Guest guest Posted April 23, 2008 Report Share Posted April 23, 2008 Jackie, Are you saying you had thyroid antibodies and then after chelation the antibodies are not detected? I have very high thyroid antibodies. I would like to have another child but am afraid to bc of the antibodies. Is it possible to get rid of them with chelation? My mother and sister also have the antibodies. Maybe for me it is genetic and not caused from metals?? Would love anyones input. Sara > Hi , > > My oldest sister is getting more symptoms of peripheral neuropathy, and > guess what, I just looked at her hair test, and her thyroid ratio (Na/K=23) > is out of range too! I emailed her this article also, and have been talking > to her lately about getting hormone testing done, so maybe this will prompt > her! > > She has removed most, maybe all, of her amalgams, but still has two gold > crowns left in her mouth, so she hasn't tried chelation yet. So if she shows > up with the antibodies, maybe I can finally convince her to finish her > dental work and try chelation. I might actually get her to do it then, > because I had the antibodies before amalgam removal, and now they have gone > down to the ok range since then. > > So let me know what happens with your SIL. > > Thanks, > > Jackie > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2008 Report Share Posted April 23, 2008 My thyroid antibody test went from positive to negative, within a year. During that year, I did some rounds, but not many. The big changes I made between tests were going gluten free, treating a gut yeast infection, and taking lots of probiotics. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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