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Old 10-03-2015, 10:44 PM #21
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Another possible - the electronics in and around our homes...

Electromagnetic fields (EMF)
http://www.emfs.info/health/
http://www.who.int/peh-emf/about/Wha...en/index1.html
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/emf/
http://www.best-emf-health.com/emf-emissions.html
http://www.lifeenergyshields.com/sto...ons-dangerous/

Reduce EMF Exposure-
http://holisticsquid.com/8-easy-ways...-emf-exposure/
http://www.emfanalysis.com/basic-steps/


Something to think about and maybe try to limit excessive exposure.
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Old 10-04-2015, 05:47 AM #22
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Default Toxin in our home

In the past year we have had a lot of work done.
A year ago we discovered that the mains water into the farmhouse was through lead pipes. We had that changed but for the past ten years the water has come from the high pressure mains into our house thru lead pipes.
We have had our kitchen ripped out this year to complete the remedial works started last year. Everything updated, plumbing boiler structures. We also had our bathroom done as my son put his arm thru the wall, it was tiled and the sheet rock stuff had gone slimy and rotten with mould. We had to wait about 2 months for our landlord to start the work as he was getting quotes to get both rooms done.
My whole family have been exposed to toxins without me having any awareness.
I think I may need to let the neurologist know about these extras on my next visit.
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Old 10-04-2015, 07:22 AM #23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sarge View Post
Here's a few more:

1) Did you have your hardwood floors installed by a contractor? I ask only because as we all should know by now, the manufacture of Asbestos products was outlawed decades ago, but most of the public is unaware that the supplying and installation of these products already produced had been, and may still be legal. It was considered unfair (does anybody smell industry lobbies?) that supply companies who stocked their warehouses should lose their investment.
Small pieces of flooring cannot be nailed because of splitting so the are glued, usually with the industry standard most reliably durable asbestos-based adhesive, which over the years through ambient humidity changes releases the chemical in vapor form.

2) Because of energy conservation concerns in our quest to construct the "green home," the International Energy Conservation Code requires dwelling to be built so tight so as not to allow any natural infiltration. If a wall is unable to "breathe" from one side or the other, "vapor lock" is created which through the course of the annual temperature cycle promotes condensation inside the walls giving rise to the certain production of mold. Our good old drafty houses never had that problem.
As a building official I personally have seen walls opened up for remodeling less than a year after they were built (folks with too much money whom after 6 months got tired of the 75k kitchen that came with the house) and the inside surface of the wall sheathing was solid pitch-black with mold.

3) Another serious problem that we have now (depending on the delineated zone site) that older homes didn't, is Radon. Don't even get me started on that one.

4) Gypsum in its natural state most often has a Sulfur content, the degree of which varies from one area mine to another. China's veins contain a notoriously high level necessitating wide openings at opposing ends to create a constant airflow--as Gypsum can somewhat quickly release the Sulfur through evaporation.
The end of August 2005 brought the southeastern US Hurricane Katrina, coincidentally in the midst of a home-building boom. With all of the necessary rebuilding and reconstruction, coupled with the new construction already underway, there existed a severe shortage of US produced sheetrock, creating a huge demand for imported. China shifted into high gear opening new mines and cranking out high sulfur-content drywall by the cargo ships loads. The immediate inpouring of orders did not permit time for the usual precautionary pre-ventilating, shipping millions and millions of tons of the tainted boards to our suppliers.
An estimated 100,000+ homes were built, between 2005 and 2010, as well as countless remodeling with the drywall. Now particularly in the southeast, with its warmer climate and higher humidity, along with the already present mold, the released SO2 combined with the in-the-wall condensation to manufacture Sulfuric Acid which proceeded to eat up any and all metal inside, while releasing the toxic mix into the living space. Instead of my going on with this and turning it into a 200 page volume, just Google: Tainted Chinese Gypsum Board the next time you have nothing to do for three days.
There was no tracking of the geographical supply distribution so any of us who did any home improvement during that time or who knows how much later involving applied new sheetrock could have used the product.

These are just the items I can just come up with off the top of my head. It's scarier to imagine what is yet to discover.
That is a lot off the top of your head! Thanks!
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Old 10-04-2015, 11:55 AM #24
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sarge View Post

3) Another serious problem that we have now (depending on the delineated zone site) that older homes didn't, is Radon. Don't even get me started on that one.
Sorry, but I think I'll get you started.

