Guest guest Posted August 13, 2010 Report Share Posted August 13, 2010 I have often wanted to know the answer to this question - giving charcoal on round. My son had a stomach bug recently which manifested itself first while on round, I gave charcoal after the round, but not during. I would think charcoal would interfere with the chelator. If anyone has an answer to this, I would like to know as well. Irene > > > > Our 5 year old was in preschool three days a week for two years and did great, but I was able to do a lot of dosing around his hours, including chelating right through Monday around school. Now this year, he will be starting K five days a week, full time....such a different animal for me! His preschool owner/teacher was great with my restrictions and I felt comfortable enough sharing our biomed journey with her, including chelation. She noticed even the slightest nuances in his behavior and was right on par with me. Now, with a new school and people, I am leery of who I can trust. Although, the principal knows us somewhat and knows a little of what we do, not all of it though. It happens to be a green charter school that my husband is a founding member of and helped get off the ground. > > > > How much do you guys share with the teachers, school nurse and others? I know I will have to share the things that need restriction, like diet, not using play doh and hand sanitizers unless I provide them, and the like - plus they will know he takes natural antimicrobials, because he will need to be dosed once or twice while at school (they already assured me that isn't a problem)...but how much else should I tell them? Mondays are going to be rough, since he will be transitioning to post round with some yeast overgrowth symptoms and mercury redistribution. He gets bloating, lethargic and a little emotional. He isn't labeled as being on the spectrum, he is very bright and very social, but has major GI issues, yeast and bacteria which can all equate to behavior changes, mood swings, lowered frustration threshold, and gassiness, lol. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2010 Report Share Posted August 13, 2010 You cannot give charcoal during a round as it will eat the chelators and casue damage due to chelator levels in blood being altered and not consistent hence mercury and metals flying round the body causing more harm You can give charcoal only in the OFF periods between rounds From: iflow97@... Date: Fri, 13 Aug 2010 20:21:00 +0000 Subject: [ ] Re: Activated charcoal -- on round? I have often wanted to know the answer to this question - giving charcoal on round. My son had a stomach bug recently which manifested itself first while on round, I gave charcoal after the round, but not during. I would think charcoal would interfere with the chelator. If anyone has an answer to this, I would like to know as well. Irene > > > > Our 5 year old was in preschool three days a week for two years and did great, but I was able to do a lot of dosing around his hours, including chelating right through Monday around school. Now this year, he will be starting K five days a week, full time....such a different animal for me! His preschool owner/teacher was great with my restrictions and I felt comfortable enough sharing our biomed journey with her, including chelation. She noticed even the slightest nuances in his behavior and was right on par with me. Now, with a new school and people, I am leery of who I can trust. Although, the principal knows us somewhat and knows a little of what we do, not all of it though. It happens to be a green charter school that my husband is a founding member of and helped get off the ground. > > > > How much do you guys share with the teachers, school nurse and others? I know I will have to share the things that need restriction, like diet, not using play doh and hand sanitizers unless I provide them, and the like - plus they will know he takes natural antimicrobials, because he will need to be dosed once or twice while at school (they already assured me that isn't a problem)...but how much else should I tell them? Mondays are going to be rough, since he will be transitioning to post round with some yeast overgrowth symptoms and mercury redistribution. He gets bloating, lethargic and a little emotional. He isn't labeled as being on the spectrum, he is very bright and very social, but has major GI issues, yeast and bacteria which can all equate to behavior changes, mood swings, lowered frustration threshold, and gassiness, lol. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2010 Report Share Posted August 13, 2010 The gas is usually undigested food that candida is growing on. Activated charcoal flushes out undigested food particles, but it is necessary to try to get on a tolerable diet and enzymes as well. Try an elimination diet or add enzymes...using HCl or baking soda when you eat protein can help. Liz > > > > Our 5 year old was in preschool three days a week for two years and did great, but I was able to do a lot of dosing around his hours, including chelating right through Monday around school. Now this year, he will be starting K five days a week, full time....such a different animal for me! His preschool owner/teacher was great with my restrictions and I felt comfortable enough sharing our biomed journey with her, including chelation. She noticed even the slightest nuances in his behavior and was right on par with me. Now, with a new school and people, I am leery of who I can trust. Although, the principal knows us somewhat and knows a little of what we do, not all of it though. It happens to be a green charter school that my husband is a founding member of and helped get off the ground. > > > > How much do you guys share with the teachers, school nurse and others? I know I will have to share the things that need restriction, like diet, not using play doh and hand sanitizers unless I provide them, and the like - plus they will know he takes natural antimicrobials, because he will need to be dosed once or twice while at school (they already assured me that isn't a problem)...but how much else should I tell them? Mondays are going to be rough, since he will be transitioning to post round with some yeast overgrowth symptoms and mercury redistribution. He gets bloating, lethargic and a little emotional. He isn't labeled as being on the spectrum, he is very bright and very social, but has major GI issues, yeast and bacteria which can all equate to behavior changes, mood swings, lowered frustration threshold, and gassiness, lol. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.