The interview below was recently
with Mr. Spencer Feldman, the creator of Medicardium.
Although some portions contain opinions which are unique
to Mr. Feldman, much of the interview involves "EDTA
basics" that we felt would be helpful to our
Alpha Omega customers. Read and enjoy, and if you have
comments for us, just email us.
Medicardium (10 suppositories) -- $ 99.95 ---
Code 130 --- [ Order ]
Gabor:
I'm speaking with Spencer Feldman, the inventor of Medicardium EDTA
chelation by suppository. Spencer, I ve heard some wonderful things about
your product. For the benefit of our listeners who may now know much about
chelation, can you tell us first, what EDTA chelation is?
Feldman:
Sure, EDTA chelation is process that doctors have been using for the last
50 years to remove toxic metals like lead from their client's bodies.
Gabor:
You said that chelation uses EDTA, what exactly is EDTA?
Feldman:
EDTA is an amino acid that has also been used as a food preservative. You
actually are already taking a little EDTA since it is added to many foods
and drinks.*
* --- [AO Editor: EDTA is used in foods as a sequestering agent,
primarily to prevent certain metals, such as iron and copper, from
negatively impacting the flavor, freshness, or appearance of the
target food product. It is GRAS-approved (Generally Regarded
As Safe) by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration.]
Gabor:
What is chelation used for?
Feldman:
Well, in the beginning, chelation was used specifically to help remove
lead from people who had lead exposure, but over time, chelation has been
shown to have many other benefits.
Gabor: Like what?
Feldman:
Chelation has been used to reduce the risk of heart attacks and cancer,
the two top causes of all deaths. Chelation is also able to remove other
toxic metals like aluminum, mercury, arsenic, uranium, cadmium and
nickel from the body. Chelation can be used to help rejuvenate all
the organs and glands of the body making you look and feel years younger,
and can increase our lifespan up to 50%.
Gabor: Wow, that s a lot of uses for one simple molecule.
Let's start with the first one, you said that chelation can
reduce the risk of heart attacks.
Feldman: Yes, studies have shown that chelation can reduce the
risk of dying of a heart attack 86%.
Gabor: That s remarkable. Can you explain more?
Feldman:Sure, the first thing to understand is what causes a
heart attack. Do you think it s high cholesterol? Think again.
Nearly ½ of all heart attack patients in the Emergency Room have
normal cholesterol. Heck, hibernating bears have cholesterols of
nearly 600 yet there are no documented cases of bears having
heart attacks.
Gabor: So what causes heart attacks?
Feldman:The majority of heart attacks are caused when a bit of
plaque that has formed on an artery wall breaks off and gets caught
in the hearts blood supply. Blood and oxygen can't get to the heart,
and part of it dies. Sometimes these plaques get so large that even
if they don't break off, they can still block off the flow of blood,
but this is less common. When this takes place, it usually does so
slowly over time and the body has enough time to create new routes
for the blood to travel. It's when plaque breaks off suddenly and
without warning that a heart attack occurs.
Gabor: Wouldn't a person know if they have plaques building
up in their arteries?
Feldman: Actually no, arteries can be up to 75% blocked
without any symptoms whatsoever. These plaques begin forming when
we're teenagers, so it's a safe bet that some have already begun
to build up in your body.
Gabor: So if I understand properly, the questions are,
"What causes these plaques to break off, and what can we do to
shrink the ones we already have?"
Feldman: To understand what causes a plaque to break off,
we need to talk about the arteries. Arteries aren't like
cooper pipes, they're more like rubber hoses. They have to
expand and contract with each heartbeat. Every time the heart
beats, a pulse of blood travels down the arteries causing them to
stretch. When the blood passes by, the artery expands to
accommodate the extra blood, and then it shrinks back to its
regular shape. Now plaque is attached to the walls of these
arteries, so when an artery expands and contracts from the pulse
of blood, the plaque has to expand and contract with it. Now the
heart beats about 100,000 times a day, and about 38 million times
a year, so you can imagine that the plaque can get loosened
up over time.
Here is the important part,
the bigger the pulse of blood, the more the artery has to stretch
and the more likely the plaque is too break free from the artery wall.
So one of the keys to avoiding heart attacks is to keep the pulse
of blood from getting to large.
Gabor: How do I know if my arteries are being overly
stretched by this pulse of blood?
