Guest guest Posted July 26, 2008 Report Share Posted July 26, 2008 A saliva test is a hormone panel that measures your adrenal hormones (cortisol and dhea) as well as reproductive hormones. This is done by putting your saliva into vials. This test will tell you if you have problems with those hormones. Diagnos Tech and ZRT Labs are the two places that do these tests. You can order them through Canary Club. If your hair met counting rules..it's not necessary to supplement the red results. The results are not indicative of body levels when deranged mineral transport is present. it makes more sense to supplement according to Andy's supplement list for chelation which consists of basic vitamins and minerals to help the body work better and provide support during chelation. Even if you don't plan to chelate right now. > > Hallo all > It was recently suggested to me that a saliva test may be useful to me > based on my hair test (190). > Could someone please tell me or point me in the right direction as to > what this entails? > Also does it make sense to supplement to my red deficits even though my > hair test meets a counting rule? > > Cheers > Kenny > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2008 Report Share Posted July 27, 2008 > > Hallo all > It was recently suggested to me that a saliva test may be useful to me > based on my hair test (190). > Could someone please tell me or point me in the right direction as to > what this entails? Saliva tests measure the tissue effect of various hormones. This is more accurate than blood tests and can be used for a variety of hormones - cortisol, dhea, progesterone, estrogen, testosterone. There are a number of places you can order saliva tests without a doctor. The lowest prices I have seen are at www.canaryclub.org. You can search archives to see some examples of how these have been interpreted and you can post your results for feedback when you get them. > Also does it make sense to supplement to my red deficits even though my > hair test meets a counting rule? The undetectable lithium indicates you need to supplement: http://onibasu.com/wiki/Lithium The other red lows are not significant. Occasionally some people need a little bit of manganese, but you have to think this through carefully because manganese is a synergistic toxin with mercury so you don't want to take any unless you need it. -- > Cheers > Kenny > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2008 Report Share Posted July 28, 2008 > Saliva tests measure the tissue effect of various hormones. This is > more accurate than blood tests and can be used for a variety of > hormones - cortisol, dhea, progesterone, estrogen, testosterone. > > There are a number of places you can order saliva tests without a > doctor. The lowest prices I have seen are at www.canaryclub.org. > > You can search archives to see some examples of how these have been > interpreted and you can post your results for feedback when you get > them. > > > > > Also does it make sense to supplement to my red deficits even though my > > hair test meets a counting rule? > > > The undetectable lithium indicates you need to supplement: > > http://onibasu.com/wiki/Lithium > > > The other red lows are not significant. Occasionally some people > need a little bit of manganese, but you have to think this through > carefully because manganese is a synergistic toxin with mercury so > you don't want to take any unless you need it. > > -- > > Thanks for your help I read many of the links above with great interest. I will supplement low doses of lithium probably orotate(5-10mg per day) and am tempted with low doses of manganese as I suffer from tinitus and inner ear problems. Is the baseline test ok to get from canary club? I believe they ship abroad as I live in Oz. > > > > > Kenny > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 29, 2008 Report Share Posted July 29, 2008 > > > Thanks for your help > I read many of the links above with great interest. > I will supplement low doses of lithium probably orotate(5-10mg per > day) and am tempted > with low doses of manganese as I suffer from tinitus and inner ear > problems. Yes, in that case, it is worth trying some manganese to see if the tinnitus improves. I think Andy has said to try a low dose (5 mg) and if it doesn't help after a few weeks or a month, then drop it. If the manganese doesn't work, vinpocetine is another thing you can try for this. > Is the baseline test ok to get from canary club? This is fine. -- > I believe they ship abroad as I live in Oz. > > > > > > > > > Kenny > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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