Comments:

Dr. Robert Simon on Malathion

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Questions on Malathion answered by Dr. Robert Simon:

Q:        It is being said that storage temperature's of malathion over 77 degrees causes malathion to change to a much more toxic forms.

A:         YES

Q:        So, essentially, in it's final metabolized form, isn't malathion >usually going to end up as malaoxan, eventually, in our tissue?

A:         VERY QUICKLY..........First the body's P450 detoxification pathway changes it to malaoxon then the body attempts to eliminate it, IF it did not first enter the body as malaoxon, but as it hits the atmosphere with all the other VOC's/PM's (volatile organic compounds and particulate matter) who knows what it is when it makes contact with our skin, lungs and mucous membranes. Most assuredly, MALAOXON. But, the body is also responding to all the other toxin enhancing chemicals it needs to breakdown in the formulation at the same time as well.

Q:        Can the detoxification system handle the load? What happens when it cannot?

A:         During the time it is doing this, nervous system toxicity has already occurred, and cholinesterase transmissions impaired systemically (including all your organs), hence improper nerve signaling.

As you know these formulations are created by the scientists to kill on contact, knock down. The liver and kidney are called to overtime, yet all organs are also controlled by nerve transmission.

Q:        What was our atmospheric temperature at the time of the malathion spraying, 89 degrees?

Body's very initial simultaneous responses would be peripheral nerve reactions, since the agent is a neurotoxicant.....and it is specifically primarily created to unhook that system to ensure death......and nerves are the scope of our entire ecosystem.... skin, lung, eye absorption and as the toxin penetrates the mucous membranes and swallowed into the gut and inhaled through the nose triggering brain sensory responses, there is a full body alteration, but initially impaired by nerve transmission enzyme inhibition creating a grossly debilitated environment for detoxification of the toxins promoting prolonged systemic poisoning and storage.

What malaoxon and metabolites of the formulation could not be broken down due to overburden of the poisoned ecosystem at the time of exposure would be stored in the fatty tissue.

Q:        JIM WROTE >>So, essentially, in it's final metabolized form, isn't malathion usually going to end up as malaoxan, eventually, in our tissue?

A:         YES and whatever the body is not able to eliminate and all the other metabolites of the formulation as well and the liver which can store what the body cannot breakdown.

Q:        What happens when you start to burn this fat by exercising and losing weight?

A:         These can be re-released into the circulation and re-contaminate.

If you need expert medical confirmation on this, here is the Neurotoxicologist that Dr. Simon works with at ETI. http://www.toxint.com/page7.html

Peter Bernad, M.D., M.P.H., F.A.C.P. Neurology, Neurotoxicology, Internal Medicine

Dr. Bernad is a practicing physician and neurologist, author, college professor, and expert neurotoxicology. He is a Public Heath Officer and has served as an expert in numerous jurisdictions.

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