Feldman: The technical term for the pulse of blood is pulse pressure,
and you can find out your pulse pressure very easily. Just take the two
numbers of your blood pressure and find the difference between them. As
an example, a person who had a blood pressure of 120 over 80 would have
a pulse pressure of 40. 40 or below is an optimal pulse pressure. The blood
gets to where it needs to go, and the arteries aren't overly stretched.
Lets try another one. Say a person has a blood pressure of 135 over 70.
This person has a pulse pressure of 65. Now looking at his blood pressure
alone, you wouldn't think he is in a high-risk category, but his pulse
pressure is much too high. As a matter of fact, a pulse pressure of 65 or
more triples the risk of heart attack.
Gabor: So you want the two numbers on the blood pressure test to
be smaller not bigger?
Feldman: Exactly, the pulse pressure should not be over 40.
So, now you know the real value of a blood pressure test, it is
how far apart the numbers are. This tells you how much the
arteries are being stretched, how likely the plaque on those
arteries is to rupture.
Gabor: So the next question is how can we lower our pulse pressure?
Feldman: There are only two ways to lower pulse pressure.
One is to try to relax, and the other is to clean the excess
calcium out of the arteries. The best way to lower a high pulse
pressure caused by stress is to supplement with magnesium and
potassium. These are nature's tranquilizers. It's a deficiency
of these two minerals that causes people to get overly stressed
in the first place so it makes sense to supplement with these
two minerals to help get more relaxed.
Gabor: What about removing calcium from the arteries, how can we do that?
Feldman: Calcium in the arteries is called arteriosclerosis.
It causes the arteries to harden and become brittle. The best way
to clean calcium out the arteries is with EDTA chelation. The EDTA
molecule pulls the calcium out of the arteries where it doesn't
belong and puts it back in the bones and teeth where it does belong.
Gabor: I understand, so is that why you made a form of chelation
that combined magnesium, potassium and EDTA all together?
Feldman: Exactly, we combined the stress reducing qualities of
magnesium and potassium with the artery cleaning abilities of EDTA.
Until now, chelation was combined with sodium and or calcium, the
very minerals known to RAISE pulse pressure. That doesn't make much
sense does it? That's why we made our magnesium and potassium-based
EDTA, it works both to lower pulse pressure AND to clean out
the arteries.
Gabor: That's amazing. Thanks for explaining it. You said
that chelation also helps prevent cancer. Can you talk about that?
Feldman: Sure. That information comes from a study done in
Switzerland 12 years ago. They gave 15 chelation sessions to a group of
people and came back several years later to see how they were doing.
Gabor: What did they find?
Feldman: What they found was that the group of people who had received
the chelation had 90% less cancer than their neighbors who had the same
jobs, ate the same food, lived in the same town&
Gabor: 90% reduction in cancer risk, that s remarkable. How does it do that?
Feldman: Nobody's really sure, but we think that it s be due to the
ability of chelation to removal of toxic metals from the body. You see,
back in the early 1900's when the levels of toxic metals we were exposed
to was much less, cancer killed 1 out of 20 people, nowadays we are exposed
to high levels of toxic metals, and cancer kills 1 out of 3 people. After
chelation, the cancer risk goes back to 1 out of 20 again, and one of
the things that chelation does it remove toxic metals.
Gabor: So toxic metals cause cancer?
Feldman: That's what it looks like.
Gabor: And removing them prevents it?
Feldman: Exactly.
Gabor: Just where are we getting these metals from anyway?
Feldman: Good question. All right, let's take two metals as
an example, mercury and aluminum. The average American has several
fillings in his or her mouth, but if we were to take just one out and
put it in a ½ acre lake, the environmental protection agency would
have to designate that lake a toxic waste site, and you wouldn't be
allowed to eat fish from that lake.
Here's another one, imagine
a 12-inch square of aluminum foil. That weights about 5 grams.
5 grams of aluminum, but in your lifetime, you will eat drink or
inhale about 300 of those aluminum foil squares, over 3 pounds
of aluminum.
Gabor: But where does it come from?
Feldman: Well, drinking water is all purified with aluminum, it's
found in baking soda, antacids, baby formulas, aluminum pots and pans,
even underarm antiperspirant.
Gabor: So these things are all around us.
Feldman: Yes, and inside of us as well.
Gabor: Can you give me some more examples?
