Are Heavy Metals Playing Havoc With Your Fertility? (PART 2)

July 30th, 2009 in Articles // Fertility 2 Comments

As outlined in part one of this article heavy metals are natural components of the Earth’s crust. However to the body, they are poisonous substances even in very small quantities, which enter our food and water supply by industrial and consumer waste, or even from acidic rain breaking down soils and releasing heavy metals into streams, lakes, rivers, and groundwater. Heavy meals are also added (yes, unfortunately you read correctly—they are added!) to medicines as well as thousands of different food products, household products, personal products and untold numbers of industrial products and chemicals.

Toxic heavy metals cannot be degraded or destroyed and are dangerous because they tend to bioaccumulate. Bioaccumulation means an increase in the concentration of a chemical in the body over time, compared to the chemical’s concentration in the environment. Heavy metals accumulate in living organisms whenever they enter the body (of humans and/or animals). They are immediately absorbed and due to their high toxic potential are quickly and deeply stored away in tissues such as the brain, liver, kidneys and bones to prevent immediate harm as they are not easily broken down, metabolized or excreted by the body.

The problem being that due to their inability to be easily metabolized and excreted they tend to accumulate further and further causing metabolic disruptions which can lead to infertility, poor sperm parameters and miscarriages, but they have also been linked to malformation and abnormalities in the foetus as well as developmental concerns including autism in children whose parents (particularly the mother had high heavy metal loads during pregnancy). Researchers believe a lot of the damage caused to developing babies and children due to heavy metals exposure begins and happens whilst in utero, in addition to some links to certain vaccines which are preserved with mercury and may contain other heavy metals as well as polluted fish, water and other environmental exposure.

Arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, aluminum, and uranium are highly toxic and every care should be taken to avoid them. Barium, lithium, nickel (one of the alloys in stainless steel) and strontium are also toxic and are certainly best avoided.

So where are these toxic metals found?

Heavy Metal

General Sources

Food Sources

Aluminium

Alum, aluminium foil, animal feed, antacids, aspirin, auto exhaust, cans, ceramics, cigarette filters, construction materials, cookware, cosmetics, dental amalgams, deodorants, drying agents, dust, insulated wiring, medicinal compounds, nasal spray, pesticides, pollution, sutures with wound-healing coatings, tobacco smoke, toothpaste. Baking powder, beer, bleached flour, colour additives, drinking water, hard cheese, milk products, salt, seasonings, tap water, treated water, vanilla powder

Arsenic

Automobile exhausts, burning of arsenate treated building materials, coal combustion, coloured chalk, household detergents, insect sprays, pesticides, rat poisons, sewage disposal, soils (arsenic rich) wallpaper dye and plaster wood preservatives. Chicken, seafood from coastal waters (especially mussels, oysters and shrimp), water (drinking, seawater and well), wine (if arsenic in pesticides used).

Beryllium

Coal burning, manufacturing, household products, industrial dust.

Cadmium

Airborne industrial contaminants, batteries, ceramics, cigarette smoke, congenital intoxication, copper refineries, copper alloys, dental alloys, electroplating, fertilisers, fungicides, galvanised pipes, incineration of tires/rubber/plastic, marijuana, motor oil, nickel-cadmium plated batteries, paint, pesticides, polyvinyl plastics, rubber, rubber carpet backing, rust-proofing materials, sewage, silver polish, smelters, solders (including in food cans), tobacco, tools, vapour lamps, welding material. Candy, colas, drinking water, food from contaminated soil, evaporated milk, instant coffee, kidney, liver, oysters, processed foods, processed meat, refined grains/flours/cereals, seafood (cod, haddock, tuna), vending machine soft drinks, water (city, softened, well).

