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Mercury is Toxic
Mercury is highly toxic to humans. The World
Health Organization declared there is no safe level of mercury for human
beings - in other words, mercury is so poisonous that no amount of
mercury absorption is safe. (1992) Mercury comprises a large part of
dental amalgams used to fill teeth. Dental amalgams (fillings) are
classified as a hazardous material by OSHA and recommend not contacting
amalgams with skin when handling. A protective measures should be used to
avoid breathing or touching amalgam dust, and hazardous waste instructions
used for disposal!
In 1992, Germany banned the use of certain forms of amalgam. Since then so
has Sweden and Norway. In December 1992, the American Medical Association
passed a resolution advocating the elimination of mercury, and benzene from
all household products, citing their harmful effect on the environment and
on human health. (12/92). In August 1993, a Federal Court ruled that
Californias Proposition 65 is valid with regards to dental amalgam. This
means that any dentist who has 10 or more employees must provide "clear and
reasonable warning" to both employees and patients that amalgam is a
potentially harmful substance. In February 1994, the Swedish parliament
passed a bill banning all use of dental amalgam by 1997.
Debates continue to rage regarding toxicity to mercury.
The American Dental Association continues to defend the use of mercury in
dentistry while the American Board of Clinical Metal Toxicology advises that
it be banned. Dentists have used amalgam to fill cavities -- and have argued
about their safety -- since the 1800s. Today, tens of millions of Americans
receive mercury fillings each year. Practicing dentists are generally
unaware that they have been inadequately informed about amalgam's toxic
properties by their professional association. Norway has banned mercury in
2008.
Sources of Mercury
The toxicity of mercury is not only from the major source of dental
amalgams, but is also found in a natural state in soil and has been
processed and used in a wide variety of industrial applications from the
manufacture of wood pulp to agricultural fungicides and pesticides. Other
sources of mercury contamination are from pharmaceutical medicines including
vaccinations and laxatives, cosmetics, large ocean fish such as swordfish
and tuna, film, plastics, and paint. We ingest or inhale inorganic mercury
through our air, food, water, and soilour bodies can even absorb it through
our skin and convert it into even more highly toxic methyl mercury.
Additional sources are inks, in some printing and tattoos, refined grains
and seeds may test for methyl mercury, chlorine bleaches, contact lens
solutions (antibacterial mercury compound is found in contact lens cleaning
solutions and injectable vitamins and drugs), felt, fabric softener, floor
waxes and polishes, film, broken thermometers and barometers, antiseptic
creams and lotions, and nasal sprays.
"Mercury is poisonous. It also has the capacity to bond with
prevalent bodily proteins containing sulfur which are essential for normal
function and repair.
Symptoms & Diseases of Mercury Toxicity
The symptoms of mercury toxicity are lengthy, but we
will attempt to bring you a list derived from several different sources.
They include: gastrointestinal problems, nervous system problems, fever,
chills, fatigue, headache, insomnia, loss of sex drive, depression, numbness
and tingling in hands, irritability, tremors, learning difficulties,
irregular heartbeat, chest pains, sore and bleeding gums, immune
suppression, birth defects, infertility, kidney/brain damage, anxiety,
sensitive tongue, metallic taste in the mouth, allergies, dizziness,
cataracts, insomnia, kidney damage, memory loss, nervousness, paralysis,
seizures, vision loss, weakness, hearing loss, heart problems, chronic
constipation, recurring lesions of the skin, hypersensitivity, restlessness,
inability to relate to other people, poor coordination, brain fog (memory
problems), monologue talking - sometimes for extremely long periods of time,
difficulties in breathing, retinal bleeding, loss of interest in life,
reduced capacity for work, vertigo, facial paralysis, a painful pull at the
lower jaw towards the collar bone, joint pains, pains in lower back,
weakness of muscles, pressure, pains, "needles" at lymph nodes under arms
and in groinalso in the liver region, increased need for sleep, a gray ring
around the cornea of the eye, feeling of being old, emotional problems, lack
of concentration, a feeling of being disconnected from God.
