Very interesting Roger, but it seems to read (I am probably wrong) that
ingesting zeolites might not be such a good thing.  Is this correct?  Dee  

-------Original Message------- 

 

From: Roger Barker 

Date: 31/08/2007 00:16:13 

To: [email protected] 

Subject: Re: CS>What a physician should know about zeolites 

 

Copied this from the web-site. Hope it's what's wanted? 

 

Cheers, Roger 

Rotorua, NZ 

 

Boranić M. 

Institut Ruder Bosković, Zavod za molekularnu medicinu, Bijenicka 

Cesta 54, 10000 Zagreb. 

 

Zeolites are natural and synthetic hydrated crystalline 

Aluminosilicates endowed with absorptive and ion exchange properties. 

They have found numerous and multifarous applications--in industry as 

Catalysts and absorbents, in water sanitation for the removal of 

Ammonia and heavy metals, in agriculture as fertilizers, and in 

Animal husbandry as the absorbents of excreted material and as food 

Additives. Medical applications have included the use in filtration 

Systems for anesthesia or dialysis and as the contrast materials in 

NMR imaging. Recently, zeolite powders for external use have found 

Application as deodorants, antimycotic agents and wound dressings. 

Peroral use of encapsulated zeolite powders enriched with vitamins, 

Oligoelements or other ingredients has been claimed to exert 

Beneficial medical effects. Ingestion of zeolites may be considered 

Analogous to the clay eating (geophagia), considered in traditional 

Medicine as a remedy for various illnesses. Being amphoteric, 

Zeolites are partly soluble in acid or alkaline media, but within the 

Physiological pH range the solubility is generally low. Minimal 

Amounts of free aluminium or silicium from the ingested zeolites are 

Resorbed from the gut. The bulk of ingested zeolite probably remains 

Undissolved in the gut. In view of the ion exchange properties, 

Zeolites may be expected to change the ionic content, pH and 

Buffering capacity of the gastrointestinal secretions and to affect 

The transport through the intestinal epithelium. In addition, 

Zeolites could affect the bacterial flora and the resorption of 

Bacterial products, vitamins and oligoelements. The contact of 

Zeolite particles with gastrointestinal mucosa may elicit the 

Secretion of cytokines with local and systemic actions. Reactive 

Silicium ions might react with biomolecules of the intestinal 

Epithelium, and if resorbed, do so in other cells. Mutagenic and 

Carcinogenic effects of zeolite particles have been described, 

Resembling such effects of asbestos fibers. Thus, local and systemic 

Effects of zeolites may be complex and interrelated, and an objective 

Assessment requires appropriate experimental models. 

 

 

 


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