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Heavy Metal Testing
Test for toxic heavy metals in urine or water. |


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The Metal Detector
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Instant Toxic Metals Test
The Metal Detector allows you to instantly test your drinking water, your urine and many materials in your environment for heavy metal toxicity. If you suspect paint has lead, test it. If you think there is lead in your crystal glasses? Test them.
[Product Details] |
| Wondering about the foods you eat? The Metal Detector is a one-time use product that tests for the presence of heavy metals. It is not a comprehensive laboratory analysis, but it will certainly prove the existence of metals in what ever you decide to examine.
Heavy metals like Cadmium, Aluminum, Lead, Mercury and Nickel and more are so pervasive in our society today. There is no longer a question of whether or not you are toxic, but rather what your level of toxicity is. These metals are added to our food chain from many industrial sources including pesticides, everyday products, amalgam “silver” dental fillings, the air we breathe and the water we drink. They are virtually everywhere, slowly absorbing and building-up inside our bodies—eventually leading to disease and degenerative conditions. The body becomes overwhelmed with so many toxins that it can no longer completely metabolize them. EPA biopsies of human fat tissue show that 100% of humans have stored toxins just waiting to cause disease.
For anyone who is serious about avoiding many of the degenerative diseases facing the human race today, getting tested for heavy metals is more important than ever before. We are told to get our heart, blood pressure and cholesterol checked, but never told to check what we now know to be a major cause of the many diseases plaguing us today - heavy metal toxicity.
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The Five Most Common Toxic Heavy Metals |
Sources and General Physiological Effects |
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| Antacids, Antiperpirants, Baking powders, Beverage/Food Cans, Buffered Aspirin, Canned Foods, City Water Supplies, Cookware and Utensils, Cosmetics, Foil, Lipstick, Ore Smelting Plants, Processed Cheese, etc. |
Abudant in today's environment and toxic in excessive quantities, aluminum is mostly absorbed through the skin, lungs, and intestinal tract. Aluminum toxicity seems to affect the bones (causing brittleness or osteoporosis), kidneys, stomach, and brain. Research suggests thtat it may also contribute to Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, dementia, and other neurological disorders. |
| Chemical processing plants, cigarette smoke, drinking water, fungicides, ore smelting plants, pesticides, polluted air, specialty glass products, week killers, wood preservatives, etc |
Extremely poisonous as well as colorless and odorless, arsenic can enter the body through the mouth, lungs, and skin. Arsenic toxicity seems to predominantly affect the skin, lungs and gastrointestinal system, and may cause nervous disorders, deteriorated motor coordination, respiratory diseases, and kidney damage as well as cancers of the skin, liver, bladder and lungs. |
| Air polution, batteries, ceraic glazes/enamels, cigarette smoke (both first and second hand), tap and well water, food (if grown in cadmium contained soil), fungicides, mines, paints, power and smelting plants, seafood, etc. |
Exposure to cadmium can occur through inhalation or ingestion in places or situations where cadmium products are used, manufactured, or ingested. Cigarette smoke is the biggest source of cadmium toxicity, which seems to primarily affect the lungs, kidneys, bones, and immune system. It may lead to lung cancer, prostate cancer, and heart disease, and also causes yellow teeth and anemia. Cadmium also seems to contribute to autoimmune thyroid disease. |
| Air pollution, ammunition, auto exhaust, batteries, containers for corrosives, contaminated soil, cosmetics, fertilizers, foods (if grown in lead-contaminated soil), hair dyes, insecticides, lead-based paints, lead-glazed pottery, pesticides, solder, tobacco smoke, water (if transported via lead pipes), etc. |
Lead is a naturally-occurring nerotoxin. Although many lead containing products (such as gasoline and house paints) were banned in the 1970s, contamination still occurs today mostly by drinking lead contaminated water, breathing lead-polluted air, and living in or near older painted buildings and certain toxic industrial areas. Lead toxicity primarily targets the nervous system, kidneys, bones, heart and blood, and poses greatest risk to infants, young children and pregnant women. It can affect fetal development, delay growth, and may also cause attention deficit disorder, learning disabilities, behavioral defects, and other developmental problems. |
| Air pollution, barometers, batteries, cosmetics, dental amalgam fillings, freshwater fish (such as bass and trout), fungicides, insecticides, laxatives, paints, pesticides, saltwater fish (such as tuna an swordfish), shellfish, tap and well water, thermometers, thermostats, vaccines, etc. |
Both poisonous and dangerous, mercury is found throughout our environments in many forms and also in many household items. Mercury often permeates the ground we walk on, and is also found in some childhood vaccines today because of its use as a preservative. Mercury as used in dental fillings is the primary source of toxic exposure, and in vapor form accounts for the majority of all exposures (via inhalation). Mercury tox |
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