Removing Amalgams In Quadrant-Voltage Order

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Detoxing Mercury

How to you give your body the best chance of detoxing properly after amalgam (mercury) dental fillings are removed.

Physics dictates this: If you join two dissimilar metals, a voltage difference (potential) will be created on one metal versus the other. Because amalgam fillings contain dissimilar metals, they create a voltage just like a chemical battery. This voltage is normally measured by a microamp meter and is measured in microamps (0.000001 or millionth or 10 to-the-negative-6th [10^-6] of an amp).

To determine a quadrant-voltage, you add all the voltage readings in each quadrant of the mouth (upper-left, upper-right, lower-left, lower-right). The quadrant that has the highest (most) negative voltage should have it's fillings removed first. The quadrant with the second-highest negative voltage should have it's fillings removed second, and so on. If you follow this rule, (according to Huggins), you have an 80% chance of causing your body to begin to eliminate mercury via the urine by itself (without drugs or supplements). This increase in urine mercury is dramatic (as a before/after ratio) and usually occurs within 48 hours of removal of the last filling. Somehow, it seems the body knows (in 80% of cases) when the last filling is removed.

Huggins admits that he does not know what specific mechanism causes the body to enter this "mode" but the percentages were consistent in his experimentation as outlined in his book It's All In Your Head.


Additional Information That May Be Helpful

What Is Voltage?

Voltage is a difference in the actual number of electrons. Therefore, if you have a bunch more electrons at location "A" in reference to location "B", then location "A" is said to be "negative" (because electrons are negative, not positive) in respect to point "B". Often, point "B" will be called the reference point, or "ground", so you can say "point A is negative in respect to ground", or more often just, "A is negative".

Where Is Point "B"?

When having your filling voltage measured, "ground" is generally considered your gums near the point where the tooth makes contact with the jaw. Because of the conductive minerals in saliva, all of your gums are at the same voltage (they have the same number of electrons no matter where you measure). Therefore, a Dentist will normally place the "ground" probe anywhere inside your mouth touching your gums or the inside of your lip. The other probe will be used to touch the top of the filling itself. This enables the Dentist to measure the voltage between that specific filling and "ground" (the rest of your mouth).

Keep In Mind

You can typically expect readings between +5 and -15 microvolts. My father had a few extremely large fillings, one with -39 microvolts and another with -47 microvolts. The Dentist set back in his chair and looked at me (I was in the room during the voltage readings) as if to say, "WOW".

If a voltage is positive, this means that there are less electrons on the filling than at "ground". Many people get about 3 negative voltages for each positive or zero voltage, although this varies widely based on many factors.

You will also notice that a comprehensive Dentist will scrape the surface of the filling with the probe before taking a reading. The reason for this is to remove any corrosion that would insulate (block) the probe from making a good contact with the filling which would tend to falsely coerce the voltage reading toward zero (up if the true voltage was negative and down if the true voltage was positive).


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Disclaimer: We are not a doctors. We do not prescribe medication or practice medicine. No information we share is intended to prescribe medication or practice medicine, nor is it intended to prevent, treat or cure symptoms, conditions or diseases. We only express our opinions based on personal research and experience.

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