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fluoride feedback JoAnn Guest Apr 25, 2005 15:22 PDT

http://www.leaflady.org/fluoride_feedback.htm

 

'SAFE' LEVELS OF FLUORIDE UNSAFE " - As little as 1 ppm of fluoride added

to drinking water can interfere with critical biological functions.

Researchers found it halved DNA repair enzyme activity, causing genetic

& chromosomal damage.

Scientists say this could be because of fluoride's ability to interfere

with magnesium, a vital co-factor needed by many enzymes to perform

their catalytic function or fluoride's ability to form strong bonds with

hydrogen (enzymes usually catalyse around hydrogen bonds, and they are

special proteins which trigger 1000s of chemical

reactions in the body). Klein, W et al. Zeitschrift fur Angerwandte

Bader-und Klimaheilkunde. 3.22.05

 

CIPRO Facts, more from PFPC: Health Alert - CIPRO

 

October 21, 2001

 

Dear All,

 

Two months ago we reported on the withdrawal of Bayer's BAYCOL

(Cerivastatin), a fluorinated drug (statin class) which had caused

deaths

and serious adverse health effects worldwide (1,2,3).

 

BAYCOL had been found to cause muscle destruction/wasting - a condition

known as rhabdomyolysis - and displayed compounded toxicity when used

with

other drugs. It had been linked to at least 31 deaths.

 

We also showed how the adverse reactions documented with BAYCOL were

largely identical to those of numerous other fluorinated drugs - all of

which had been withdrawn from the market in recent years (3).

 

ANTHRAX AND CIPRO

 

As a result of the current Anthrax scare another fluorinated drug called

 

CIPRO has received extensive media coverage and the name has become

familiar to millions almost overnight. As soon as the first cases of

anthrax resulting from suspicious mail became known, there were wide

reports of a he

ctic run on this drug.

 

Mass hysteria seems present as governments, pharmacies and individuals

everywhere are stockpiling this drug. Pharmacies are reporting record

sales, and on-line prescription services and Internet sites are found

selling the drug at more than $7.00 per pill.

 

People everywhere, hyped into believing their flu-like symptoms are

caused by anthrax exposure and mis-informed by irresponsible media

reports,

are taking CIPRO, and worse yet - are giving it to their children.

 

WHAT IS CIPRO?

 

CIPRO is ciprofloxacin, a fluorinated quinolone, belonging to a class

of fluorinated antibiotics which also include enoxacin, fleroxacin,

temafloxacin, grepafloxacin, norfloxacin, sparfloxacin, tosufloxacin,

lomefloxacin, ofloxacin, etc..

 

Ciprofloxacin has been in use since 1987 for a variety of other

indications and is the most-widely used fluoroquinolone in humans and

animals worldwide (4).

 

In 2000 the FDA approved its use in treatment for inhalational anthrax

under its " accelerated approval " regulations (5). It had actually taken

the

unusual step of urging Bayer - the sole manufacturer for all countries

except India - to file for such approval, supposedly in order to protect

 

the public from future terrorist attacks. The US Department of Defense

had

already ordered reserves of CIPRO during the 1991 Gulf War (6).

 

ADVERSE EFFECTS:

 

As mentioned in the info on BAYCOL, temafloxacin and grepafloxacin are

two other fluoroquinolones now withdrawn from the market because they

had

caused severe liver and renal damage - and deaths, just like fluorinated

 

drugs from other, different classifications (3).

 

The same information also exists for CIPRO.

 

Fatal liver failure associated with ciprofloxacin was reported in the

Lancet in 1994 (7, 8 -> 150 more related refs).

 

Ciprofloxacin has been implicated in several cases of acute renal

failure and is the most established fluoroquinolone to cause such renal

dysfunction (4, 9, 10, 11 -> 96 related refs).

 

FLUORIDE

 

The most common side-effects reported due to CIPRO (2-16%) are

gastrointestinal in nature and equal those reported when children

accidentally ingest " too much " fluoride from their toothpaste - such as

nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Why?

