Guest guest Posted October 12, 2007 Report Share Posted October 12, 2007 Hi Everybody. So I've been trying to research chelation of mercury/metals for ASD children, and have not been able to find any sort of guide line regarding what kind of levels warrant it, and what levels don't. My son's hair test meets the counting rules but he is very communicative, affectionate, etc. with a couple of sensory/behavioral patterns so slight that he would probably not qualify for any diagnosis. His nutrition/and metabolic results, which were problematic, are being addressed with supplements. So it has dawned on me that there are no guidelines anywhere because the exact metal levels cannot be detected... is this right? In this case, would it be safe to say that the parents who chelate do it when their children still face apparent issues which have not been resolved through other treatment methods? Would anyone just chelate their children to get the metal out as a precaution against potential health problems, even if the child's functioning level didn't necessarily warrant it? Would you chelate a non ASD child based on hair test results only?? What would be the reasons not to do it? Is it dangerous? How do you know when the child is " fully chelated " ? I would really appreciate a couple of responses because this has been one part that I have not been able to fully grasp. Thank you. Carolyn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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