The best natural chelating agent is Amino acid and other related compounds.
Other best natural chelating agents are peptides, phosphates, nucleotides, tetrapyrrols, ferrioxamines, phenolics and lonophores, such as gramicidin, monensin, valinomycin.
Chelation therapy costs on average of $5,000.00
Each chelating treatment costs $75.00 to $125.00, and people often undergo dozens of these three-hour-long infusions over a period of several months.
Chelating treatment or chelating therapy is a treatment that removes heavy metal from the body and and treats heavy metal poisoning.
Heavy metal poisoning from metals such as iron, arsenic, mercury and lead can be removed through chelating therapy.
Some people have chelation therapy for other health conditions such as Alzheimer's autism and cardiovascular disease.
Chelation therapy is the preferred medical treatment for reducing the toxic effects of metals.
Chelating agents are capable of binding to toxic metal ions to form complex structures which are easily excreted from the body removing them from intracellular or extracellular spaces.
Today, chelation therapy is only FDA-approved to treat metal poisoning.
There just isn't enough evidence to support its use for any other condition.
And, as research shows, it can be dangerous if it's used for an unapproved reason.
Each chelating treatment costs $75.00 to $125.00, and people often undergo dozens of these three-hour-long infusions over a period of several months.
All in all, a treatment course can exceed $5,000.00—and it isn't typically covered by health insurance.
When metals like lead, mercury, iron, and arsenic build up in your body, they can be toxic.
Chelation therapy is a treatment that uses medicine to remove these metals so they don't make you sick.
Some alternative health care providers also use it to treat heart disease, autism, and Alzheimer's disease.
The lead and other heavy metal chelators include succimer (dimercaptonol), dimercaprol (BAL), and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA).
Succimer is orally available and appears to be more effective and better tolerated that the other therapies, which require intravenous administration.
Some natural chelating agents include.
Amino acids and related compounds.
Peptides.
Phosphates.
Nucleotides.
Tetrapyrrols.
Ferrioxamines.
lonophores, such as gramicidin, monensin, valinomycin.
Phenolics.
Enterobactin, produced by E. coli, is the strongest chelating agent known.