SOURCES OF TOXIC
METALS
For a
more complete list of sources for each of the major toxic metals organized by
the metal, see the Reference Guide at the end of this article.
Food
Sources. Food grown near
highways or downwind of industrial plants may contain lead and other toxic
amounts of metals.
Even
organic home gardens may be contaminated if, for example, old house paint
containing lead leaches lead into the soil.
Sprays and
insecticides still often contain lead, arsenic, mercury and other toxic
metals. Refining of food often
contaminates the food with aluminum, as it is found in water supplies
everywhere.
Also, food refining
removes the protective zinc, chromium and manganese from food and leaves the
toxic metals in some cases, such as cadmium. This makes white flour even more toxic, as with white sugar,
and is another reason to totally avoid these foods.
Arsenic. Arsenic I call the slow death mineral. Its symptoms are vague, and it was used
to kill people because it is colorless and tasteless so it was added to food
and slowly killed people.
Today arsenic is
still a common toxin. It may be
added in up to 70% of chickens in their feed as Roxsarone
and perhaps in other additives that are still permitted by the idiotic and
corrupt FDA and USDA in America.
Europe has banned arsenic in chicken feed, but I don’t know if some are
still using it. It gets into
commercial eggs, all pig products such as pork, ham, bacon and lard, and into
most US drinking water supplies as it leaches into the soil from farming and
livestock operations. Organic
chicken and eggs should be better.
Avoid all pig products for other reasons and this one, too.
Arsenic is used in
pesticides and, as a result, may be found in commercial wines, beers, fruits,
vegetables, rice and other foods.
Once again, organically grown should be better.
Lead is called the horror
mineral because it is associated with violence, lowered IQ, ADD, ADHD and many
neurological problems. another
widely distributed toxic metal due to its many uses in industry. However, mercury, arsenic, cadmium and
particularly aluminum are just as widespread if not more, but are less
well-studied.
Pesticides used on
fruits, vegetables and many other foods may contain arsenic, lead, copper,
mercury and other toxic metals.
Lead was added to gasoline until the 1970s when lead-free gas replaced
it. The new gasoline has manganese
in it instead of lead. Old house
paint, current paint used on ships of all sizes, lubricants, medications,
cosmetics such as lipstick and others, inks, and perhaps other products may
contain lead. Entire books have
been written about lead toxicity, which causes hundreds of symptoms from anemia
to death.
Cadmium is called the pseudo-macho
or the violent element.
Like lead, it is an older male mineral that is associated with macho
behavior, violence and horror.
People who have orgasms more than once a week tend to accumulate
cadmium, probably because it replaces zinc in the male testicles and even in
women’s ovaries. Male and female
sexual fluids are rich in zinc, and when one loses too much of these, cadmium
from the environment seems to replace the zinc in the body.
Cadmium is
widespread in the air, as it is used in brake linings of cars. It is also used in metal plating as it
is a very hard substance.
Cigarette smoke and marijuana smoking can contribute to cadmium
toxicity. Cadmium toughens the
tissues and hardens the arteries.
Some women have cadmium in them that allows them to function in a male-oriented
jobs and positions of authority.
Cadmium helps them and others to act more tough and manly. Military and police often have more
cadmium, as it helps them handle their very difficult jobs, at times, and take
risks. Unfortuately,
it is also a deadly toxic metal associated with heart disease, cancers of all
kind, kidney disease, diabetes and other health problems.
Mercury
and others from the sea. Mercury may be
called the mad hatters mineral.
People who made raccoon skin hats in the mid 1800s in America and Europe
developed mercury toxicity after a few years from rubbing mercury on felt to
soften it. They became mentally
and emotionally deranged in many cases.
Fish, especially
those caught near the coast or in contaminated streams or lakes, are universally contaminated. Mercury is found today in ALL FISH, bar
none. Even small fish, which used
to be safe, are not any more. This
is sad as fish is otherwise an excellent food.
As
a result, the only fish I recommend are very small fish, and the best is
sardines because of their content of omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin D, along
with calcium, selenium, RNA, DNA and many other vital nutrients. The omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin D
are almost universally deficient in modern diets and are important for every
one. Articles on this website
detail this sad nutritional deficiency.
