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    is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?

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    • ?
      A Former User
      last edited by

      they powder it themselves in USA and i doubt they are using a machine with lead so it is probably naturally occuring lead from Sri Lanka

      cs3000C MossyM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • LucHL
        LucH
        last edited by LucH

        Antagonist mineral is calcium. We have to occupy the place.
        *) Healthy Minerals – Mineral Antagonist
        Calcium - Lead
        Zinc - Cadmium
        Sulfur/molybdenum (Molybdenum) - Copper
        Selenium – Mercury – arsenic
        Magnesium – aluminum (=> Calcium, Magnesium and vitamin B6)

        Mind thyroid with Selenium first, afterwards iodine 125 / 150 mcg by staples +/ 10 days.
        When under 1 ppm, no problem if ...
        Total acceptable for all heavy metals (toxicity, overload): 10 ppm but max 1 ppm for mercury.

        When your body is deficient in a mineral it requires, it will look for a replacement. For example, cells in your arteries require zinc. If zinc is not available, the body will substitute toxic cadmium for this metal. The result is arteries that are less flexible, leading to high blood pressure and damaged or cracked arterial walls. The body then tries to repair the damaged arteries by patching the cracks with plaque (=> cholesterol).

        SunnivaS MossyM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • cs3000C
          cs3000 @A Former User
          last edited by cs3000

          @sneedful looks best to avoid cinnamon, potent anti thyroid

          https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1756464618305139

          p is cinnamon, few grams and they couldnt even detect thyroid hormone anymore
          ae7055c0-f1ae-40b2-8611-02fd1c8017ab-image.png

          "world," as a source of new perceptions
          more https://substack.com/@cs3001

          "Self-organizing systems decay only if they have assimilated inertia and — with a little support of the right kind— the centers of degeneration can become centers of regeneration"

          W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • SunnivaS
            Sunniva @LucH
            last edited by Sunniva

            @LucH -"For example, cells in your arteries require zinc. If zinc is not available, the body will substitute toxic cadmium for this metal. The result is arteries that are less flexible, leading to high blood pressure and damaged or cracked arterial walls. The body then tries to repair the damaged arteries by patching the cracks with plaque (=> cholesterol)."

            This is new info to me. How much Zinc/how often for a person who won't eat oysters? I think I remember this is a mineral you don't want to overdo.

            "You're changing your past every time you learn something because you become a different organism" Ray Peat

            "Everything is changing thru time, whether it's a word, organism, thing. The world around it changes, and so its relationships change"Ray Peat

            LucHL 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • LucHL
              LucH @Sunniva
              last edited by

              @Sunniva said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

              This is new info to me. How much Zinc/how often for a person who won't eat oysters?

              If you eat meat once a day, you won't lack zinc.
              10-15 mg zinc is adequate.
              We must pay attention to balance with Cu (copper): 1.5 mg.
              When there is suspicion of infection or flu, I take 30 mg zinc and upgrade Vit D3 from 5 000 UI to 10 000 UI for 2 days. Mind K2 if high level D3 (> 2 000 UI).
              I never take Zn or Cu at the same time than I eat dairies (if < 40 mg Ca). Same transporter.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • W
                wrl @cs3000
                last edited by

                @cs3000 said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

                looks best to avoid cinnamon, potent anti thyroid

                FYI, they gave the rats an anti-thyroid drug!

                Here we investigated the effects of chronic ingestion of cinnamon on lipid metabolism of hypothyroid male Wistar rats. Rats received methimazole for 7 weeks, and treated either with cinnamon

                Methimazole is an antithyroid medication used to treat hyperthyroidism and is categorized within the thioamide drug class. Methimazole primarily functions by inhibiting thyroid hormone production in the thyroid gland

                cs3000C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • cs3000C
                  cs3000 @wrl
                  last edited by cs3000

                  @wrl aye , 3rd group is hypothyroid + cinnamon. which took the lower thyroid levels to undetectable amounts

                  here extract severely lowered t3 action in the heart https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26374392/ and that other one shows regular powder does it too, i dont think its safe , at least at gram amounts as regular powder, idk how much less is needed to not get that effect

