Spirulina
In Boundless, Ben Greenfield explains why it's such a powerful detox supplement...
100 mcg (a tiny amount) of spirulina hexane extract has been shown to remove over 85 percent of arsenic found in tissue. At a dose of 250 to 500 mg per kilogram of body weight (about 20 to 40 g for a 170-pound individual), spirulina has been shown to prevent metal toxicity in pregnant rats’ offspring when the mothers were given fluoride. Spirulina has also been shown to reduce lead accumulation in brain tissue, protect against cadmium buildup, and attenuate mercury accumulation in the testes. Granted, spirulina is one of the few substances that has a large body of evidence to support its detoxifying activity, but other compounds such as dandelion extract, ginseng, and zinc have also been clinically proven to reduce heavy-metal buildup. And while heavy metals are only one form of the toxins that can accumulate in your tissues, there is no doubt science has proven that these toxins can indeed be removed via certain natural compounds. (p. 527)
Sources
Downloadable Spirulina?
You may be interested in taking it as an infoceutical - a non-pharmacological, side-effect-free version of the supplement that takes advantage of the phenomenon of water memory - which is imprinted on water via quantum collocation and electromagnetism using this device...
Infocueticals typically have 1/3 or half the effect of the actual medicine being imprinted. If you're skeptical of Infopathy that's understandable, it's a game-changing application of a little-known scientific phenomenon. But I'd urge you to evaluate the scientific evidence (presented in my biohacker review) that downloadable medicine is no longer science fiction...
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