Quote:
Originally Posted by lexluger
I have many of the same problems you described. I started having these symptoms about 2 or 3 years after I started using the cream. I developed kidney stones a few months after I started using the cream, and gall stones about 8 years later. I also went into a severe depression just afterward and have been struggling with it ever since (going on 7 years now.) I'm always weak and lethargic, and sometimes sleep way more than I should. The lethargy is so bad that I haven't been able to work at times. The stomach problems have also hindered my ability to live a normal life. I don't know if any or all of my problems could have been caused by the cream, but could it be possible?
I did some research and it seems that zinc overdose can cause a copper deficiency, and one of the symptoms of copper deficiency is chronic diarrhea. So that is a definite link. Google "copper deficiency" for more information.
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You should have a zinc/copper ratio done with a blood test.
One of the first signs of low copper is anemia.
More on copper:
http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/infocente...per/index.html
more on zinc:
http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/infocenter/minerals/zinc/
Zinc metabolism:
Quote:
Zinc Metabolism
The dietary intake of zinc is around 10-15 mg/day. It is present in meat and other protein foodstuffs, but intestinal absorption is affected by other dietary constituents. Absorbed zinc enters the liver where it is incorporated into zinc metalloenzymes and exported to peripheral tissue in plasma, bound to albumin. Of the total plasma zinc concentration of 12-25 µmol/l, over 90% is associated with albumin, <10% with alpha-2 macroglobulin, and a small amount, <1%, complexed to amino acids and other low molecular weight species.
Zinc homeostasis is achieved by regulation of enterohepatic re-circulation. An amount of zinc equivalent to the total absorbed zinc is re-excreted into the gut in intestinal fluids. In normal health zinc output by the gut is equal to the total dietary intake. Urinary excretion of zinc is low (around 10 µmol/day), and does not vary markedly with dietary supply. It is increased in catabolic states, by certain drugs and/or chelating agents.
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from
http://www.trace-elements.org.uk/zinc1.htm
This is a good monograph:
http://ods.od.nih.gov/FactSheets/Zinc.asp
Notice low zinc can also cause diarrhea.
Zinc is excreted in larger amounts in people who have pyroluria.
http://www.drkaslow.com/html/pyroluria.html
Many people have this disorder and don't know it. Today more
information is available on it. Don't expect your doctor to know this one.
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All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered; the point is to discover them.-- Galileo Galilei
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Weezie looking at petunias 8.25.2017
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