Re: Faradaic Activity in Dental Amalgams
- From: Keith P Walsh <keith.p.walsh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 3 Sep 2005 21:21:26 +0000 (UTC)
On Sat, 03 Sep 2005 18:31:19 GMT, "CWatters"
<colin.watters@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>"Keith P Walsh" <keith.p.walsh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
>news:f6gih1l1smt02kjj2apfqgbt5m9q8u9pve@xxxxxxxxxx
>> On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 16:54:11 GMT, "CWatters"
>> <colin.watters@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>>
>> The fact that scientists may have identified the gene responsible for
>> our physiological response to stressful situations does not prove that
>> the causes of "stress" are genetic.
>
>Many of the causes are man made (bullying at school for example) who is
>spending all these millions of dollars attempting to prove that the causes
>(as distinct from the reaction) are genetic?
>
I did a Google search with:
depression stress schizophrenia genetic research millions dollar
- and some of the more interesting hits I looked at were:
http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/bipolarresfact.cfm
http://www.schizophrenia.com/szresearch/
http://www.medhelp.org/NIHlib/GF-230.html
http://web.sfn.org/baw/tips_facts.cfm
I would offer the thought that the gene which is responsible for
alleviating the symptoms of stress and the gene which is responsible
for causing them might be one and the same, except that in the former
case this gene is working properly and in the latter it is defective.
I suppose that a principal element of my enquiry is the question of
whether or not there are enough "defective" genes out there to explain
the large numbers of "stressed", "depressed", and "schizophrenic"
people which we have in our societies.
And if not, is it possible that some other as yet unidentified factor
is a significant cause of these so-called "psychiatric" disorders?
Whatever the case, it has been demonstrated experimentally that metal
amalgam dental fillings generate electrical potentials with magnitudes
of up to 350 millivolts.
See:
http://book.boot.users.btopenworld.com/dutch.htm
And the resting potential of the human neurological synapse is only 70
millivolts.
There are a great many people with amalgam fillings in their teeth.
Do you think that it should be possible using modern instrumentation
to determine whether or not neurological function in the vicinity of
teeth with amalgam fillings is any different from neurological
function in the vicinity of teeth without?
I feel certain that it wouldn't cost a million dollars to try.
Keith P Walsh
Oh I nearly forgot; it might be considered that the widespread
adoption of metal amalgam as a material for use in restorative
dentistry was quickly followed by the rise to prominence of
psychiatric "medicine" in our societies.
.
- References:
- Re: Faradaic Activity in Dental Amalgams
- From: CWatters
- Re: Faradaic Activity in Dental Amalgams
- From: Keith P Walsh
- Re: Faradaic Activity in Dental Amalgams
- From: CWatters
- Re: Faradaic Activity in Dental Amalgams
- Prev by Date: Re: Is It A Cavity?
- Next by Date: Scaler / tooth-scraper for home use?
- Previous by thread: Re: Faradaic Activity in Dental Amalgams
- Next by thread: Re: Faradaic Activity in Dental Amalgams
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|