|
1. Neural Therapy
The most accurate way to use DMPS to determine which body
area has high concentrations of Hg is the " selective neural
therapy/DMPS challenge" introduced by this author several
years ago:
DMPS can be selectively injected into tissues suspected of
holding a large burden of Hg, followed by urinalysis. High
urine or stool values of Hg suggest that the tissue injected
was loaded with Hg.
Examples:
- selected trigger point injections
- autonomic or sensory ganglion blocks
- retrobulbar block (eye)
- thyroid injection
- pelvic injection
- segmental injections, using intrasegmental axonal transport
of DMPS
- kidneys, brain, sinusses, spinal chord
- lymphnode injection (ie tonsil injection)
- selective nerve block (ie sciatic nerve)
- selective joint injection (ie intra-articular shoulder
joint injection
The patient's history can guide the practitioner as to where
the diagnostic injection(s) should be given.
2. Electro-Mobilization:
Use the Electro-Bloc on the tissue in question for 20 minutes
either sandwiching the tissue between both electrodes or by
treating the autonomic ganglion which governs this area, followed
by i.v. DMPS or oral DMSA (500 mg) and 3 hour urine collection.
Compare with results obtained on previous challenges with
the same agent when electricity was not used. If Hg level
is clearly elevated, Hg has been selectively mobilized from
the tissue flooded with electricity.
3. Mercury vapor lamp mobilization:
The author found that by exposing a skin segment to the light
generated by a Hg vapor lamp intracellular Hg can be mobilized
and displaced extracellularly. The Hg is selectively mobilized
in the anatomical segment and tissues sharing the same autonomic
innervation.
4. Transdermal cilantro challenge/Jerome mercury breath
analyzer
The author has developed a transdermal solution of the natural
herb cilantro. This solution can be applied to joints and
skin areas suspected of being Hg storage sites. The breath
is tested for Hg content before application of the solution
and 1 min. 2 min and 5 min after. If the breath level of exhaled
Hg increases significantly, compartmentalized Hg has been
detected and mobilized.
5. DMSA challenge
DMSA is behaving more unpredictably and chaotically and crosses
the blood brain barrier sooner. Whatever is mobilized with
DMSA, we cannot conclude with reasonable accuracy where the
Hg came from. All we can say is, that it is inthere somewhere.
If the patient had a fish meal within 72 hours, the yield
will be high. If the patient is chronically constipated, this
time can be as long as 3 weeks. DMSA is believed to be superior
to DMPS in its ability to mobilize organic mercury (Hg ++),
especially methylmercury. A clinical tip: if a patient does
not do well with DMSA, increase the dose or continue giving
it, until the detox symptoms subside.
6. D-Penicillamine
D-Pen is excellent for mobilizing Hg intracellularly. High
values on the D-Pen challenge suggest high intracellular Hg
levels.
7. Selective mobilization of Hg from the gut
3 effective agents are available:
- chlorella pyreneidosa
- chitin and chitosan
- activated charcoal
8. Selective mobilization from the skin: Sauna Therapy
Can be very effective! Removes Hg from the skin. Levels can
be tested with sweat test. Far infrared saunas also mobilize
Hg in deeper tissues (3"down). Avoid re-uptake by the lungs!
i) the direct resonance phenomenon
Using the bi-digital O-ring test and the "resonance phenomenon
between identical substances", discovered and published by
Yoshiaki Omura, MD is currently the only non-invasive way
to diagnose exactly - if, how much, what chemical form of,
and where - mercury is in the body.
Rule #3: Choose the appropriate detox-agent for the compartment
in question!
urrently there is no available Hg detox agent that can mobilize
Hg from every body compartment evenly. Rule
#4: Choose the appropriate confirmatory test for the body
compartment in question!
If a chelating or complexing agent is used that cannot mobilize
Hg in the involved tissue, no Hg will appear in the specimen
obtained!
Rule #5: Remove the source!
This is also known as rule #1 of toxicology.
If the patient has a toxic profession where he/she
is continually exposed to Hg fumes, detoxing can be dangerous
or lethal.
If the patient continues to eat contaminated fish
(all fish today is contaminated), don't treat him/her!
If the patient has amalgam fillings he/she will absorb
significant amounts of metallic Hg on a daily basis, which
is gradually converted to the more toxic forms. All detox
agents that appear in the blood stream will also appear in
the saliva or even concentrate there. They will mobilize Hg
out of the fillings and may set more Hg free then the agent
will carry out of the body. Treating someone who has Hg/amalgam
fillings with a Hg-detox protocol is violating rule #1 of
toxicology and is jeopardizing the patient's well being. Older
fillings are usually (not always) less dangerous then more
recently placed fillings with higher Hg-content.
Rule #6: There is a difference between mobilizing and
detoxing
Mobilization means stirring Hg up in its hiding place. Mobilization
may lead to excretion. It also may lead to redistribution.
The body had done the best it could by storing Hg wherever
it stored it. By mobilizing, we tell the body that we know
better where to put it. We don't.
Detoxifying or detoxing means mobilizing
and moving it out of the body
There are no true detoxifying agents. All we have is mobilizing
agents. The body has to do the excreting with the help of
the proper agents. The body is not always able to do this!
Often perpetuating factors are present that disable the bodies
mechanisms to detox.
2. Perpetuating Factors
Even when the appropriate agent is used for a given patient,
Hg may not be released in significant amounts. Certain biochemical,
structural, emotional, electromagnetic and psychological/spiritual
problems will "lock up" the Hg in the tissues. Resolving the
causative situation will often on its own not release the
stored Hg, but will lead to a high yield of Hg on the next
challenge.
1. Biochemical Factors:
|