Alzheimer's in America: The Aluminum - Phosphate Fertilizer Connection
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http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13895
By Lynn Landes, AlterNet
August 22, 2002
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that there are 18 million people with Alzheimer's. Over 4 1/2 million Americans have the disease. We account for 25 percent of all Alzheimer's cases, even though we represent only 4.6 percent of the world's population. Europe is experiencing half our rate of disease. For Americans over 85 years of age, 50 percent are thought to have Alzheimer's. The question is, "Why?" Alzheimer's was first discovered in 1906. It is not a part of normal aging, says the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The NIH contends that the cause of Alzheimer's is "not known." They say, "Prior theories regarding the accumulation of aluminum, lead, mercury, and other substances in the brain have been disproved." Don't believe that. Federal agencies have a talent for not finding environmental causes for many diseases. They live by the motto, "Do not seek and thou shall not find." Genetic triggers and lifestyle choices get the research dollars for pretty obvious reasons -- their findings don't hurt polluters' profits. The world's scientists and government researchers have not taken aluminum off the scientific table as a causal factor in Alzheimer's. Research scientists with the International Aluminum Network report, "Aluminum has been implicated ...as a potential factor or cofactor in the Alzheimer's syndrome, as well as in the etiopathogenesis of other neurodegenerative diseases, Parkinsonism, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and other diseases." That's a mouthful, but you get the picture.
Initially, it was thought that aluminum might be the sole
cause of
Alzheimer's. Persons with Alzheimer's have been found to experience
increased absorption of aluminum in the brain, as well as exhibit
densities of senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. However, there
are reports that suggest plaques and tangles do not always signify
Alzheimer's, and vice versa. Further clouding the issue are patients on kidney dialysis
machines. They
are unable to excrete aluminum, plus they may also be treated with
medicines that include aluminum. However, reports say that dialysis
patients don't develop Alzheimer's, although they can develop dialysis dementia if the equipment doesn't filter out aluminum. And therein lies a
clue. The process of kidney dialysis requires very purified,
non-fluoridated
water. What does this mean? Perhaps fluoride is aluminum's
partner-in-crime. In 1998, Julie Varner and two colleagues published research
on the
effects of aluminum-fluoride and sodium-fluoride on the nervous system of
rats. They concluded, "Chronic administration of aluminum-fluoride and
sodium-fluoride in the drinking water of rats resulted in distinct
morphological alterations of the brain, including the effects on neurons
and cerebrovasculature." In layman's terms, it looked like fluoride and
aluminum could cause Alzheimer's.
That was not a definitive study, but they may have been
onto something.
Aluminum is in our drinking water, foods, and many consumer products.
Adding fluoride to drinking water in the U.S. started in the 1950s.America's drinking water is now over 60 percent fluoridated. Fluoride
appears in many processed foods and beverages made with fluoridated water. Keep in mind, Europe has half our rate of Alzheimer's. They don't
fluoridate their water supplies, but they do use fluoride supplements and
dental products. Is there a connection? There are other intriguing issues. Why do people with
thyroid disease
have an increased risk for Alzheimer's? In the U.S., thyroid disease has
reached even greater epidemic levels than Alzheimer's, with as many as 20
million American victims. Besides problems with iodine intake, a common
cause of thyroid disease is radiation. There are also striking similarities between Alzheimer's,
Creutzfeldt-Jacob-Disease (CJD), and mad cow disease. Mad cow has been
linked to livestock feed and fertilizer. o, what do radiation, livestock feed, fluoride, and
fertilizer have in
common which may have led to the emergence of the Alzheimer's epidemic?
The phosphate fertilizer industry. "Fertilizer use was not a common practice in the nited
States until
after 1870, when phosphate and lime were applied to crops like cotton and
tobacco. By the end of World War II, an era of intensive agriculture
began," says Cargill Fertilizer. "Of the phosphate produced in Florida,
about 95 percent is used in agriculture (90 percent goes into fertilizer
and 5 percent into livestock feed supplements)." The remaining 5 percent
is used in a variety of foods and beverages, plus personal care, consumer
and industrial products.
George Glasser writes in the Earth Island Journal, "Radium
wastes from
filtration systems at phosphate fertilizer facilities are among the most
radioactive types of naturally occurring radioactive material wastes ...Uranium and all of its decay-rate products are found in phosphate rock, luorosilicic acid (fluoride) and phosphate fertilizer." The Florida Institute of Phosphate Research says, "Removal
of uranium as
a product is no longer profitable and all of the extraction facilities
have been dismantled. The uranium that remains in the phosphoric acid and
fertilizer products is at a low enough level that it is safe for
use." That's not reassuring. Chronic exposure to low levels of
contamination can be as dangerous, or more so, than chronic high levels
of exposure or acute occurrences. Of particular interest is calcium silicate, another
byproduct of the
phosphate fertilizer industry. One of its uses is as an anti-caking agent
in iodized table salt. Is calcium silicate also radioactive? Would that
have a significant impact on the thyroid? Given the relationship between
Alzheimer's and thyroid disease, Alzheimer's may be destined to increase
exponentially. The phosphate fertilizer industry seems to be the common
thread in
Alzheimer's -- and maybe also in thyroid and mad cow type diseases.
Aluminum by itself may not cause Alzheimer's, but in combination with the
radioactive products of the phosphate fertilizer industry, it could be
wreaking havoc on our health.
Whatever the cause, we deserve real answers to the Alzheimer's epidemic, not the red herrings of research on genetics and lifestyle. The number of American victims is totally out of proportion to the incidence of Alzheimer's worldwide. Something truly has gone terribly wrong. Lynn Landes is a freelance journalist specializing in environmentalissues. She is the founder of Zero Waste America, a Web-based environmental organization, and posts her work on EcoTalk.org.
*****
"All truth passes through three stages.
First, it is ridiculed.
Second, it is violently opposed.
Third, it is accepted as being self-evident."
-- Arthur Schopenhauer