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Duer 157099

(17,742 posts)
26. Interesting, if true. Here is one research report.
Wed Jan 16, 2013, 04:11 PM
Jan 2013

Acupunct Electrother Res. 1996 Apr-Jun;21(2):133-60.
Significant mercury deposits in internal organs following the removal of dental amalgam, & development of pre-cancer on the gingiva and the sides of the tongue and their represented organs as a result of inadvertent exposure to strong curing light (used to solidify synthetic dental filling material) & effective treatment: a clinical case report, along with organ representation areas for each tooth.
Omura Y, Shimotsuura Y, Fukuoka A, Fukuoka H, Nomoto T.
Source

Heart Disease Research Foundation, New York, USA.
Abstract

Because of the reduced effectiveness of antibiotics against bacteria (e.g. Chlamydia trachomatis, alpha-Streptococcus, Borrelia burgdorferi, etc.) and viruses (e.g. Herpes Family Viruses) in the presence of mercury, as well as the fact that the 1st author has found that mercury exists in cancer and pre-cancer cell nuclei, the presence of dental amalgam (which contains about 50% mercury) in the human mouth is considered to be a potential hazard for the individual's health. In order to solve this problem, 3 amalgam fillings were removed from the teeth of the subject of this case study. In order to fill the newly created empty spaces in the teeth where the amalgams had formerly existed, a synthetic dental-filling substance was introduced and to solidify the synthetic substance, curing light (wavelength range reportedly between 400-520 nm) was radiated onto the substance in order to accelerate the solidifying process by photo-polymerization. In spite of considerable care not to inhale mercury vapor or swallow minute particles of dental amalgam during the process of removing it by drilling, mercury entered the body of the subject. Precautions such as the use of a rubber dam and strong air suction, as well as frequent water suctioning and washing of the mouth were insufficient. Significant deposits of mercury, previously non-existent, were found in the lungs, kidneys, endocrine organs, liver, and heart with abnormal low-voltage ECGs (similar to those recorded 1-3 weeks after i.v. injection of radioisotope Thallium-201 for Cardiac SPECT) in all the limb leads and V1 (but almost normal ECGs in the precordial leads V2-V6) the day after the procedures were performed. Enhanced mercury evaporation by increased temperature and microscopic amalgam particles created by drilling may have contributed to mercury entering the lungs and G.I. system and then the blood circulation, creating abnormal deposits of mercury in the organs named above. Such mercury contamination may then contribute to intractable infections or pre-cancer. However, these mercury deposits, which commonly occur in such cases, were successfully eliminated by the oral intake of 100 mg tablet of Chinese parsley (Cilantro) 4 times a day (for average weight adults) with a number of drug-uptake enhancement methods developed by the 1st author, including different stimulation methods on the accurate organ representation areas of the hands (which have been mapped using the Bi-Digital O-Ring Test), without injections of chelating agents. Ingestion of Chinese parsley, accompanied by drug-uptake enhancement methods, was initiated before the amalgam removal procedure and continued for about 2 to 3 weeks afterwards, and ECGs became almost normal. During the use of strong bluish curing light to create a photo-polymerization reaction to solidify the synthetic filling material, the adjacent gingiva and the side of the tongue were inadvertently exposed. This exposure to the strong bluish light was found to produce pre-cancerous conditions in the gingiva, the exposed areas of the tongue, as well as in the corresponding organs represented on those areas of the tongue, and abnormally increased enzyme levels in the liver. These abnormalities were also successfully reversed by the oral intake of a mixture of EPA with DHA and Chinese parsley, augmented by one of the non-invasive drug-uptake enhancement methods previously described by the 1st author, repeated 4 times each day for 2 weeks.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I can handle small (and I mean *small*) amounts Arkansas Granny Jan 2013 #1
I feel ya, AR Granny MrScorpio Jan 2013 #5
Cilaaaaaantro ... Mmmmmmm ... Arugula Latte Jan 2013 #2
... pinboy3niner Jan 2013 #31
... Arugula Latte Jan 2013 #32
Beat me to it! u4ic Jan 2013 #36
Ah, a connoisseur of the soaps with which we got our mouths washed out pinboy3niner Jan 2013 #41
It would be so much easier today, eh? u4ic Jan 2013 #48
A little bit is okay, but in significant amounts it becomes quite soapy-tasting. nt Codeine Jan 2013 #3
I feel sorry for you. surrealAmerican Jan 2013 #4
It does, in a way Canuckistanian Jan 2013 #6
Tastes like stink bugs Taverner Jan 2013 #7
Well, I sort of agree. It tastes like Laurian Jan 2013 #9
... 2naSalit Jan 2013 #35
Mexican and Thai food.... BlancheSplanchnik Jan 2013 #8
+1 pinboy3niner Jan 2013 #17
Mmmmmmm....oh you ratfink BlancheSplanchnik Jan 2013 #18
Ratfink I may be, but I hope somebody brings you a steaming bowl of pho pinboy3niner Jan 2013 #29
Awwwwwwwwwwwww! thanks pin! Hey for me, BlancheSplanchnik Jan 2013 #38
well, that hamburgler was a mistake. BlancheSplanchnik Jan 2013 #47
Megadittoes, Blanchsplanch Bucky Jan 2013 #44
so....are u busy tonight? BlancheSplanchnik Jan 2013 #46
I said yes, it tastes like soap, but frogmarch Jan 2013 #10
I grow it, but have never tasted it. femmocrat Jan 2013 #11
I bought some once from a co-op to make homemade salsa Art_from_Ark Jan 2013 #12
How about "Do beets taste like dirt?" shadowmayor Jan 2013 #13
I love beets..... AnneD Jan 2013 #24
Oh god yes. Codeine Jan 2013 #40
Love it love it love it Populist_Prole Jan 2013 #14
That's a good way of putting it... GoCubsGo Jan 2013 #25
it tastes wonderful to me hopemountain Jan 2013 #15
I always wondered why my mom washed out my mouth with cilantro Shrek Jan 2013 #16
23andMe tests for cilantro Thirties Child Jan 2013 #19
Love cilantro!! n/t PasadenaTrudy Jan 2013 #20
I can handle a little bit as a garnish geardaddy Jan 2013 #21
No. But I find it amazingly disgusting. bunnies Jan 2013 #22
Cilantro can remove toxic metals from body tissue. antiquie Jan 2013 #23
Interesting, if true. Here is one research report. Duer 157099 Jan 2013 #26
interesting. ...I wonder if there's any corelation to cultures that use a lot of cilantro? BlancheSplanchnik Jan 2013 #39
Seems to be genetic intaglio Jan 2013 #27
More like chlorine, but I voted 'yes'. trof Jan 2013 #28
It tastes like soap libodem Jan 2013 #30
Brown Soap...like Fels Naptha.... n/t Sekhmets Daughter Jan 2013 #33
I make a cilantro pesto - It's really good. GoneOffShore Jan 2013 #34
No, but I know deeply dislike it. n/t Agschmid Jan 2013 #37
Possibly. Jack Sprat Jan 2013 #42
It tastes a lot like coriander. RedCloud Jan 2013 #43
Here's a site where you can write a haiku on how much you hate it. geardaddy Jan 2013 #45
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