Re: Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and Blood Mercury Level:
- From: Mark Probert <markprobert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 03:19:52 GMT
Kevysmom wrote:
Hmmm......Do we know this for sure?
All gthe credible evidence says so.
.
My sons mercury level was VERY toxic. The Minamata Institute in Japan
wanted to test my son, Thats how HIGH his levels were. Im sure you
dont know diddly squat about mercury poisoning. But in Japan there was
a huge outbreak of mercury poisoning, They call it Minamata Disease.
It was so terrible they even opened an institute JUST for mercury
poisoning. Guess how they test for mercury poisoning....
Hair. It is the MOST accurate way to test for mercury.
On Oct 28, 4:21 pm, wri...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (David Wright) wrote:In article <1193601837.999793.116...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
Kevysmom <bluebun...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and Blood Mercury Level: a>from a developmental assessment center. Fifty-nine normal controls
Case-Control Study in Chinese Children
Objective: To investigate the association between blood mercury level
and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in Chinese
children in Hong Kong. Methods: Fifty-two children with ADHD aged
below 18 years diagnosed by DSM IV criteria without perinatal brain
insults, mental retardation or neurological deficits were recruited
were recruited from a nearby hospital. Blood mercury levels wereThat might be interesting -- if vaccination were associated with high
measured by cold vapor atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Results:
The mean ages of cases and controls were 7.06 and 7.81 years
respectively. Boys predominated (case = 44 [84.6 %], control = 44
[74.6 %]). There was significant difference in blood mercury levels
between cases and controls (geometric mean 18.2 nmol/L [95 % CI 15.4 -
21.5 nmol/L] vs. 11.6 nmol/L [95 % CI 9.9 - 13.7 nmol/L], p < 0.001),
which persists after adjustment for age, gender and parental
occupational status (p < 0.001). The geometric mean blood mercury
level was also significantly higher in children with inattentive (19.4
nmol/L, 95 % CI 13.3 - 28.5 nmol/L) and combined (18.0 nmol/L, 95 % CI
14.9 - 21.8 nmol/L) subtypes of ADHD. Blood mercury levels were above
29 nmol/L in 17 (26.9 %) cases and 6 (10.2 %) controls. Children with
blood mercury level above 29 nmol/L had 9.69 times (95 % CI 2.57 -
36.5) higher risk of having ADHD after adjustment for confounding
variables. Conclusion: High blood mercury level was associated with
ADHD. Whether the relationship is causal requires further studies.
blood mercury levels. It isn't.
-- David Wright :: alphabeta at prodigy.net
These are my opinions only, but they're almost always correct.
"Saddam Hussein was a bad man, connected with some incredibly dangerous
people: Cheney, Rumsfeld, George Galloway." -- Marcus Brigstocke
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- From: David Wright
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- From: Kevysmom
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