Feldman: Sure, lead is found in cosmetics, plastics and soldered
pipes. Arsenic is found in cigarette smoke, laundry detergents and beer.
Cadmium is found in water softeners, soft drinks and seafood.
Barium is found in soaps, paper and paint.
Nickel is found in stainless steel cutlery, dental fillings, coins.
And uranium, well given that there have been over 2,000 nuclear detonations
on this planet since Hiroshima we are all breathing uranium.
Gabor: Can't the body get rid of these on it s own?
Feldman: Only to a point. You see, part of what makes these metals
so difficult to get rid of is that to the body, they look just like other
minerals, minerals we need. I call them mineral masqueraders.
Gabor: Can you explain?
Feldman: Sure. Take mercury and selenium for example. Our soil is terribly
deficient in selenium, but we need it to stay healthy. Now to the body,
mercury looks just like selenium, so when we become selenium deficient,
(which most of us are unless we supplement), we will absorb mercury,
thinking it is selenium.
Gabor: And then it s hard to get it out?
Feldman: Exactly, the body says, "Hey, I need this."
Here's another example, aluminum and magnesium. Virtually everyone is
deficient in magnesium as well and to the body aluminum looks just
like magnesium.
Gabor: Uh oh.
Feldman: Uh oh is right, do you know one of the places
where magnesium is used?
Gabor: No.
Feldman: The brain. Now you understand the aluminum alzhiemers connection.
The body thought it was magnesium and put it up there,
where is causes the disease.
That's another reason to keep enough magnesium in the body, it keeps you
from absorbing aluminum.
Gabor: Are there any other mineral masqueraders?
Feldman: Sure, lead masquerades as calcium, cadmium masquerades as zinc.
Gabor: And EDTA chelation can remove all of these toxic metals?
Feldman: In time, yes.
Gabor: You said that chelation could help rejuvenate our bodies, can you explain?
Feldman: Sure. There are three main causes of aging, damage to DNA,
autoimmune reactions and the loss of circulation.
Okay, lets start with the first one, our DNA.
All right, toxic metals like mercury damage our DNA, which is our
instruction booklet for how to make new cells. Every day we wear our
some cells, and have to make new ones. If we try to make new cells and the
instructions are wrong, then we make faulty parts. That's part of
aging. If the instructions are wrong in a particular place, we may make
cancer cells.
Gabor: So removing the toxic metals protects our DNA?
Feldman: Exactly.
Gabor: Okay, how about autoimmunity? How does that cause aging and how does
chelation help with it?
Feldman: Toxic metals are one of the main causes of autoimmune reactions.
What happens is that the metals get incorporated into the structure of the body,
and then the immune system no longer recognizes that part of the body. The
job of the immune system is to attack anything that isn t you, so if the
immune system doesn't recognize your joints for instance and begins to
attack them, you could end up with arthritis. If the immune system doesn't
recognize the pancreas, you could end up with diabetes. That is what an
auto-immune reaction is, it s the immune system attacking the
body. Arthritis, lupus, Chrones disease, M.S., diabetes, all are
autoimmune diseases. A lot of anti-aging doctors think that these
autoimmune reactions are one of the main causes of aging, and that if we
could stop attacking our own bodies, we would last a lot longer.
Gabor: You also said that we age because of poor circulation,
can you elaborate on that?
Feldman: Sure. As we age, it s not just the big arteries that get
clogged, but also all of the little capillaries that feed the skin and organs
of the body. They are much smaller and narrower than arteries and it only
takes a little clot or plaque to block them up. Without blood flow there is
no oxygen or nutrition in and that part of the body dies. If this happens
in the heart, we know what that is.
Gabor: A heart attack?
Feldman: Right, and if it happens in the brain?
Gabor: A stroke?
Feldman: Right again, but what happen if it takes place in
other organs or glands. Let's say just a small part of the lung,
or a little part of the liver?
Gabor: I don t know.
Feldman: A person might just get a shooting pain for a minute and
then that part is dead. This takes place all over the body in countless
tiny capillaries no wider than a human hair every day. Any one of these
getting clogged up is not a problem, but the cumulative damage of thousands
upon thousands of these getting blocked causes problems. Problems we call aging.
Gabor: So by keeping all the capillaries open the whole body can ]
get what it needs?
Feldman: Exactly, the whole body stays healthy and nourished.
Gabor: You talked about calcium building up in the arteries,
is that the only place it builds up?
