Guest guest Posted August 31, 2008 Report Share Posted August 31, 2008 The adrenal link makes complete sense to me. In other posts, I have commented that I feel a lot of improvement in the adrenal area (much less fatigue), so much so that I am contemplating reducing adrenal support within the next 6-12 months. ----Katharine > > > Does anyone have any thoughts as to what happened? > Hi Suzanne > The one thing that ALL dental work does, and especially mercury removal, is > stress the adrenals. > Your adrenals produce female sex hormones and support the cycling process. > During stress you will shunt hormones towards the stress pathway and away > from the sex pathway. > Supporting your adrenals usually is the answer, and often pregenolone is the > key. > > > > > > Eg. another " bad " effect I got right after amalgam removal was that, > > in a blood test done a few weeks later, my glucose (blood sugar) was > > elevated above the normal reference range for the first time ever > > (130, instead of the usual 85 - 99 or so). I believe (and am hoping) > > this is just another example of my body being in a bit > > of " shock " /confusion after the amalgam removal, and that things will > > normalize again in short order. > Adrenals also play a role in glucose control - cortisol is a glucocorticoid. > > Adrenals are so often the key. > Mercury has a particular affinity for messing with the adrenals. > DeanSA > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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