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How to Detox From Fluoride



In today's world, fluoride is hard to avoid completely. Here's how to detox your body


Adding fluoride to the water supplies has been called murder on a grand scale. But whether or not your town adds it to your drinking water, you're probably ingesting this toxin every day. 


You're exposed to fluoride if you take prescription drugs like Prozac, swim in pools, or sit in hot tubs. It's in conventional produce like lettuce, and commercial bread and bakery products. It may be in beverages like iced tea, wine, and beer made with municipal water, or in infant formula. And of course it's in toothpaste. It may even sneak into your food from Teflon coated pots and pans. 



Minimizing your exposure to fluoride is important. But in today's world, this toxin is hard to avoid completely. That's why it's critical to detox your body from fluoride. 


Iodine Flushes Out Fluoride


Cleansing your system of fluoride is not the same as getting rid of mercury or arsenic. Fluoride is not a heavy metal. It's a halide in the same family as bromine and chlorine. Fluoride, bromine, chlorine, and perchlorate all bind to iodine receptors in the body and displace iodine. 


Perchlorate is a man-made molecule combining oxygen and chlorine. It's used for rocket fuel and industrial processes and contaminates our water supplies.


According to Dr. Mark Sircus, the only effective way to detox from perchlorate, fluoride or other halides is with iodine.[i] Chelation and other methods for heavy metal detox may not be as effective.


Loading the body with iodine displaces fluoride from cell receptors and flushes the fluoride out of the body in urine. 


Your body can't make iodine. You have to get it from food or supplements. And unfortunately it's estimated that as many as 74% of Americans are deficient in this crucial element.


The best dietary source of iodine is seaweed. Sea vegetables like wakame, nori, kombu (kelp), arame, and dulse are the richest edible sources of iodine. Just one tablespoon of dried dulse flakes contains about 750 mcg of iodine. The government's daily recommended amount is about 150 mcg.


Other good iodine sources include seafood (salmon, lobster, scallops, cod and shrimp). Cranberries, yogurt, potatoes, strawberries, and navy beans also contain iodine but in much lower amounts.


You can also find seaweed supplements like kelp tablets at most health food stores.

 

Iodine supplements are also widely available. Iodoral® tablets contain 5 mg of iodine, and 7.5 mg of potassium iodide. A typical dose is 6.25mg or 12.5 milligrams of combined iodine and iodide. We prefer food forms because it is less likely to have side effects, as your body likely has more control over what it absorbs from a food complex than when taken in isolated form. 


Detoxing from fluoride using iodine may trigger symptoms like headaches, agitation, and palpitations as fluoride is released. To minimize those effects, it's important to work with a natural health specialist. According to Dr. David Brownstein in his book "Iodine: Why Your Need It, Why You Can't Live Without It" an iodine detox should include a nutritional plan as well as unrefined sea salt, selenium, vitamin C, and a vitamin B complex. 


At the same time, as with any cleanse, your liver will need additional support. Liver cleansing foods include garlic, turmeric, flaxseeds, milk thistle, lemons, limes, and avocados.


And always drink plenty of water when detoxing. Divide your weight by two and drink that number of ounces of fluoride-free water each day to help flush the toxins.


Even though iodine may be the best way to detox from fluoride, studies show that other methods may help reverse the damage done by fluoride in the body. 


Curcumin Fights Fluoride Toxicity


In a study published in Pharmacognosy Magazine, curcumin was found to protect against the brain-damaging effects of fluoride.[ii]


Other studies show curcumin, the active ingredient in the spice turmeric, also protects the kidneys against fluoride toxicity.[iii] And curcumin has been shown to prevent DNA damage from fluoride in human lymphocytes.[iv]


Tamarind Moves Fluoride Out of Bones


Tamarind is an African spice commonly used in Ayurvedic medicine. In one randomized, diet control study, Indian researchers studied the effect of tamarind in 30 subjects living in an area with high natural fluoride levels. After two weeks, the group supplementing with tamarind had a significant increase in fluoride excreted through their urine. The researchers concluded that tamarind mobilized fluoride from bone and carried it out in urine.


In another study, Indian schoolboys ate 10 grams of tamarind every day. After 18 days, their excretion of fluoride was significantly increased. The researchers concluded that tamarind could delay fluorosis by improving excretion of fluoride in the urine.


Tamarind is a tropical tree. Its pulp, bark, and leaves can be used to make a tincture or tea. Leaves, flowers, fruit, and seeds are used to make curries, lentils, salads, stews and soups.

Animal studies also show benefits of nutrition against fluoride:


For more natural compounds that have been shown to reduce the effects of fluoride visit GreenMedInfo's page on Fluoride Toxicity.



References


[i] https://drsircus.com/medicine/iodine/iodine-protects-fluoride-toxicity#_edn3 [ii] Sharma C, Suhalka P, Sukhwal P, Jaiswal N, Bhatnagar M. Curcumin attenuates neurotoxicity induced by fluoride: An in vivo evidence. Pharmacognosy Magazine. 2014;10(37):61-65. doi:10.4103/0973-1296.126663. [iii] Seyed Fazel Nabavi et al, "Protective effects of curcumin against sodium fluoride-induced toxicity in rat kidneys." Biol Trace Elem Res. 2012;145(3):369-74. Epub 2011 Sep 7. PMID: 21901432 [iv] Hemlata Tiwari, Mandava V Rao, "Curcumin supplementation protects from genotoxic effects of arsenic and fluoride." Food Chem Toxicol. 2010 Feb 17. Epub 2010 Feb 17. PMID: 20170701

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