Hi
@Learner1
What’s the source of these images?
I got them from the scientist, Dr. Wallace, who showed them in his presentation on mitochondrial toxins at the 2016 United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation Conference.
How do you know Polymva is pulling from the mitochondria?
Alpha lipoic acid is a known chelator of heavy metals, which can cross the BBB and cell and mitochondrial membranes. The polymer formulation has more electrons to help grab onto the metals and pull them out (in layman's terms).
Prior to starting PolyMVA, I had had very little arsenic show up on any tests in the previous 6 years. Immediately on starting it, I collapsed. Suspicious, my doctor quickly ran a blood test, showing acute arsenic toxicity, according to CDC guidelines.
I went to the Mito Conference a couple of weeks later, saw Dr. Wallace's talk, which convinced me when he showed the images of arsenic in the mitochondria.
What would you say you’ve spent on chelation ?
Oral is cheap. The price of the chelator(s) plus the nutrients to support it, about $3-400 a month. For IV, it ran about $2400 a month.
Altogether, about $35,000 over 8 years. But, I have lousy detox genes, built toxicity over 45 years to an extremely toxic level, fought stage 3 cancer with toxic platinum-based chemotherapy, and have a family full of people with toxin related diseases, like Parkinson's and non-Hodgkins lymphoma, so I was pretty motivated.
For most people, I'd guess that 2 years of well-managed oral chelation (several times stronger than Cutler's protocol) would get them a long way.
As I mentiined, its impossible to know how toxic you are, you can only measure what's coming out at any point in time, so that when the output goes down on the same protocol, you know you're getting there.
We live in a toxic world and our bodies have ways of getting rid of toxins. Its when they get overwhelmed that we are negatively impacted by the toxins. So, avoiding toxins and feeding our detox systems should be first, with chelation when we have a load that's damaging ATP production and other biochemical processes.
One chelating IV, with methylation support, glutathione/molybdenum, and replenishing minerals.
I agree w/you on Cutler. Just not going to make a dent.
Cutler is for people who can't find a doctor with expertise to help and its designed to go slow and keep people out of trouble. For most of us, though, its too slow.
Given what you've said regarding pulling one toxin at a time, I wonder if the lead was just "waiting in the wings." In any case, even if I fix my high toxic metal levels with my current treatment, I think I'll test again some time in the future just to make sure. Best of luck and healing to you.
It probably was waiting in the wings, just as I've found. For me, the progression was mercury, platinum, cadmium, arsenic, lead, and tin.
Things are always changing, so living as clean a life as one can, then checking every couple of years may be wise.
Arsenic is the #1 ubiquitous toxin and it impairs ATP production, and is carcinogenic, so its a good one to keep an eye on.