                  @sneedful t3 aside on lead obviously taking in more is not great but 0.000768% if its 500mg is in nanogram amounts so not very significant compared to what you'd find in most peoples blood (microgram / L) actually thats just pushing into microgram amounts, its hard to tell whats significant but might be pushing it over time depends on absorption. if you go >3.6ug/dl its probably (association) significantly more toxic than <2ug. so 1.6ug/dl could be enough to make a difference. but as thats higher shared across 5L blood that seems like its a 80ug difference to me

                  idk though, for some reason theres consensus on every +1ug of intake being +0.16ug/dL, so +10ug would make the difference. maybe it doesnt eliminate well & builds

                  https://www.edf.org/sites/default/files/edf_lead_food_report_final.pdf "EDF used a ratio of 1 µg/day of dietary lead intake to 0.16 µg/dL of blood lead level (BLL) to estimate that 2.9 µg/day of dietary lead intake would result in a BLL of 0.46 µg/dL"

                  In NHANES III (1988–1994), patients with the highest tertile of blood lead (≥3.62 µg/dL) compared with the lowest tertile (<1.94 µg/dL) experienced a significantly higher risk of death during followup. The increased risk was 25% for total mortality, 55% for cardiovascular mortality, 89% for myocardial infarction, and 151% for stroke

                  "world," as a source of new perceptions
                  more https://substack.com/@cs3001

                  "Self-organizing systems decay only if they have assimilated inertia and — with a little support of the right kind— the centers of degeneration can become centers of regeneration"

                  ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • ?
                    A Former User @cs3000
                    last edited by A Former User

                    0.768 ppm is 0.768mcg/g which is high because 2mcg is max for children set by fda apparently and if fda says <2mcg is "safe" I bet it's way lower threshold

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • MossyM
                      Mossy @LucH
                      last edited by

                      @LucH Good information. Thank you.

                      "To desire action is to desire limitation" — G. K. Chesterton
                      "The true step of health and improvement is slow." — Novalis

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • MossyM
                        Mossy @A Former User
                        last edited by Mossy

                        @sneedful said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

                        they powder it themselves in USA and i doubt they are using a machine with lead so it is probably naturally occuring lead from Sri Lanka

                        This is a good question and timely for me. I've been attempting to get spices and herbs with as little contamination as possible, and I'm finding that this is not easy to do, especially for Ceylon cinnamon. If what I'm finding is correct, Ceylon, of all cinnamon, is currently not even available without contamination:

                        https://www.mamavation.com/food/cinnamon-lead-cadmium-glyphosate.html

                        I realize you have to take these reports with a grain of salt, as there can be contributing factors that don't allow for the whole picture or even an accurate picture.

                        "To desire action is to desire limitation" — G. K. Chesterton
                        "The true step of health and improvement is slow." — Novalis

                        SunnivaS ? yerragY 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • SunnivaS
                          Sunniva @Mossy
                          last edited by

                          @Mossy , between that site abd this one, you wonder if ANY prepared food is safe. The best thing on these charts is plain chocolate m&m.

                          https://tamararubin.com/2024/09/food-toxicity-comparison-charts-chocolate-snack-chips-supplements-flours-etc/

                          "You're changing your past every time you learn something because you become a different organism" Ray Peat

                          "Everything is changing thru time, whether it's a word, organism, thing. The world around it changes, and so its relationships change"Ray Peat

                          MossyM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • ?
                            A Former User @Mossy
                            last edited by

                            @Mossy yeah it is too contaminated . ill look for a farm with better soil

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • MossyM
                              Mossy @Sunniva
                              last edited by

                              @Sunniva said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

                              @Mossy , between that site abd this one, you wonder if ANY prepared food is safe. The best thing on these charts is plain chocolate m&m.

                              https://tamararubin.com/2024/09/food-toxicity-comparison-charts-chocolate-snack-chips-supplements-flours-etc/

                              Yes, it does shine a light on the high contamination of manufactured foods. That site I referenced does attempt to offer up a "best" option, with limited to no contamination; though, depending on the food, there can still be contaminants, and in some cases, like the Ceylon cinnamon, the contaminants are so high that they can't even recommend a brand.

                              "To desire action is to desire limitation" — G. K. Chesterton
                              "The true step of health and improvement is slow." — Novalis

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • yerragY
                                yerrag @Mossy
                                last edited by

                                @Mossy said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

                                @sneedful said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

                                they powder it themselves in USA and i doubt they are using a machine with lead so it is probably naturally occuring lead from Sri Lanka

                                This is a good question and timely for me. I've been attempting to get spices and herbs with as little contamination as possible, and I'm finding that this is not easy to do, especially for Ceylon cinnamon. If what I'm finding is correct, Ceylon, of all cinnamon, is currently not even available without contamination:

                                https://www.mamavation.com/food/cinnamon-lead-cadmium-glyphosate.html

                                I realize you have to take these reports with a grain of salt, as there can be contributing factors that don't allow for the whole picture or even an accurate picture.