 

Ciprofloxacin administration results in elevated serum fluoride levels

(12). In a series of tests evaluating the safety of ciprofloxacin in

children, serum fluoride levels increased after 12 hours in 79% of the

children; on day 7 the 24-hour urinary fluoride excretion was higher in

88.9% of children observed (12).

 

Just as in the case of Baycol and other fluorinated drugs, CIPRO can

cause musculo-skeletal disorders such as rhabdomyolysis.

 

RHABDOMYOLYSIS

 

Since the introduction of fluoroquinolones on the market in 1987 more

than 200 cases of rhabdomyolysis, tendinitis, tendon rupture etc. have

been

reported in the literature (4,13,14,15).

 

In October 1994 the Japan Pharmaceutical Affairs Bureau was first to

amend the product information for fluoroquinolones to state that

rhabdomyolysis may occur (16).

 

In 1996 the FDA also issued directives to manufacturers to include

warning statements on all fluoroquinoline product inserts to alert

patients

and caregivers to the potential for tendinitis and tendon rupture (17).

Also in 1996 the Sri Lanka Drug Evaluation Sub-Committee decided that

the

product information of fluoroquinolone antibiotics should include a

warning

stating: " The onset of tendon pain calls for immediate withdrawal of

fluoroquinolone antibiotics. " (1

 

Achilles tendon rupture was shown to occur even after withdrawal of the

drug. Pathologically there was ultrastructure alteration in

tendinocytes.

Just as in other cases of fluoride poisoning, studies in animals show

that

magnesium deficiency aggravate the induced tendinopathy (14,19).

 

DRUG INTERACTIONS/DEATH:

 

Just as with BAYCOL, drug interactions with ciprofloxaci

n have resulted in fatal outcomes due to potentiation of another drug's

effects such

theophylline (4,20), methadone (21), or warfarin (22).

 

Just like BAYCOL and other fluorinated drugs, ciprofloxacin is a potent

inhibitor of the thyroid hormone-regulated P 450 enzyme system in the

liver. Of all fluoroquinolones, ciprofloxacin and enoxacin have shown

the

greatest inhibitory capacity (4).

 

P450 IA2 prevents the metabolism/inactivation of methylxanthines,

thereby causing increased serum concentrations of drugs like

theophylline

and caffeine, which in turn causes excess CNS and cardiac stimulation.

As

mentioned above, CIPRO also elevates serum fluoride levels.

 

The liver has been identified as a target organ of fluoroquinolone

toxicity in animal studies (23). Already in the 1930s the same was shown

by

Bayer's scientists such as Litzka or Knoll's Kraft who found that ALL

organic fluoride compounds tested (including those used for

fluoroquinolone

production) interfere d with thyroid hormone activity in liver and

muscle

tissue. Meanwhile, they also showed " anti-bacterial " activity. This led

to

the development of many fluorinated medications, including the numerous

compounds then used very successfully in the treatment of

hyperthyroidism

(24,25). Kraft invented many fluorinated " medications " . When it was

discovered that some of these organic compounds had the same detrimental

 

effects on teeth and bone as inorganic fluoride - although much less

actual F- was involved - he even filed patents on behalf of Knoll's

using

these compounds in dental preparations (26,27).

 

Pregnant women should never take ciprofloxacin. CIPRO transfers through

the placenta. It inhibits P450 1A2 which has been shown to be critical

for

neonatal survival by influencing the physiology of respiration in

neonates.

Mice lacking this cytochrome died shortly after birth and showed

symptoms

of severe respiratory distress (2. Respiratory distress is a side-effect

 

of ciprofloxacin also in adults (9). CIPRO also transfers through

breastmilk.

 

RESISTANCE TO BACTERIA

 

Taking Ciprofloxacin can spur germs to mutate so that future bacterial

infections become untreatable. During the last decades a dramatic

increase

in bacterial strains multiresistant to antibiotics, particlularly CIPRO

-

has been reported (30, 31, 32). This increase has led to the occurrence

of

incurable bacterial infections with a fatal outcome, and a particularly

serious problem in connection with hospital-acquired infections.