Diseases related to mercury poisoning are: Alzheimer's, all kinds of cancer,
epilepsy, arthritis, pneumonia, bronchitis, gingivitis, neuralgia,
Parkinson's, Multiple Sclerosis, Lupus, lymphoma, ALS (Lou Gehrig's
Disease), leukemia, sinusitis, chronic asthma, hypertension, ADD (Attention
Deficit Disorder), Crohn's Disease, Candidiasis (binds to mercury),
glomerulonephritis (disease of the kidneys), Autism (from mercury in
vaccines), SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome), anemia, dermatitis, eczema,
psoriasis, Bruxism (grinding teeth), Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
(CFIDS), insomnia, Epstein Barr.
Signs and
Symptoms of Toxicity from Mercury Exposure
Acute: Interstitial pneumonitis, bronchitis,
tightness or pain in chest, coughing, metallic taste, nausea, abdominal
pain, vomiting diarrhea, headache, dark line of mercury sulfide on gums,
teeth loosen, ulcers on lips and cheeks, develop psychopathologic symptoms
and muscle tremors.
Chronic: Mouth and face: inflammation, tender gums, gingivitis, teeth
loosen with alveolar destruction, increased or decreased salivation,
stomatitis and tongue tremors, nasal irritation, epistaxis, disturbances of
taste and smell, loss of appetite, facial pallor.
Neuralogic: tremor of eyelids and extracular muscles, fingers, arms,
and legs; neuralgia, paresthesias, ataxia, exaggerated knee jerks and
altered plantar reflexes, vasomotor: perspiration and blushing, personality
changes, erythrism, irritability, irascibility, criticalness, excitability,
melancholy, depression, shyness, timidity, moroseness, fatigue, weakness,
drowsiness, memory defect.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Toxicity
Standards
· less than 5.8
micrograms/liter blood
· less
than 1.1 micrograms/mcg hair
Mercury Toxicity Removal Protocols
Physical:
Dental removal of amalgam materials the mouth. See:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2205682215121492930&pr=goog-sl
Sauna, herbal/mineral baths
Magnetic fields
Natural by mouth:
Cilantro in salad daily may juice or buy tinctures in the health food
store.
Garlic in food or buy the socially acceptable garlic such as Kyolic
two three times daily.
Vitamin C example dose 2 grams (2000 mg.) 3x/day.
Alpha lipoic acid example dose 300 mg/day.
Selenomethionine example dose 400 mcg daily.
High Sulfur Foods such as eggs, onions, asparagus, ginger, brussel
sprouts, cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower.
Zeolite
Fulvic and Humic Acid
Algae and sea vegetation
Pharmaceuticals (oral, intravenous, intramuscular, transdermal):
DMPS
DMSA
Penicillamine
BAL
Facilitation of bodily detoxification
Various nutrients, homeopathy, etc.
Avoidance of Exposure
General Guidelines to Mercury content of
Seafood
The mercury content of fish and shell fish
vary with environmental contamination
Highest: Tilefish, Shark, Swordfish, King
Mackerel
Higher: Grouper, fresh water pike
High: Tuna (canned white albacore)(fresh), Orange Roughy, Marlin,
Bluefish, Lobster, Sea trout
Less High: Tuna (chunk light canned) Halibut, Rockfish, Mahi Mahi,
Crab, Sea Bass, Haddock, Snapper, Herring, Cod, Freshwater trout
Low: Perch, King Crab, Pollock, Catfish, Scallops, Flounder, Sole,
Trout (farm raised), Salmon, Crawfish, Shrimp, Clams, Tilapia, Oysters,
Sardines, Anchovies, Abalone(farmed), Butterfish, Calamari (squid),Caviar
(farmed, Hake, Herring, Lobster (spiny and rock), Mussels (farmed).
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