Guest guest Posted January 2, 2001 Report Share Posted January 2, 2001 Hi Myrl, I've been " on the sofa " since Dec. 4th, having to keep right leg elevated to hip level until Feb 6th, so have not been able to do much research or respond to much on net. Have you found anything on hair and nail sample showing 'toxins' in the body, as this was the basis of the original Baylor/Houston studies, in addition to blood samples, etc.? Many thanks, if you find any follow up on the toxins! Blessings, Martha Murdock, Director National Silicone Implant Foundation Dallas Texas HQ -----Original Message----- From: Myrl Jeffcoat <myrlj@...> myrlj@... <myrlj@...> Date: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 10:44 PM Subject: Hair analysis unreliable: study Hair analysis unreliable: study http://www.msnbc.com/news/510641.asp Method should not be used to diagnose nutritional problems MSNBC NEWS SERVICES Jan. 2 — Hair analysis is generally an unreliable method of diagnosing nutritional problems and exposure to environmental toxins, according to a study of six commercial laboratories. A HAIR sample sent to all six labs produced widely varying and often opposite results. One lab called the patient a “fast metabolizer” and recommended that she abstain from vitamin A; another said the sample showed she was a “slow metabolizer” who should take vitamin A supplements. “Health-care choices based on these analyses may be ineffective or even detrimental to the patient’s overall health,” the researchers said in Wednesday’s Journal of the American Medical Association. “Physicians and other health care professionals who are considering ordering hair analysis to assess nutritional status or who are basing nutritional counseling or therapy on hair analysis results should reconsider this approach unless and until the reliability of hair analysis value is established and evidence becomes available that clinical recommendations based on hair analysis improve patient outcomes,” they wrote. A similar study made a similar warning in the same journal 15 years ago. Because laboratory methods have generally improved since then and a federal law was passed in 1988 to regulate testing, the researchers decided to re-examine the issue. The hair — supplied by one of the researchers — was not tested for illegal drugs such as cocaine, which is another common use of hair analysis. The researchers did not pass judgment on the reliability of hair tests to detect drug use. The authors, from the California Department of Health Services, said the federal government should refrain from certifying hair analysis laboratories until standards for proficiency testing are developed. ANNUAL TAB: $10 MILLION Nine U.S. laboratories promote mineral analysis of hair as a diagnostic tool, and the public spends nearly $10 million a year on the tests that the researchers concluded were worthless. They focused on six, whose charges ranged from $30 to $69 per sample to test for levels of poisons such as arsenic and 18 other elements, including lead and mercury. The laboratories’ findings of mineral content varied considerably, and they also provided conflicting dietary and nutritional supplement recommendations based on their results. The results of hair analysis can be skewed by hair treatments, contamination from environmental sources and inconsistent lab techniques, the study authors said. An editorial in the journal supported the researchers’ findings. Written by Steindel of the Public Health Practice Program Office at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Chamblee, Georgia, and Howanitz of the State University of New York, Health Science Center at Brooklyn, it questioned the value of hair analysis. The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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