Start English 1 - Preface 2 - Introduction 3 - Diagnosising 4 - Patient reports
5 - Amalgam 6 - Symptoms 7 - Who gets ill? 8 - Mercury-free dental care 9 - Detoxing
10 - Avoid poisoning 11 - Research 12 - Researchers/Practitioners 13 - Protest agains EU
14 - Bivirkingsgruppen Norway 15 - Norway leads the way 16 - Germany sued
17 - References / Sources 18 - My personal Network 19 - Video Documentations
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EVIDENCE OF HARM video Tooth-only .
1. PREFACE
I’m pleased that you - deliberately or by pure chance - have arrived at my website on chronic mercury poisoning (toxicity) – WELCOME!
In case you know the difference between “chronic cumulative mercury poisoning” and “acute mercury poisoning”, you can continue to point 2, otherwise continue to read this part.
Acute mercury poisoning (and/or acute poisoning from other heavy metals) can arise if, for example, you are exposed to heavy metals at your workplace (typically steel works, car body factories, agriculture, the medicines industry, nuclear power stations, etc.). Less traditionally, it may arise from some types of hobby such as the production of tin soldiers. Another possibility is if a nurse drops a tray with mercury thermometers on the floor and comes in contact with the mercury while cleaning.
Acute heavy metal poisoning can be diagnosed in a general blood or urine sample.
Chronic cumulative mercury poisoning (and/or accumulated poisoning from other heavy metals) arises when the patient is exposed to small quantities of heavy metal for a longer period of time, such as mercury from amalgam fillings (but also from coal-fired power plants, smelting plants, crematoria, volcanoes, vaccinations and the consumption of certain marine fish), that are deposited in our organs such as the liver, kidneys, heart and brain, etc.
Chronic mercury / heavy metal poisoning (toxicity) CANNOT be diagnosed in a general blood or urine sample. See also point 3 for details.
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