Sardines in the can
are fine. A can three or four
times per week will supply an adult with adequate omega-3 fatty acids, and this
is actually better at this time than using supplements of fish oil and vitamin
D, although these are fine as well.
All other fish should be avoided, except perhaps occasional small fish
like sole, smelt, anchovies or herring.
Large
fish concentrate mercury a million times or more. The federal government recently issued
a warning that pregnant and lactating women should avoid tuna, shark, king
mackerel and other large fish. I
recommend everyone avoid these fish!
Avoid
shellfish. Shellfish and bottom
feeders in particular contain excessive cadmium, mercury and other toxic
metals. Please avoid all
shellfish, forever, as the problem is just getting worse in most nations of the
world. Once again, they are not bad
foods if they are processed correctly, but the toxic metal levels are
incredible at times. This is why
many people are “allergic” to them.
This is a mild term. They
are really poisoned by them.
Aluminum. Aluminum is called the soft
in the head mineral because it is associated with memory loss and
dementias. All types of salt
contain some aluminum. Table salt
often has aluminum added as an anti-caking agent and should never be
eaten. Sea salt is better but
contains some aluminum as well.
Beverages in
aluminum cans or food cooked in aluminum may contain elevated levels of
aluminum. Ceramic plates and
cookware from other nations often contain leaded glazes that come off onto the
food. Anti-perspirants
all contain aluminum compounds.
Use an old-fashioned deodorant instead, or put some liquid soap like Dr.
Bronner’s peppermint soap under your arms
instead.
Nickel. This is called the depression and suicide
mineral, as it is associated with these feelings and symptoms. It is a particularly deadly toxic
metal. It is found in large
quantity, sadly, in some older metal or even ceramic dental fixtures such as
crowns and some wires used in bridges and braces. Be very careful about this because nickel can contribute to
cancer and other horrible problems.
If you suspect you
have nickel-plated crowns or dental wires of some kind, talk to your dentist
about the problem and try to find out the materials in your mouth. One way to save thousands of dollars,
though not a perfect solution, would be to coat dental wires and even the sides
of crowns with clear nail polish
to keep the nickel from rubbing off into the body.
DO NOT TRY THIS AT
HOME, however. Go to a dental
office where they have a suction machine and do it there, or have the hygienist
do it for you. Nail polish gives
off very toxic fumes and these should never be breathed, ever.
Nickel in much
smaller quantity in hydrogenated oils found in commercial peanut butter,
margarines including soy margarine and vegetable shortening. Cadmium used as catalysts.
Toxic
drinking water. This is the most
important source of toxic metals for most people. Aluminum, copper, toxic chlorides and fluorides are added to
many municipal water supplies.
Aluminum allows dirt
to settle out of the water, while copper kills algae that grows in
reservoirs. Chlorine is used to
disinfect water, although ozone works very well and is a far more healthful
treatment. Wells and even
municipal water may also contain some lead, arsenic and other undesirable
metals. Galvanized and black
plastic pipes can be an important source of cadmium. Lead-soldered pipes and copper pipes may increase these
metals in the drinking water if the water is soft. It is an uncommon problem in hard water areas.
Fluoride is sometimes called
a cancer
mineral. Adding fluoride to
drinking water not only does not stop cavities in the teeth. It is totally insane, because fluoride
compounds added to drinking water are extremely toxic. The entire world has stopped this
practice except for parts of America and Great Britain.
Fluorides have found
their way into ground water supplies, and thus into the food chain. Fluoride levels in foods processed with
water may be very high, especially baby foods and reconstituted fruit juices.
Health authorities
who recommend fluoridating the water are extremely ignorant, in my
experience. I have debated
dentists and public health officials and their level of knowledge of the
medical literature on fluorides is horrendous. They rarely if ever take into account the toxic effect of
fluorides already found in natural foods, foods processed with fluoridated
water and fluoridated toothpaste. The combination adds up to overload in all
cases.
Hydrofluosilicic acid, the chemical
often used to fluoridate drinking water, is a smokestack waste that contains
lead, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, aluminum, benzene and radioactive waste
material.
Note
that carbon and carbon block filters do
not remove most toxic metals from water. Only distillation and reverse osmosis remove most toxic
metals. Good quality spring
water is probably best way to avoid the most common source of toxic metals and
at the same time obtain vital minerals.