Copper

Birth control pills, congenital intoxication, copper cookware, copper IUDs, copper pipes dental alloys, fungicides, ice makers, industrial emissions, insecticides, swimming pools, welding. Avocado, beer, bluefish, bone meal, chocolate, corn oil, crabs, gelatine, grains, lamb, liver, lobster, margarine, milk, nuts, mushrooms, organ meats, oysters, perch, seeds, shellfish, soybeans, tofu, wheat germ, yeast, water (city/well).

Iron

Iron cookware, iron pipes, welding. Blackstrap molasses, bone meal, bran, chives, clams, drinking water, heart, kidney, leafy vegetables, legumes, liver, meat, molasses, nuts, organ meats, oysters, parsley, red wine, refined foods, shellfish, soybeans, wheat germ, whole grains.

Lead

Ash, auto exhaust, battery manufacturing, car batteries, cigarette smoke, coal combustion, coloured inks, congenital intoxication, cosmetics, eating utensils, electroplating, household dust, glass production, hair dyes, industrial emissions, lead pipes, lead-glazed earthenware pottery, mascara, metal polish, newsprint, paint, pencils, pesticides, putty, rain water, PVC containers, produce near roads, refineries, smelters, sow, tin cans with lead solder sealing, tobacco, toothpaste, toys. Bone meal, canned fruit and juice, liver, milk, organ meats, water (city, well), wine.

Mercury

Adhesives, air conditioner filters, algaecides, antiseptics, barometers and thermometers, battery manufacturing, body powders, broken thermometers, burning newspapers and building materials, calamine lotions, congenital intoxication, cosmetics, dental amalgams, diuretics, fabric softeners, felt, floor waxes, fungicides, germicides, industrial waste, insecticides, laxatives, lumber, manufacture of paper and chlorine, mascara, medications, mercurochrome, paints, paper products, pesticides, photoengraving, polluted water, Preparation H, psoriasis ointment, sewage disposal, skin lightening creams, soft contact lens solution, suppositories, tanning leather, tattooing, wood preservatives. Cereals, grains, seafood (especially tuna and swordfish), water (contaminated).

Nickel

Fertilisers, food processing, fuel oil combustion, industrial waste, kelp, nuclear device testing, stainless steel cookware, tobacco smoke. Butter, cereals, hydrogenated fats and oils, imitation whipped cream, margarine, oysters, tea, unrefined grains, vegetable shortening.


The best way to protect your health and fertility as well as for the safety of your family avoid products you suspect heavy metals are present in. And be sure to do your research!



About Gabriela Rosa

Internationally renowned author, researcher and leading natural fertility specialist Gabriela Rosa publishes the ‘Natural Fertility Booster’ with 3,000+ subscribers. If you're ready to optimise your natural fertility, boost your IVF chances, get pregnant fast and create the healthy baby of your dreams, get your FREE subscription and great tips now at www.NaturalFertilityBreakthrough.com.

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2 Responses to “Are Heavy Metals Playing Havoc With Your Fertility? (PART 2)”

  1. miriam says:

    Thank you for your wonderful work and excellent article. I also was fortunate enough to be able to get and to read your great book on cleaning products and fertility. I wonder after reading all this do we need to be tested for heavy metals in our body and do you recommend any particular lab. Also after modifying diet and other life style matters, is there any roles for detoxification techniques such as infrared saunas , colonics, etc…
    regards
    miriam

  2. admin says:

    Hi There Miriam!

    Thank you kindly for your lovely words.

    Heavy metal testing is very important. Many couples don’t find out that this is a problem until it’s ‘too late’ so it’s a very important first step in my practice.

    The initial screening we use is a hair mineral analysis and then we do other tests if our suspicions are concerned. The most reliable way to treat heavy metal toxicity is through chelation therapy and far infrared saunas can also be useful adjunct to treatment.

    When treating heavy metal problems it is essential to do preconception preparation after chelation for at least 120 days to optimise a couple’s combined fertility and the ability to conceive, whilst reducing the risk of miscarriage and childhood complications.

    I hope this helps!

    With fertile blessings,
    Gabriela Rosa

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