Guest guest Posted July 27, 2006 Report Share Posted July 27, 2006 Rene, one of my doctors is asking for medical or scientific articles about the dangers of using ALA when a person has mercury amalgam dental fillings. If you have access to any of these sources, I would very much appreciate as to where to find such information. Thanks, Sam. [ ] Re: AlLA AND MERCURY AMALGAM DENTAL FILlINGS QUESTION , are you asking if it is safe to use ALA when you have amalgams? It is very unsafe. People who do this run a real risk of poisoning themselves. Unfortunately, ALA's properties as a potent mercury chelator that crosses the blood brain barrier are not well known, so a lot of people who think it is a harmless antioxidant are slowly but surely putting a lot of mercury into their brains. My understanding is that generally the ability to detox efficiently declines as one becomes more toxic - a vicious circle. Best wishes René Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2006 Report Share Posted July 27, 2006 Sam, this is probably not as scholarly as you need it to be, but it is a copy of a conversation I had with a health writer a while back on the dangers of using ALA with amalgams in place - which basically rest on the assertion that ALA is a mercury chelator that can cross the brain blood barrier. If you follow the links, particularly to the ALA section on Moria's website, you should find yet more links to the studies Andy bases his ALA protocol on. These should give you what you need, but if not please let me know. take care René ------------------------- ......One thing that has become clear to me is that, like every other biomedical treatment for autism, every aspect of chelation (including ALA) is fraught with controversy. Even within the biomedical autism community there is much disagreement about proper chelation protocols and whether or not ALA can be considered a chelator. One study, done in 2003, seemed to discredit its use as a chelator. I've found a post by Andy Cutler, the chemist, on this study: http://onibasu.com/archives/am/118797.html?highlight=lipoic%20acid% 20study%202003 Here's another link to some of Andy's comments on ALA. I think these are significant because they give a good idea of why he has emphasized its use in chelation. Some of these posts contain the abstracts or full studies that he has based much of his chelation protocol on. http://home.earthlink.net/~moriam/ANDY_INDEX.html#mercury_exposure (scroll down to the ALA section) ALA is such a beneficial substance. My sense is that without heavy metal toxicity there is little reason to use it with the extreme caution that a safe chelation protocol requires. The trouble is that it is very hard to know exactly who might be carrying unhealthy levels of mercury; blood, urine, and fecal tests are notoriously inaccurate for anything other than recent exposures and hair tests are only meaningful if you know how mercury works on other elements, since it seldom shows up as high in mercury toxic people. So, people taking ALA for diabetes or other conditions are very unlikely to know that they may also have heavy metal issues, and that ALA can make this much worse. Here's yet one more post to look at that addresses this danger: http://onibasu.com/archives/am/136033.html?highlight=ALA%20diabetes Sorry, I know this is all coming form a limited source. However, Andy Cutler's work has been proven to be very reliable by parents chelating autistic children, and by mercury toxic adults. (By the way, the dose of ALA recommended in your article is actually quite conservative compared to other recommendations I have read!) The size of the dose certainly can increase the potential for heavy metal redistribution, but the fact that ALA is usually given once a day may be even more harmful, since in order to reduce redistribution there must be a steady level of chelator in the bloodstream: for ALA this means dosing at least once every three hours, around the clock. This is a lot of stuff to wade through, so I'm really grateful that you've shown such an interest in it. Thank you. > > Rene, one of my doctors is asking for medical or scientific articles about > the dangers of using ALA when a person has mercury amalgam dental fillings. > If you have access to any of these sources, I would very much appreciate as > to where to find such information. Thanks, Sam. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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