne, My comments are based on pg. 182 of Amalgam Illness. > Coproporphyrins 110 (rr: 50-80) This being elevated suggests mercury or another toxin or a rare genetic disease. This can be elveated by liver disease, malignancy or other non-toxic causes. > Uroporphyrins 30 (rr: 7-14) This also being elevated means the porphyria must be due to intoxication rather than genetics. > Precoproporphyrin 12.9 (rr: 2-5) This is a specific biochemical marker for mercury intoxication. Hair Test interpretation doesen't get too specific about individual porphyrins except top of pg. 96, re: cadnium. See also: http://home.earthlink.net/~moriam/ANDY_INDEX.html#fractionated_urine_p_tests Msg. 824 says: " There are some things other than mercury poisoning that can elevate these [coproporphyrin and uroporphyrin}, but not many and if these are elevated it will strongly motivate any REAL doctor to figure out what is wrong, since the potential causes are all serious conditions like mercury, lead or arsenic poisoning, hepatitis, rare genetic conditions, etc. " W. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 2006 Report Share Posted October 31, 2006 , Thanks. I looked at some of the andy posts and this one struck me, particularly the creatinine part: http://onibasu.com/archives/am/1043.html My little guy's creatinine was 282 mg/l per the French lab. I will go back tonight to see if I can figure out whether this has any bearing on why people are finding that the these test results don't match up to the reality of what they are seeing. Anne > Hi Anne, > > My comments are based on pg. 182 of Amalgam Illness. > > > Coproporphyrins 110 (rr: 50-80) > > This being elevated suggests mercury or another toxin or a rare > genetic disease. This can be elveated by liver disease, malignancy or > other non-toxic causes. > > > Uroporphyrins 30 (rr: 7-14) > > This also being elevated means the porphyria must be due to > intoxication rather than genetics. > > > Precoproporphyrin 12.9 (rr: 2-5) > > This is a specific biochemical marker for mercury intoxication. > > Hair Test interpretation doesen't get too specific about individual > porphyrins except top of pg. 96, re: cadnium. > > See also: > > http://home.earthlink.net/~moriam/ANDY_INDEX.html#fractionated_urine_ p_tests > > Msg. 824 says: > > " There are some things other than mercury poisoning that can elevate > these [coproporphyrin and uroporphyrin}, but not many and if these are > elevated it will strongly motivate any REAL doctor to figure out what > is wrong, since the potential causes are all serious conditions like > mercury, lead or arsenic poisoning, hepatitis, rare genetic > conditions, etc. " > > W. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 3, 2006 Report Share Posted November 3, 2006 > Uroporphyrins 30 (rr: 7-14) > Coproporphyrins 110 (rr: 50-80) This is consistent with a toxic porphyria, but not with any genetic porphyria. > Precoproporphyrin 12.9 (rr: 2-5) This is consistent with the toxin being mercury, but not with any other heavy metal. Andy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 3, 2006 Report Share Posted November 3, 2006 We just got our results in too and hubby and son are both very high almost across the board. What does genetic porphyria look like? > > > Uroporphyrins 30 (rr: 7-14) > > Coproporphyrins 110 (rr: 50-80) > > This is consistent with a toxic porphyria, but not with any genetic porphyria. > > > Precoproporphyrin 12.9 (rr: 2-5) > > This is consistent with the toxin being mercury, but not with any other heavy metal. > > Andy > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 5, 2006 Report Share Posted November 5, 2006 Thanks Andy. Anne > > > Uroporphyrins 30 (rr: 7-14) > > Coproporphyrins 110 (rr: 50-80) > > This is consistent with a toxic porphyria, but not with any genetic porphyria. > > > Precoproporphyrin 12.9 (rr: 2-5) > > This is consistent with the toxin being mercury, but not with any other heavy metal. > > Andy > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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