I've just learned of some radon problems in my development. Some have had their houses remediated...or whatever the word is. I started looking into testing, and am a little confused. Are any of the inexpensive test kits worth it?

http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&key...l_6p9599z3sk_e


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Old 10-04-2015, 01:17 PM #25
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Originally Posted by janieg View Post
Sorry, but I think I'll get you started.

I've just learned of some radon problems in my development. Some have had their houses remediated...or whatever the word is. I started looking into testing, and am a little confused. Are any of the inexpensive test kits worth it?

http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&key...l_6p9599z3sk_e


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I live in Wisconsin and some of my friends who have a home in the country got their place tested for radon last year. The cost was about $700 dollars and I think a technician had to come to their house.
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Old 10-04-2015, 03:36 PM #26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Blairzo View Post
In the past year we have had a lot of work done.
A year ago we discovered that the mains water into the farmhouse was through lead pipes. We had that changed but for the past ten years the water has come from the high pressure mains into our house thru lead pipes.
We have had our kitchen ripped out this year to complete the remedial works started last year. Everything updated, plumbing boiler structures. We also had our bathroom done as my son put his arm thru the wall, it was tiled and the sheet rock stuff had gone slimy and rotten with mould. We had to wait about 2 months for our landlord to start the work as he was getting quotes to get both rooms done.
My whole family have been exposed to toxins without me having any awareness.
I think I may need to let the neurologist know about these extras on my next visit.

Absolutely! Particularly regarding the lead piping.
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Old 10-04-2015, 07:09 PM #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by janieg View Post
Sorry, but I think I'll get you started.

I've just learned of some radon problems in my development. Some have had their houses remediated...or whatever the word is. I started looking into testing, and am a little confused. Are any of the inexpensive test kits worth it?

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When I suggested not to get me started it was for several reasons, mostly involving economy and degree of relevance to the geographical conditions, legal and procedural, to the Post specific situation. If it sounds like i'm attempting to weasel-out I'm not. Laws and codes regarding testing, detection response, and prevention/remediation requirements and methods vary, sometimes significantly, from state to state.

Not being a certified or even qualified Radon specialist by any stretch, I could merely relate my experiences enforcing NJ regulations and system designs acceptable in my state alone. So far as the effective accuracy degree of the results from one of these OTC kits, our laws require receipt proof of on-site testing by a state certified lab--usually with the total costs line being redacted, and we officials are not allowed to request a viewing of the test results. Readings from store-bought kits are legally irrelevant. My responsibility is to witness that the installation of the design professional's approved solution was completed in strict accordance to the specifications.

I suggest Googling: Radon Laws, {your state}. In the process of wading through sites ultimately with the purpose of selling a service or device, you could still sift out more pertinent info than I could supply, unless of course you live in NJ, but don't hesitate to be curiosity driven. Radon is a gaseous form of radiation caused by the degeneration of trace amounts of Uranium usually found in igneous rock and surrounding soils--and is pegged as the second leading cause of lung cancer in the US!
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Old 10-05-2015, 03:11 PM #28
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Using thiamine properly is genetically driven. There are ethnic peoples (mostly in Asia) who lack enough of the enzyme to process the alcohol and aldehydes it creates in the body. These people get ill very quickly if they drink alcohol, and some drugs cannot be metabolized properly either and require much lower doses. (Crestor is one).
My daughter-in-law is full Japanese, born and raised just outside the Kobe main metropolitan area. She and my older son met while both were in their Doctoral programs at Purdue U. Her main project was spearheading research on a noise-reduction systemic problem for Samsung, under whose grant she drew some of her financial compensation not to mention Doctoral credit.
Corporate dinners Eri was obligated to attend usually included a ceremonial toast at some point in which she was obligated by corporate manners and protocol to participate. Without fail, one mere sip would make her deathly ill, sometimes for days.
She managed to educate Jordy into a Sake quasi-connoisseur through her cultural second-hand knowledge, while never partaking herself, seeming possibly victim of that particular genetic chemistry.
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Old 01-10-2016, 02:28 PM #29
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Friends of mine in Colorado are going through radon-remediation right now. Bob is a retired electronics test engineer, and after a lot of experimentation with kits and looking into a professional contractor, he purchased one of these:

http://www.amazon.com/Safety-Siren-S.../dp/B011ACOMK0

He said its readings agree with the industry-standard test kits.

They're attempting to do their own remediation first and will be using this detector to gauge improvement. If they can't get it to safe levels, they'll have to put a pump in.
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