Chapter 1: Radiation and Cellular Health
How Radiation Devastates Our Cellular Health
Radioactive Elements and Chronic Degenerative Diseases
A Brief History of Radiation and its Impact upon Health
Fallout Spurs Sub-Par Thyroid Function in Our Children
Fallout Spurs Contagion
Uses of Radioactive Wastes
Fallout Arriving in Our Imports
High Dose Versus Low Dose Radiation Exposure
The Petkau Effect
The Bystander Effect
The Transgenerational Threat to Humankind & All Life on Earth
Chapter 2: Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant
The Fuel Rod
Partial Meltdown
Complete Meltdown
Reactor Vessel Melt-Through
The China Syndrome
Explosive Potential of Melting Fuel Rods
Deflagrations
Detonations
Nuclear Detonations
Radioactive Fallout from Fukushima
Confirmation Has Already Begun
Bending Science in Radioactive Fallout Reporting
Suspect from the Environmental Protection Agency
Suspect from the Japanese Ministry of Internal Affairs
Suspect from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
North American Radioactive Fallout Migration
Time Tables
Radiation in the Oceans
Potential Radiation Doses Post Fukushima
Radiation in Drinking Water
U.S. Milk Supply Contamination
Radioactivity Released by Fukushima Compared to Chernobyl and All Atmospheric Nuclear Bomb Testing (1950's to present)
The Nature and Dangers of Radioactive Elements
Measuring the Spread of Radioactive Fallout
The Human Impact of the Fukushima Catastrophe
Some Chilling Conclusions
Chapter 3: Preventive Measures
Lessons Learned: Diet, Water and Air
Food Selections are Critical
Water Filtration is Critical
Air Filtration is Critical
Mineral Supplements May Block Entry of Radionuclides
Iodine for Thyroid Protection
Potassium and Calcium Supplements
Selenium, Copper, Zinc and Manganese Supplements
Chapter 4: Antioxidants and Other Select Antidotes è Hot Particle Quenchers
Antidoting the Petkau Effect
Antidoting the Genetic Damage via HRR & NHEJ
Preventing Ionizing Radiation from Inducing Chronic Degenerative Diseases
Enhancing Nrf2 to Rapidly Amplify Core Antioxidant Enzyme Systems
Chapter 5: Radiation Elimination (Cell è Tissue è Organ è Whole Body Decorporation)
Diet è Bowel Elimination of Radioactive Metals
Edible Clays
Blood è Urine elimination of Toxic Metals
Baking Soda
Cell è Blood è Urine/Bile è Bowel Elimination of Radioactive Metals
Intracellular Chelation è Excretion Transport
Chapter 6: The Regeneration Effect and Strict Determinism (Plus The Misnomer "Radiation Hormesis")
The Regeneration Effect Has No Known Rival
Disciplined Detoxification
Maximum Oxygenation
Super-Nourishment
Select Bioenergetics
Double-Stranded DNA Repair è Putting Autophagy & Vitagenes To Work
Unscheduled Repair è Upregulating Normal Cell Replication via Insuring Optimal Apoptosis & Precise Growth Factor Management
Accelerated Healing è Regenerating Cellular Mitochondria (mitochondrial biogenesis via PGC-1 α)
Misconceptions About Radiation Hormesis è Russian Roulette or Regenerative Aikido?
Chapter 7: Where to Start? Regenerative Protocols for Optimal Recovery & Protection
Straightforward Individualized Basic Protocols (for Adults, Children and the Very Young) According to Budget
Straightforward Individualized Advanced Protocols According to Budget
Straightforward Individualized Optimum Protocols According to Budget
Anti-Inflammatory Quenching Protocols
Educational Information for Women Who are Pregnant
A Discussion about Comprehensive Regenerative Protocols
Acute Radiation Sickness Protocol è For Populations Most at Risk (Japanese, Hawaiians, North Americans)
Resources
Conclusion
References:
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1. In 1974, the U.S. Public Health Services noted that only 3,000,000 out of 210,000,000 Americans could be considered healthy (i.e., living disease-free).