Airborne
Sources of Toxic Metals. Most toxic metals
are effectively absorbed by inhalation.
Auto and particularly aircraft exhaust, industrial smoke and products
from incinerators are among the airborne sources of toxic metals and other
chemicals.
Mercury
and coal-fired power plants. Burned high in the
atmosphere, aircraft fuel deposits everywhere and affects everyone on
earth. Burning coal can release
mercury, lead and cadmium among other metals . Iranian and Venezuelan oil are high in vanadium.
Coal plants should
have scrubbers, as they do in the United States. However, they do not in some nations such as China, that are
in a great hurry to industrialize and do not realize the damage their plants
are causing in the entire world thanks to their pollution of the air, water and
food supplies.
Other oil is
excessive in toxic sulfur compounds.
Tetraethyl lead was added to gasoline for many years. Residues are present on pavement and
may settle on buildings, cropland and elsewhere. Today, manganese is added to gasoline. Uranium exposure is largely from
airborne sources such as nuclear tests and accidental nuclear releases.
Incineration
can be clean. Older methods of
incineration of electronic parts, plastics, treated fabrics, batteries and even
diapers release all the toxic metals into the air. The use of scrubbers and newer methods of very high
temperature incineration are much better.
Cadmium
and mercury in papers. Cigarette and
marijuana smoke are high in cadmium, found in cigarette paper. Pesticides used on these crops may
contain lead, arsenic and other toxic metals.
Medications
and toxic metals. Many patented prescription and
over-the-counter drugs contain toxic metals. Cipro (fluoquinolones) and Prozac (fluoxetine)
are fluoride-containing chemicals, for example.
Thimerisol, a
mercury-containing preservative, is still used in many vaccines, including all
flu shots, even when doctors deny it, I am told. Independent evaluation of a large study that is part of the
Centers For Disease Control Vaccine Safety Datalink
concluded that:
“Children are 27 times as likely to develop
autism after exposure to three thimerisol-containing
vaccines than those who receive thimerisol-free
versions” .
Thiazide diuretics contain
mercury. These include Maxzide, Diazide and many
others. Antacids such as Ryopan, Gaviscon, Maalox, Mylanta
and many others are very high in aluminum. Antibiotics may also contain toxic substances including
metals.
Direct
Skin Contact As A Source Of Toxic Metals. Almost all anti-perspirants
and many cosmetics contain aluminum.
Dental amalgams contain mercury, copper and other metals. Dental bridges and other appliances
often contain nickel.
Prostheses and pins
used to hold bones together may contain nickel and other toxic metals, although
most are titanium, which is much better.
Copper intra-uterine devices, if left in place for years, release a
tremendous amount of copper into the body.
Soaps, body lotions
and creams often contain toxic compounds.
A few hair dyes and commercial high-end lipsticks contain lead. Selsun Blue
shampoo contains selenium that is quite toxic in high doses.
Household lawn and
garden chemicals may contain lead, arsenic and other compounds. Mercury treated seeds and
arsenic-treated wood are other common sources of toxic metals.
Occupational
exposure to toxic metals is important for many occupations today. Among the worst are plumbers,
electricians, auto mechanics, printers, ironworkers, office workers, other
building trades and many other occupations.
Workers need to wear
gloves, masks and take other precautions when handling inks, metals and other
toxic materials. Unfortunately,
most occupational exposure occurs without the knowledge of either the worker or
the employer today.
Congenital
Toxic Metals – An Extremely Important And Preventable Tragedy. This is a vital topic that deserves a
separate article, so important is it.
Here I will just briefly introduce the subject.
Today, all
children are born with some toxic metals acquired in utero. All the
toxic metals pass through the placenta from mother to child. This is seen clearly when
reviewing mineral analyses of infants.
These are babies who have never been exposed to food, yet their bodies
are high in many toxic metals.
The only explanation
is that these infants receive exposures in utero
during gestation. This is a very
sad situation, as these children are born with two strikes against them, so to
speak. They are far more prone to
autism, ADD, ADHD, infections, developmental delays and more. For more information about this
critical topic, see the articles on this website about children’s health.
This tragedy can be
prevented if all young women would go on a nutritional balancing program before
they become pregnant to reduce their load of toxic metals. It would take a year or so to do this,
and I am always pleased when young women want to improve their health before
becoming pregnant