What is the definition of "Nascent," as in "Nascent Iodine?"

(The definition of what it is, not what it is not...)

Dan



-----Original Message-----
From: Simon Jester [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, August 29, 2007 9:16 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: CS>Re: Iodine

>>> I have never heard of Magnascent; can you tell me a little about it 
>>> and what it is for and if a Magnesium derivitive? I am using Iodine 
>>> and CS and taking Magnesium Chloride. I just know that goiter is 
>>> much smaller now so must be doing something right for a change.

>> www.magnascent.com

 > I got mine here but it is called de-toxified iodine and is £10  > whereas 
 > this one is £20 or more.  Dee www.zeusinfoservice.com

??

This is not the same stuff - magnascent is 'nascent iodine', and in fact the 
site specifically says it is *not* 'detoxified iodine':

"Nascent Iodine is totally different from the typical iodine in its denser 
state sold as an antiseptic, or as iodine tri-chloride (claiming to be 
atomized), or as added to potassium iodine to make it safer. It is also unlike 
glandular or prescriptions containing hormones that take over the thyroid's 
job, instead of nutritionally building the thyroid to do its own job. Seaweed, 
seafood, greens, raw sunflower seeds, are good sources of iodine, but may not 
have the levels necessary to support the thyroid fully for good homeostasis in 
the body. Sources from seaweed may contain certain levels of arsenic. 
MAGNASCENT (tm) is considered nascent iodine, not detoxified iodine."


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