Current trends as of 2007 reveal that over:
Ø 18 million Americans have cancer
Ø 165 million never engage in physical activity lasting more than 10 minutes, 99 million are physically inactive, approximately 45 million are functionally impaired or suffer at least one physical difficulty
Ø 105 million are overweight
Ø 81 million were obese
Ø Making a grand total of 186 million unfit Americans most at risk for premature death,
Ø 81% or 243 million folks saw a physician, which in turn contributed to…
Ø 571 million work-loss days
Ø 84 million suffer lower back pain
Ø 84 million suffer chronic joint pains
Ø 72 million have hypertension
Ø 66 million have arthritis
Ø 62 million are smokers
Ø 50 million experience nervousness or anxiety
Ø 48 million suffer migraines
Ø 45 million have hearing problems
Ø 30 million suffer heart disease
Ø 30 million have symptoms of depression (sadness, hopelessness, worthlessness, or that everything is an effort)
Ø 28 million have vision problems
Ø 27 million have diabetes
Ø 24 million have lost their teeth
Ø 24 million have ulcers
Ø 24 million have asthma
Ø 6 million have emphysema
Ø 6 million have kidney disease
Ø 3 million have liver disease.
See: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/heart.htm series 10, No. 249:5-13.
2. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_life_expectancy
3. See: http://www.webmd.com/cancer/news/20110123/us-has-7th-highest-cancer-rate-in-the-world
4. See data on table - List by the United Nations Population Division Infant mortality (deaths/1,000 live births) - Longitudinal Data, right column pertaining to 2005-2010: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_infant_mortality_rate
5. Gould JM. The Enemy Within: The High Cost of Living Near Nuclear Reactors. Four Walls Eight Windows, NY, 1996; Figure 3-11, p. 83.
6. Gould JM. The Enemy Within: The High Cost of Living Near Nuclear Reactors. Four Walls Eight Windows, NY, 1996;pp. 72-8, and Figure 3-4, p. 73.
7. According to Aaron Blair, Ph.D., the chief of the Occupational Epidemiology Branch in NCI's Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics in June 17 issue of the NCI publication Benchmarks. See: http://www.cancer.gov/images/Documents/5d17e03e-b39f-4b40-a214-e9e9099c4220/Cancer%20and%20the%20Environment.pdf
8. Biello D. Mixing it up: Harmless levels of chemicals prove toxic together. Scientific American 2006 May 10;294(5):16, 18.
9. Linus Pauling, Andrei Sakharov, and Helen Caldicott.
10. Health Risks from Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation: BEIR VII – Phase 2 Committee to Assess Health Risks from Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation. National Research Council. ISBN: 0-309-53040-7. For free download see: http://www.nap.edu/catalog/11340.html.
11. See: http://www.ucsusa.org/nuclear_power/nuclear_power_and_global_warming/nuclear-power-subsidies-report.html
12. Mangano JJ. Childhood leukemia in US may have risen due to Fall Out from Chernobyl. BMJ. 1997 Apr 19;314(7088):1200.
13. Wing S, Richardson DB, Hoffmann W. Cancer Risks near Nuclear Facilities: The Importance of Research Design and Explicit Study Hypotheses. Environ Health Perspect. 2011 Apr;119(4):417-21.
14. Busby C, Bramhall R. Is there an excess of childhood cancer in North Wales on the Menai Strait, Gwynedd? Concerns about the accuracy of analyses carried out by the Wales Cancer Intelligence Unit and those using its data. Green Audit Aberystwyth. Occasional Paper. 2005/3, Nov 5th 2005.
15. Koturbashi I, et al. Epigenetic dysregulation underlies radiation-induced transgenerational genome instability in vivo. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2006 Oct 1;66(2):327-30.
16. Gould JM. The Enemy Within: The High Cost of Living Near Nuclear Reactors. Four Walls Eight Windows, NY, 1996; Table 3-1, p. 79.