                                If the cinnamon here refers to the bark, I doubt the lead would be coming from the bark itself. As before lead could get into the bark, it would be filtered off my the xylem of the true and the lead would stay in the center of the tree trunk. The bark is the farthest from the center of the tree, where the xylem is, so it should be free from lead or whatever contamination.

                                If ever there is lead contamination, it should be coming from the processing of the cinnamon bark after it has been harvested from the tree.

                                Temporal thinking is the faculty that’s
                                engaged by an enriched environment, but it’s
                                wrong to call it “thinking,” because it’s simply
                                the way organisms exist... - Ray Peat Nov 2017 Newsletter

                                MossyM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • MossyM
                                  Mossy @yerrag
                                  last edited by

                                  @yerrag said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

                                  @Mossy said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

                                  @sneedful said in is 0.768 ppm lead for ceylon cinnamon too high?:

                                  they powder it themselves in USA and i doubt they are using a machine with lead so it is probably naturally occuring lead from Sri Lanka

                                  This is a good question and timely for me. I've been attempting to get spices and herbs with as little contamination as possible, and I'm finding that this is not easy to do, especially for Ceylon cinnamon. If what I'm finding is correct, Ceylon, of all cinnamon, is currently not even available without contamination:

                                  https://www.mamavation.com/food/cinnamon-lead-cadmium-glyphosate.html

                                  I realize you have to take these reports with a grain of salt, as there can be contributing factors that don't allow for the whole picture or even an accurate picture.

                                  If the cinnamon here refers to the bark, I doubt the lead would be coming from the bark itself. As before lead could get into the bark, it would be filtered off my the xylem of the true and the lead would stay in the center of the tree trunk. The bark is the farthest from the center of the tree, where the xylem is, so it should be free from lead or whatever contamination.

                                  If ever there is lead contamination, it should be coming from the processing of the cinnamon bark after it has been harvested from the tree.

                                  Thank you, Yerrag. I believe the testers are testing the end product of ground cinnamon. Under the "Better" and "Best" categories, they do not note any brand of Ceylon cinnamon. This is what they note under their "Not Our Favorite Cinnamon" category:

                                  "These products were found to have detectable glyphosate according to our EPA-certified laboratory OR they have over 1,000 ug/kg of lead. Some of these products also could require Prop. 65 warnings based on 1 gram of cinnamon per day. (ug/kg = ppb) As an explainer, California Prop. 65 would require a warning accounting for 1 gram of cinnamon per day above 500 ppb lead and 4,100 ppb cadmium or more."

                                  For now, I'm not going to go with any Ceylon cinnamon, and instead go with the one under "Best", that is supposedly less contaminated:

                                  365 Whole Foods Market Organic Cinnamon Ground — Non-detect glyphosate, 14.87 ug/kg lead, & 93.75 ug/kg cadmium

                                  "To desire action is to desire limitation" — G. K. Chesterton
                                  "The true step of health and improvement is slow." — Novalis

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                                  • ?
                                    A Former User
                                    last edited by

                                    I have the mountain rose organic ceylon. I read that the contamination is coming from the soil in Sri Lanka. @yerrag I wouldn't think that lead would make it to the inner bark either, but these sticks tested high too https://tamararubin.com/2024/10/simply-organic-cinnamon-sticks/ They can't be getting that much lead contamination just in peeling the inner bark and chopping it could they?

                                    If lead is so wide spread in Sri Lanka soil, I wonder about coconut products from there.

                                    I also have the mountain rose organic cassia cinnamon, from Indonesia. Has anyone seen any tests on cassia? I know some people avoid it because of the coumarin, but I'm not worried about it in the quantities I use.

                                    ? yerragY 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • ?
                                      A Former User @A Former User
                                      last edited by A Former User

                                      @Sippy the cassia is 0.06ppm

                                      ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • ?
                                        A Former User @A Former User
                                        last edited by

                                        @sneedful thanks. Did you just request a COA from them?

                                        ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • ?
                                          A Former User @A Former User
                                          last edited by A Former User

                                          @Sippy yeah

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                                          • yerragY
                                            yerrag @A Former User
                                            last edited by

                                            @Sippy @Mossy thanks.

                                            Temporal thinking is the faculty that’s
                                            engaged by an enriched environment, but it’s
                                            wrong to call it “thinking,” because it’s simply
                                            the way organisms exist... - Ray Peat Nov 2017 Newsletter

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