Feldman: Actually, calcium builds up everywhere in the body
as we age. In essence, part of the aging process is that we gradually
turn to stone.
Gabor: Can you give us some examples?
Feldman: Sure. Calcium in the kidneys forms kidney stones, calcium
in the gall bladder forms gall stones, calcium in the joints causes
arthritis, calcium in the skin causes wrinkles, calcium in the muscles
causes stiffness, and eventually fibromyalgia. We even develop calcium
in the brain, pathologists call it brain sand.
Gabor: Is this normal, I mean do we all get it?
Feldman: Yes, this is one of the processes of aging. Let's look at
calcium in the muscles, for instance. When we are young, there is no calcium
build up in the muscles. The muscles of a young child are soft and flexible.
This is healthy. Now look at the muscles of say a 25 year old. They will
probably have a few knows in their upper neck. This is the beginning of calcium
accumulations. Now look at the neck and shoulders of a 45 year old. He
will have some and know that they never seem to go away.
Gabor: More calcium?
Feldman: Yes. Now, feel the muscles of someone in their 60's or 70's,
the muscles are rigid, hard and knotty. They are filled with calcium. They are
turning to stone. The ultimate expression of this is, of course, rigor mortis.
Gabor: You mean when someone dies and the get all-stiff like a board?
Feldman: Yes, when we die, all the remaining calcium floods into the
muscles and you turn in to one big knot. Of course, this process is
happening as we age.
Gabor: So a knotted muscle is the same as rigor mortis?
Feldman: On a local scale, yes. There's a condition where
this happens in the extreme, you may have heard of it, it's called fibromyalgia.
Gabor: And these are all calcium deposits?
Feldman: Yes, that's what they are.
Gabor: And chelation can stop this from happening?
Feldman: Yes, it takes the calcium out of the organs and muscles and
glands where it doesn't belong, and puts it back into the bones and teeth
where it does belong.
Gabor: So as we age, the calcium leaves our bones and goes in our muscles
and organs?
Feldman:Yes.
Gabor: And chelation puts it back in the bones?
Feldman: Yes, that's right. The average man and woman will lose 35
to 40% pf their bone mass by the time they are 75 years old, about one
percent per year from age 30. And you know where that calcium is going
to don't you?
Gabor: The organs and muscles.
Feldman: Right. But if you are on chelation, you will actually
gain 1% bone mass per year.
Gabor: So without chelation we are all going to have osteoporosis?
Feldman: In varying degrees, yes ... unless you are willing to do
weight bearing exercise for the rest of your life, and even then it is
hard to stop the bone thinning process.
Gabor: And what about aging, you said that EDTA might increase
maximum lifespan?
Feldman: We don't know about for humans, but for some animals anyway,
daily use of EDTA increased lifespan 50%.
Gabor: I don't know if I want to live until I'm 120.
Feldman: No one would want to if they were old and sickly. There
was that woman in France,
Jeanne Calment,
who recently died at 122 -- but she was a mess, blind, deaf,
and she could hardly move. But what if you were young and vibrant?
Gabor: Then 140 isn t long enough!
Feldman: Exactly.
Gabor: Why don't we know if it would work with humans?
Feldman: Well, for one thing, the test would take 120 years
to complete. In animals, with naturally short lifespans they lived 50%
longer. When the normal animals without the chelation were dying,
these animals with the chelation were still jumping around, enjoying life
-- being active. They were vital longer. I can tell you that the people
I know who have been doing chelation for a long time look much younger
than their contemporaries who don't.
Gabor: Okay, you've convinced me, but you make the EDTA chelation
as a suppository, isn't there another way to take it?
Feldman: Well, you could spend 3 hours in a chair with a needle in
your arm in a doctor's office every time you wanted to do it instead.
Gabor: No thanks. Can't I just take a pill?
Feldman: Sorry, EDTA chelation is destroyed by stomach acid.
That's why we use a suppository, no acid in the colon to destroy it.
It's no big deal, it's dissolved in 5 minutes and you're done. Just
driving to a physician who practices intravenous chelation
takes longer than that.
(AO Editor: It should be noted that this is the contrarian's
view. There are a number of physicians who feel that oral chelation,
taken in conjunction with intravenous chelation, has a synergistic
effect - since heavy metals can get stored in the intestines, as
well.)
Gabor: You're right. Any other effects that chelation has?
