A ranch house, a zip lock bag and some ordinary flour
Two experiments:
1) Some ordinary wheat flour such as can be found in most homes placed with
some water in a zip-lock plastic bag. A magnet is passed over the bag and an extraordinary
thing happens - Iron particles start popping out and attaching themselves to the
side of the bag, forming clusters of what looked like iron filings.
2) The next experiment involves placing a well-known brand of cereal into a bowl
of water. The magnet is again passed over the bowl this time and the flakes literally
line up and follow the magnet round the bowl.
This is the first time I realized that there is so much added iron in the food
that we eat and the effect it can have on our health. We’ve all been told
that heart attacks and heart bypass surgery are as a direct result of clogging
or furring of our arteries by ‘bad cholesterol’. The arteries become
so narrowed as to make the blood flow through the arteries very difficult thus
placing enormous strains on the cardio-vascular system.
Why do we need chelators and what are they? A few trace metals that we absorb
are toxic, these include iron and lead. To make use of them our bodies must form
chelates (key-lates) out of them, and to do this requires chelating substances.
Chelating substances attach to desirable trace metals and allow the body to properly
utilize those metals they also attach to undesirable trace metals and allow the
body to remove them.
Types of Chelator
Many chemicals can serve as chelators. Their effects will depend on the precise
nature and concentration of that chelator. There are some weak chelators present
in common foods. Stronger chelators are substances used medicinally to rid the
body of excess toxic metals
Why is there potential for Iron Overload? Iron overload is possible because there
is no normal mechanism for removing it from the body. The body is iron-efficient,
it retains its iron and recycles it over and over again. The body's iron level
is controlled almost entirely by absorption and iron can build up progressively
as dietary intake increases, especially in men because they do not have a monthly
blood loss.
Over a period of months and years this will result in the accumulation of several
grams of iron.
Iron and Heart Disease Risk
Iron can generate free radical pathology. There is now good evidence that free
radical pathology leads to changes in the blood vessels which sets the stage for
atherosclerosis. Accumulation of excess iron in the body may increase the
risk for heart disease and the connection doesn't end there.... Health statistics
have revealed that women have a lower risk of heart disease than men, until menopause,
after which the risk is the same.
Why?
Pre-menopausal women have a monthly blood loss that rids the body of excess, potentially
toxic iron, which may protect against heart disease. Even pre-menopausal women
with high blood cholesterol levels and high levels of LDL (bad) cholesterol, which
are considered to be strong risk factors for heart disease, have less heart disease
than men.
The Lead connection
Lead is a toxic element that has many undesirable health effects. Evidence links
excess lead with cardiovascular disease, cancer and other disorders. Researchers
have found that cancer rates are higher amongst people living near heavily-traveled
roads and it was suggested that this increased risk is due to the higher levels
of lead in the air.
This led the researchers to test the effect of a lead-removing substance - EDTA
(ethylene diamine tetra acetic acid), a man-made amino acid and chelating agent
- on cancer rates in people living near high-traffic roads. After 18 years those
treated with EDTA had one-tenth of the cancer rate of those not treated with EDTA.(1)
Chelation Therapy
This is the use of chelating agents, orally or by injection, in order to bind
and remove harmful metals from the body. The man-made chelating agent EDTA can
remove most toxic metals.
Intravenous Chelation
This therapy has been used by doctors as an effective alternative to bypass surgery
for atherosclerosis since the 1950s, giving hope that having hardening of the
arteries need not lead to coronary bypass surgery, heart attack, stroke and numerous
other related diseases.
Doctors noted reduced pain and blood cholesterol levels as well as other favorable
changes. EDTA chelation therapy has been reported to help in many conditions now
thought to be related to free radical pathology: Rheumatoid Arthritis, Diabetes,
Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and others.
Another effect of EDTA is that it changes the calcium/ magnesium ratio in the
body. EDTA removes calcium more efficiently than magnesium which reduces the ratio.
Lowering the ratio improves the flexibility of blood cells, reduces the tendency
of blood to clot and reduces blood cholesterol and blood pressure.
So the benefits of EDTA are not entirely due to the removal of toxic metals but
also the calcium/magnesium balance.
In the case of intravenous chelation, EDTA is used as the chelating agent. It
is carried in a glucose formulation together with synthetic B Vitamins. It takes
several hours and requires 80-100 treatments.
Oral Chelation
Oral EDTA therapy can also be used. One or two oral doses of EDTA per day, over
a period of months can have a long-term preventative effect.
But beware! - there are many so-called oral chelation supplements on the market
containing few or no chelating substances! For an oral chelation supplement that
has been tested and certified to lower bad cholesterol by The University of Illinois,
Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition go to our website.
------------------------------------------------
References: 1. Blumer,W, et al Environmental International
3: 1980, pages 465-471 Bibliography: New Answers to Old Questions, The Free Radical
Story by Harry W Hersey
About the author:
Article written by Jakki FrancisWebsite: http://www.naturesremediesuk.com
Author: Jakki Francis
Website:
Copyright © 2023 Jakki Francis. All rights reserved
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