Thursday 5 April 2012

Does Fluoride damage D.N.A.?


John Yiamouyiannis, in his influential Fluoride and the Aging Factor, described how the fluorine ion disrupts enzyme activity and attacks DNA and protein.

In his theories, backed up by research, the fluorine ion particularly disrupts hydrogen bonds. When chemicals are dumped together, the elements that have a higher bonding affinity will “steal” the bonds from other elements.  Because it holds its electrons more tightly than any other element, fluorine forms the smallest negatively charged ions of all the elements, and that small size allows them to go where larger ions cannot.

Those fluorine ions can get into the nooks and crannies of larger molecules, such as enzymes and DNA, and wreak biological havoc. Those fluorine ions disrupt weaker bonds in those larger molecules, damaging or destroying the original substance, disabling its biochemical usefulness.

The fluorine ion acts similarly to “free radicals” in the body, with its net electrical charge interfering with biochemical reactions. This is how the fluorine ion harms or kills people.

The Genetic Damage Caused by Fluoride (Chromosomal changes in cells): http://www.fluoridealert.org/f-genetic.htm

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