Feldman: Well, if you use the form with the magnesium and potassium
(as with Medicardium)
in it there are a whole range of unexpected benefits not associated with
the chelation itself but are due to the minerals.
Gabor: Such as?
Feldman: Well, users have reported that it helps with insomnia, PMS cramps,
all types of headaches including migraines, anxiety, stress, diabetes,
and depression.
Gabor: All that from just magnesium and potassium?
Feldman: Yes, but that s probably another entire session ...
[[ REST OF SESSION IS SALUTORY CLOSE OUT . . . WHAT FOLLOWS
BELOW IS THE SECOND SESSION IN THIS SERIES ]]
Gabor: Welcome back, we have with us Spencer Feldman and he is
going to discuss the role of magnesium and potassium in health.
Welcome back, Spencer.
Feldman: Thanks . . . Well, I guess I left you with a bit of a
cliffhanger last time regarding the magnesium and the potassium so let's
talk about that. Our nervous system has 2 settings, one for normal everyday
life, and one for emergency situations. You've probably heard of the
emergency response, one name for it is the fight or flight response.
Gabor: That's when you either fight for your life,
or run for your life?
Feldman: Exactly. This is a very ancient system and it was designed to
help us with physically dangerous situations. Take a caveman, for instance.
There he is, walking out of his cave on one sunny morning, minding his own
business, when out from behind a boulder jumps a large and hungry sabertooth
tiger. [Both laugh.]
In order to survive, he is either going to have to run very fast
or fight very hard.
Gabor: Even then he's probably going to die.
Feldman: Well... let's hope not. In this situation, the body,
in its infinite wisdom gives the caveman every ounce of strength
he's got. Any activities not immediately involved in survival
get turned off so that the little bit of energy they would normally get
goes to the muscles of the legs if he is going to run, or the muscles of
his arms if he is going to fight.
Can you think of any systems that the caveman won t need immediately?
Gabor: Is digestion one?
Feldman: Yes. It makes no sense in digesting the mastodon steak he
had for breakfast, if he is going to be dead in the next minute, so stress
turns off the digestive system.
Gabor: How about the immune system?
Feldman: Yes, that too. If the caveman has a cold or an infected wound,
it won't matter if he's dead in two minutes. So stress essentially turns off
the immune system - or at least suppresses it.
Growth and repair get turned off, too. If the body needs to replace some
worn out cells, they have to wait. If there was an injury, it has to
wait. Stress will turn off all growth and repair systems as well.
Gabor: Stress does all that?
Feldman: It has to.
Gabor: But we're not going to see a sabertooth tiger now in the
21st century.
Feldman: That's true, but do you get caught in traffic jams, or have
arguments with your co-workers, or have stress about bills or
watching the news?
Gabor: Yes.
Feldman: Well, as far as your body is concerned, these are all sabertooth
tigers of various sizes. Our body doesn't know one stressor [STIMULUS] from
another. It only has one response.
Gabor: Turn off all the things we need to stay alive.
Feldman: Exactly. Sleep is another one. You shouldn't be laying down to
take a nap if you being chased by that tiger.
Gabor: So stress causes insomnia.
Feldman: Absolutely.
Gabor: What else?
Feldman: All right, so you're the body and you think you are being
confronted by a sabertooth tiger, which probably means you're going to be
bitten or mauled, and you don't want to bleed to death so what does
your body do?
Gabor: It makes your blood start to clot?
Feldman: Exactly. It makes your blood get ready to for scabs so that
if you do bleed, you can form a scab in a hurry and not lose too much blood.
Gabor: I guess that s a good thing if there really is a sabertooth tiger,
but how does that affect us today?
Feldman: Well, if your blood is on the verge of clotting, that means
it is very thick and hard to push, that makes more work for the heart, it
also makes the plaque formation we talked about earlier more likely.
Gabor: So that's why stress is thought to cause heart disease, it
overworks the heart and makes the blood clot.
Feldman: Exactly, and remember pulse pressure, how it causes the arteries
to stretch, making the plaque break loose.
Gabor: Yes.
Feldman: Well, stress can double your pulse pressure and keep it
there indefinately.
Gabor: So let me see if I have all of this, stress will cause
Poor digestion
A weak immune system
Turns off our growth and repair systems
Causes insomnia
And can cause heart attacks.
Is that all?
