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Top 10 Reasons to Love Your Kidneys

To help raise awareness and appreciation for all the vital functions the kidneys perform, the National Kidney Foundation offers 10 reasons for Americans to love their kidneys and take steps now to preserve kidney health: The kidneys...

  1. Filter 200 liters of blood a day, removing two liters of toxins, wastes and water
  2. Regulate the body’s water balance
  3. Regulate blood pressure by controlling fluid levels and making the hormone that causes blood vessels to constrict
  4. Support healthy bones and tissues by producing the active form of vitamin D
  5. Produce the hormone that stimulates bone marrow to manufacture red blood cells
  6. Keep blood minerals in balance
  7. Keep electrolytes in balance
  8. Regulate blood acid levels
  9. Remove drugs from the blood
  10. Retrieve essential nutrients so that the body can reabsorb them

Why Are the Kidneys So Important?
Most people know that a major function of the kidneys is to remove waste products and excess fluid from the body. These waste products and excess fluid are removed through the urine. The production of urine involves highly complex steps of excretion and reabsorption. This process is necessary to maintain a stable balance of body chemicals.

The critical regulation of the body's salt, potassium and acid content is performed by the kidneys. The kidneys also produce hormones that affect the function of other organs. For example, a hormone produced by the kidneys stimulates red blood cell production. Other hormones produced by the kidneys help regulate blood pressure and control calcium metabolism.

The kidneys are powerful chemical factories that perform the following functions:

* remove waste products from the body
* remove drugs from the body
* balance the body's fluids
* release hormones that regulate blood pressure
* produce an active form of vitamin D that promotes strong, healthy bones
* control the production of red blood cells

Where Are the Kidneys and How Do They Function?
There are two kidneys, each about the size of a fist, located on either side of the spine at the lowest level of the rib cage. Each kidney contains up to a million functioning units called nephrons. A nephron consists of a filtering unit of tiny blood vessels called a glomerulus attached to a tubule. When blood enters the glomerulus, it is filtered and the remaining fluid then passes along the tubule. In the tubule, chemicals and water are either added to or removed from this filtered fluid according to the body's needs, the final product being the urine we excrete.

The kidneys perform their life-sustaining job of filtering and returning to the bloodstream about 200 quarts of fluid every 24 hours. About two quarts are removed from the body in the form of urine, and about 198 quarts are recovered. The urine we excrete has been stored in the bladder for anywhere from 1 to 8 hours.

What Are Some of the Causes of Chronic Kidney Disease?
Chronic kidney disease is defined as having some type of kidney abnormality or "marker" such as protein in the urine and having decreased kidney function for three months or longer.

There are many causes of chronic kidney disease. The kidneys may be affected by diseases such as diabetes and high blood pressure. Some kidney conditions are inherited.

Others are congenital; that is, individuals may be born with an abnormality that can affect their kidneys. The following are some of the most common types and causes of kidney damage.

Diabetes is a disease in which your body does not make enough insulin or cannot use normal amounts of insulin properly. This results in a high blood sugar level, which can cause problems in many parts of your body. Diabetes is the leading cause of kidney disease.

High blood pressure (also known as hypertension) is another common cause of kidney disease and other complications such as heart attacks and strokes. High blood pressure occurs when the force of blood against your artery walls increases. When high blood pressure is controlled, the risk of complications such as chronic kidney disease is decreased.

Glomerulonephritis is a disease that causes inflammation of the kidney's tiny filtering units called the glomeruli. Glomerulonephritis may happen suddenly, for example, after a strep throat, and the individual may get well again. However, the disease may develop slowly over several years and it may cause progressive loss of kidney function.

Polycystic kidney disease is the most common inherited kidney disease. It is characterized by the formation of kidney cysts that enlarge over time and may cause serious kidney damage and even kidney failure. Other inherited diseases that affect the kidneys include Alport's Syndrome, primary hyperoxaluria and cystinuria.

Kidney stones are very common, and when they pass, they may cause severe pain in your back and side. There are many possible causes of kidney stones, including an inherited disorder that causes too much calcium to be absorbed from foods and urinary tract infections or obstructions. Sometimes, medications and diet can help to prevent recurrent stone formation. In cases where stones are too large to pass, treatments may be done to remove the stones or break them down into small pieces that can pass out of the body.

Urinary tract infections occur when germs enter the urinary tract and cause symptoms such as pain and/or burning during urination and more frequent need to urinate. These infections most often affect the bladder, but they sometimes spread to the kidneys, and they may cause fever and pain in your back.

Congenital diseases may also affect the kidneys. These usually involve some problem that occurs in the urinary tract when a baby is developing in its mother's womb. One of the most common occurs when a valve-like mechanism between the bladder and ureter (urine tube) fails to work properly and allows urine to back up (reflux) to the kidneys, causing infections and possible kidney damage.

Drugs and toxins, especially heavy metals such as LEAD and MERCURY, can also cause kidney problems. Using large numbers of over-the-counter pain relievers for a long time may be harmful to the kidneys. Certain other medications, toxins, pesticides can also cause kidney damage.

The chelating agents we use, especially EDTA, help remove the heavy metals and allow for a healthier, better functioning kidney. EDTA is actually, in and of itself, beneficial for the kidney.

The National Kidney Foundations urges all Americans to love their kidneys. To learn more about Chronic Kidney Kidney risk factors, prevention and treatment, visit www.kidney.org

Source: www.kidney.org

 
 
After my last blog and email blast many people have had questions on Chelation Therapy, so I want to share some of my thoughts.

