Worried About Whether Zeolites Will Affect Your Amalgams?
Yes, it's OK to use the
zeolites if you haven't had amalgams removed. Here is an excerpt from an
interview with Rik Deitsch, chairman of their Science Advisory Board:
Mercury in amalgams and their dangers video
Autism and Alzheimer's
disease share a common cause: mercury.
Q: What about mercury fillings, stents, joint replacements–things
that people are worried that might be affected by the liquid zeolites?
A: The zeolite in the product attracts and traps
small, highly-charged particles that fit into the pores and channels of the
zeolite cage. Understand that this is a passive process – when the zeolite is
in close proximity to these compounds, they will be drawn to the zeolite and
either absorbed into the cage or adsorbed onto the surface of the zeolite.
There is no chemical activity in this process. The zeolite will not be drawn to
compounds in an effort to 'rip' metals away from them. In other words, the
zeolite will not leach mercury from dental amalgams. If, on the other hand, the
amalgams have already released free mercury into the system, the zeolite will have
the ability to trap and remove it.
Again, the activity of the zeolite is entirely passive. It will
not attack dental fillings, hip replacements, breast implants, etc.. In an
entirely passive process, the zeolite will act like a magnet - drawing high
affinity atoms and compounds to itself.
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