Feldman: Well, you probably know that stress has also been associated
with cancer and, oh yes, stress makes you stupid.
Gabor: Stress makes you stupid?
Feldman: Yep, you see when you are in a survival stress response,
you don't need to have a good memory, or be able to think abstract thoughts
or feel loving, or happy, or creative, or solve problems, you need fast
reflexes. When you are under stress, all your higher brain functions get
turned off so you can concentrate on running of fighting, and these are
animal skills. You see, we really have 3 brains, a reptile brain, surrounded
by a mammal brain, surrounded by a human brain. The reptile brain beats out
heart, moves our lungs, and is in charge of reflexes and survival. The mammal
brain gives us emotions and some learning abilities, and the human brain
is where we have language, logic, reasoning, creativity, music, the arts,
perceive beauty, etc.
Gabor: And stress turns of the mammalian and human brains?
Feldman: Yes, that's right, and all you are left with is the reptile
brain. You don't need to be a philosopher when you are running for your life.
Think of a snake -- very fast reflexes, but not too smart. You wouldn't see
a gecko compose a symphony, but boy can they move.
So when you are under stress, don t expect to be smart -- that's a human
characteristic. Don't expect to be a nice person either, or particularly
social -- that's a mammalian characteristic. Expect the behavior of a reptile,
and to top it off, long term stress actually makes your brain shrink.
Gabor: Okay, got it, stress is bad. So how do we stop being stressed,
go live on a mountain? Take a stress management class?
Feldman: The trick isn't to avoid being stressed. That's impossible.
The trick is to be able to turn off the stress response when it doesn't
serve you.
Gabor: How do we do that?
Feldman: Well, there are four minerals that control the stress response,
sodium, calcium, magnesium, and potassium. Sodium and calcium turn on the stress
response and magnesium and potassium turn it off.
Gabor: But don't I need calcium?
Feldman: Oh absolutely, it's only when there isn't enough magnesium
and potassium around to balance it out that it stress gets out of control.
Gabor: Don't I get magnesium and potassium in my diet?
Feldman: Potassium isn't too much of a problem as long as you eat
fruit -- bananas are an excellent source. But magnesium, that's another
story. You see magnesium is lacking in our foods.
Gabor: Why is that?
Feldman: Well, back in 1840 with publication, a German scientist
named Justus von Liebig discovered that if you put 3 particular minerals
back in the soil, you could grow crops on the same piece of land over and
over again without needing to move around. This was a big discovery because
for the last 10,000 years, farmers knew that if they planted their crops
on the same soil more than a few times in a row without letting the soil
regenerate, the crops would die.
Gabor: You re talking about artificial fertilizer.
Feldman: Exactly, von Liebig discovered that if you put nitrogen,
phosphorous and potassium back into the soil, you could grow your crops in
the same soil year after year without any problem.
Years later von Liebig said that he had made a terrible
mistake, and that you actually needed to put back more than just those
3 minerals into the soil, but not for the plants, but it was too late.
You see, a plant is a pretty simple life form, it doesn't need too many
minerals, just give it nitrogen, potassium and phosphorous and it is
happy. We humans, however, are more complicated. We need other things.
Gabor: Like magnesium.
Feldman: That's right, we need magnesium. Since we get our minerals
either from the plants or the animals that eat the plants, if we want to
be healthy, we have to give the plants all the minerals that we need, not
just the ones that they need.
Gabor: So all our food is mineral deficient.
Feldman: Certain minerals, yes, specifically, magnesium.
Gabor: And without magnesium we can't turn off the stress response.
Feldman: Now you've got it. As a matter of fact, you can trace the
explosion in chronic diseases to the time when we began using artificial
fertilizer.
Gabor: Amazing. So we should supplement our diets with magnesium.
Feldman: Yes, but you need to do it right. Magnesium is a very hard
mineral to absorb even when it is in our food.
Gabor: So what do you suggest?
Feldman: Well, the best magnesium I've found is
magnesium mixed with EDTA.
Gabor: Like the kind in your EDTA chelation product.
Feldman: Yes, precisely. The EDTA form of magnesium is very well absorbed.
Gabor: Is that why I feel so calm after taking your product?
Feldman: Yes, what you are feeling is the magnesium turning off
the stress response. For many people it can be a profound experience.
Gabor: What about other magnesium products?
Feldman: There are a lot of other ways to take magnesium,
but I've never found one that works as well.
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