Guest guest Posted April 28, 2008 Report Share Posted April 28, 2008 > > I thought I read somewhere that Andy recommended having amalgams out > asap for kids. I can't remember reading that (could be that he wrote it and I just didn't come across it or remember). In general, kids are healthier than adults and can recover quickly from certain interventions. They also likely wouldn't have anywhere near as much amalgam as some of us adults have had. > Why space them out -get it over with It depends entirely on the person. If there is not much amalgam, then removing most of it at once might be a good idea. It is inconvenient to have both sides of the mouth out of commission at the same time, which makes working on one side at a time more convenient. For adults who are in frail health it is better to go slower with amalgam removal. Some can only tolerate working on one tooth at a time. Others can only cope with one quadrant at a time. Many who have had all done at once (under some kind of sedation) have found the process too much for them to handle and had long recovery times (when they weren't able to face starting chelation). > and 4 days after > the last removal chelate with dmsa for 2-6 months. I assume, the > longer they are in, the more gets into your system. > Yes, that is something to take into account when planning amalgam revision. For more conversation about amalgam removal please join the new dental chelation group: http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/dental-chelation/ The mandate in the frequent dose chelation group is to discuss chelation with Andy Cutler's protocol. The above dental-chelation group has been set up to discuss the dental part. J Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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