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Heart Disease and
Chlorine
Evidence and principles
of science clearly show that drinking chlorinated water is the main
cause of arterial plaques, which is the most serious cause of heart
disease.
Summary:
Chlorine attaches to arteries and looks like a foreign substance. White
blood cells attack the chlorine. But since it is stuck to arteries, the
white blood cells stick to the arteries. Then they do what they always do,
which is remove excess calcium and fat from the blood. It accumulates to
form plaques.
Supposedly eating
the wrong foods creates heart disease. No way does biology get that
contrasurvival by itself. Humans have been eating cholesterol and similar
lipids for millions of years. And nature has had quite a bit of practice
at creating hearts for seven hundred million years prior.
The primary cause of heart disease can be understood, but authorities are
not describing it. Professional scientists would have their careers ruined
for even thinking about it. Since I'm an independent scientist, I can
describe the science of the subject.
A key point is that before plaques develop in arteries, white blood cells
(leukocytes) stick to artery walls. The leukocytes then fill up with
lipids and calcium.
Researchers don't say why leukocytes attach to arteries. A common theory
is that the leukocytes attempt to heal damage, but malfunction occurs.
Nature doesn't malfunction that way.
The nature of chlorine is extremely informative. Chlorine, iodine, bromine
and fluorine are called halides, because they are similar. Organic halides
(halides attached to carbon) are never found in nature. The reason appears
to be their tendency to react with and alter other biological molecules.
Halides react by substitution. This means they replace something else on a
larger molecule, and they stay attached to the molecule afterwards. This
is what chlorine does while killing germs in water. It could only be
expected to do the same thing inside a person's body after drinking
chlorinated water. It should attach to artery walls which it comes into
contact with.
Governmental laws require residual effects with chlorine, meaning it still
kills bacteria when water comes out the faucet. When it is drank, it is
going to react with molecules in the body. Among the first to be contacted
are walls of the arteries. This means the artery walls should
theoretically become chlorinated as a result of drinking chlorinated
water. Much evidence shows that the results follow the theory.
Chlorine attached to artery walls would create the appearance of a foreign
substance. Halides (like chlorine) are extremely antigenic. So they would
cause the leukocytes to attack the arteries. Then the leukocytes would do
what they normally do, which is absorb free lipids and calcium from the
blood.
Calcium and lipids in the blood are supposed to be combined with carrier
molecules; and if not, they are removed from the blood by white blood
cells. Probably, a low percent of all calcium and lipids which enter the
blood are not properly attached to carriers.
So the leukocytes which are attached to arteries fill up with those
calcium and lipid molecules which are not properly attached to carriers.
The result is plaque formation.
Reduced consumption of lipids and calcium diminishes the problem, because
there is then less in the blood to be absorbed into the plaques. But it is
a losing battle as long as leukocytes are attached to artery walls.
Evidence for this mechanism is in the fact that Europeans have less of a
problem with heart disease than Americans. They ozonize their water
instead of chlorinate it. Ozone does not create those problems.
Links:
Endothelium - This theory says plaques result from healing that
malfunctions. Nature does not malfunction so easily.
Leukocytes - Describes details of leukocyte attachments but
does not indicate why they attach. NOTE
I have forwarded a copy of this report to the Health Secreatry, Patricia Hewitt, and will keep you informed of any response.tonyb (Editor)
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