Health is a by-product of restoring the eco-system of the body.  One of the most disruptive insults to the body is a high heavy metal burden--most importantly lead, cadmium, mercury and arsenic.  Heavy metals can interfere with all of the biochemical processes of the body, and there really is no safe level of them. (Do not confuse a normal range that shows up on a laboratory test with an optimal level.)

So the first questions people usually ask about chelation are: when to start, when to stop, and how frequent should their treatments be.  While we all have a certain level of metals in our body, I like to use some testing or markers that we can use to track improvement.  In our office we use a couple of different instruments to estimate the health, or compliance, of the arteries.  It has been said long ago that you are as young as your arteries, and that is true.  We also use challenge (chelation) urine tests to try and draw out the heavy metals to give us a better estimation of body burden, since many people have poor mechanisms for excreting heavy metals. Some other doctors use hair analysis, which may have some utility in certain cases, but I believe a better estimation on the body burden of metals is done with a challenge--or provoked urine test.

How frequent the treatment should be depends on the amount of metals in the body or the level of vascular dysfunction.  It also depends on the condition of the patient.  Some patients are very sensitive to the chelating agent, so they will have a slower, or more protracted, chelation schedule.Those with a very high metal level or poor vascular health may need to have more frequent treatments.  Everyone’s treatment protocol is prescribed on a case-by-case basis.  In general, as the symptoms or testing improves the treatment frequency can decrease.  With all the variables, this is as much a clinical art as a science.

With children, chelation is done slowly, gently and almost exclusively orally.  Many people have seen improvements in autism and ADD/ADHD with a safe chelating protocol. Unfortunately, the opposite can be true; many have been injured with an improper protocol.

When to stop chelation is a personal decision.  This is where the value of testing and retesting comes in.  But I think the answer for people who want to remain healthy their whole lives is never.  We are living in a world of ever increasing pollution (think more and more coal burning fireplants in China and the burning of electronic waste that spews metals into the air), and we will need some kind of chelation maintenance program (once a month, for example) to protect our investment in wellness and prevent the re-accumulation of heavy metals.
 
 
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Dr. Garry Gordon
Many of you, no doubt, are familiar with EDTA Chelation Therapy, but this interview goes in depth and provides much useful information. Feel free to share this interview with your friends and family when they ask about the benefits of chelation therapy. Garry Gordon, M.D., D.O., is one of the world’s experts in chelation therapy, nutrition and mineral metabolism. Dr. Gordon wrote the original protocol for the safe and effective use of EDTA oral chelation therapy and is the author of numerous scientific papers on the subject.

The Health Benefits of EDTA Chelation Therapy: An Interview with Dr. Garry Gordon by David Jay Brown 
Chelation is a chemical process in which a metal or mineral—such as lead, mercury, or calcium—is bonded to another substance. This is a natural process that goes on continually in our bodies. However, our bodies evolved in a less polluted world and they are not prepared to handle the heavy load of environmental toxins to which they are now confronted with on a daily basis. A recent study at the Tulane University School of Public Health demonstrated that the average blood level of lead found among Americans is high enough to increase the likelihood of heart attack and stroke. In other words, lead toxicity is ubiquitous in America and everyone’s health is compromised to some extent as a result.

Chelation therapy—which employs the weak acid EDTA—has the potential to enhance virtually everyone’s health and performance because it removes lead and other toxic heavy metals from our bodies. Although many alternative physicians use EDTA chelation therapy in their practice because of its proven cardiovascular benefits and anti-aging properties, lead removal is the one area where conventional medicine agrees that EDTA chelation therapy should be utilized and we now know that everyone is suffering from enough lead toxicity to—at the very least—increase their risk of cardiovascular disease.

But chelation therapy actually does much more than lower your risk of cardiovascular disease and remove lead and other toxic heavy metals from the body. An abundance of compelling scientific evidence suggests that EDTA chelation therapy can dramatically enhance many people’s health and performance. It has been shown to help prevent arteriosclerosis, improve blood circulation, and reduce harmful clotting mechanisms. Some of the other reported benefits from EDTA chelation therapy include better skin texture and skin tone, improvements with arthritis, and better vision and hearing. It has also been shown to reduce blood pressure and cholesterol levels.

Although EDTA chelation therapy has been shown to reduce calcium accumulation in the blood vessels, it is actually used as a treatment for osteoporosis because it has been shown to stimulate bone growth and to make bones stronger. EDTA chelation therapy has been shown to significantly improve physical energy levels due to mitochondrial stimulation, and it is known to have antiviral and antioxidant activity. Perhaps most importantly, because it increases circulation to the brain, EDTA chelation therapy can also help to improve cognitive function and memory. In other words, in addition to making us stronger and healthier, EDTA chelation therapy can actually make us smarter.

I interviewed Dr. Gordon on September 14, 2006. Dr. Gordon speaks enthusiastically about chelation therapy and his excitement is contagious. We spoke about EDTA’s antioxidant activity, how it effects nitric oxide levels in the body, the differences between oral and I.V. chelation therapies, how chelation therapy effects bone growth, and about the dangers of environmental toxins.


Click here to read the full interview.

Q: How does EDTA chelation therapy affect blood circulation and how can it be used to promote cardiovascular health?

Q: How does EDTA effect nitric oxide levels in the body?

Q: Can you talk about EDTA’s antiviral and antioxidant activity?

Q: Can you talk about the difference between calcium EDTA and other forms of EDTA?

Q: How has EDTA been shown to stimulate mitochondrial activity?

Q: I’m curious about how chelation therapy effects the brain. How has EDTA been shown to help improve memory, enhance concentration, and act as an antidepressant?

Q: Why does EDTA remove important metals and minerals from the body, such as zinc, and why is it essential to take a multi-mineral while on an EDTA program?