 

For example, Clostridium difficile has become one of the most common

acquired organisms in hospitals and long term care institutions. The

organism typically infects patients whose normal intestinal flora has

been

disturbed by the administration of a broad-spectrum antibiotic such as

CIPRO. The diarrhea and inflammatory colitis associated with infection

represent a serious medical and surgical complication leading to

increased

morbidity and mortality, and prolonging hospital stays by an average of

nearly three weeks. This is especially true for the elderly and for

patients with serious underlying diseases who are the most likely to

develop the infection. C. difficile associated diarrhea represents a

major

economic burden to the healthcare system, conservatively estimated at

$3-6

billion per year in excess hospital costs in the U.S. alone (33).

 

The emergence of this " antibiotic resistance " is a result of the

overwhelming use of antibiotics in human and veterinary medicine. High

rates of fluoroquinolone resistance have been reported in many countries

 

(30). For example, in Asia CIPRO no longer can be used to treat

gonorrhea,

because the disease has become resistant to the drug (34).

 

While the FDA in August 2000 approved CIPRO as the first-line treatment

against anthrax, a few months later (October 2000) it asked Bayer to

remove

BAYTRIL - its equivalent for animals.

 

The FDA proposed banning the fluoroquinolones, which chicken and turkey

farmers have given to birds in their water since 1995 to help shield the

 

animals from infection. The agency acted after linking the drugs to a

jump

in Campylobacter bacteria immune to the medications. Nearly 18 percent

of

one common strain that infects humans are now immune to the very same

drugs

which were considered the last line of defense against the infection.

 

Campylobacter is the leading bacterial cause of food poisoning in the

United States. Typically contracted through raw or undercooked meat, the

 

germs afflict more than 2 million people and kill some 500 each year in

the

US, according to the CDC.

 

While Abbot voluntarily withdrew its version of the antibiotic

(SaraFlox), Bayer decided to challenge the FDA. The company had the

option

to comply with the proposed ban or seek a hearing to determine whether

such

a move was justified. Bayer refused to comply with the ban, a move that

kicked off a lengthy process that could take years (3

5). Meanwhile Bayer

gets to poison the world, AND make huge profits from it...

 

The AMA has advised its members to prescribe CIPRO very cautiously,

saying the worldwide problem of antibiotic resistance poses future

dangers

worse than the anthrax attacks of today (Orlando Sentinel, October 20,

2001).

 

PHOTOSENSITIVITY

 

Photosensitization can result when light interacts with chemical agents

in the skin and eyes. This process can produce undesirable clinical

consequences, such as phototoxicity (i.e. exaggerated sunburn),

photoallergy, or photocarcinogenicity. People receiving CIPRO or any

other fluoroquinolone are warned on the product inserts not to expose

themselves to direct sunlight. Rashs develop on the areas exposed.

 

Upon UVA-irradiation the " fluorine " of numerous fluoroquinolones such

as lomefloxacin and fleroxacin, are " lost " as fluoride (36).

 

" We have discovered that anions can activate visual photoreceptors in

the dark. One anionic activator is the commonly used dental agent

fluoride. The data on in

vitro preparations indicatethat these anions modulate photoreceptor

biochemistry and may effect

photoreceptors sensitivity... "

 

[Lewis A - " Fundamental studies in the molecular basis of laser induced

retinal damage " Annual report (Final) March 1 1979 - March 15, 1985 US

DTIC

records (unclassified) AD#177817 (1985)]

 

MEDLINE has many articles on fluoride and photoreceptor activation

(Gprotein-coupled) (35).

 

OTHER CIPRO SIDE EFFECTS (29):

 

Abnormal dread or fear, achiness, bleeding in the stomach and/or

intestines, blood clots in the lungs, blurred vision, change in color

perception, chills, confusion, constipation, convulsions, coughing up

blood, decreased vision, depression, difficulty in swallowing,

dizziness,

double vision, drowsiness, eye pain, fainting, fever, flushing, gas,

gout

flare up, hallucinations, hearing loss, heart attack, hiccups, high

blood

pressure, hives, inability to fall or stay asleep, inability to urinate,

 

indigestion, intestinal inflammation, involuntary eye movement,

irregular

heartbeat, irritability, itching, joint or back pain, joint stiffness,

kidney failure, labored breathing, lack of muscle coordination, lack or

loss of appetite, large volumes of urine, light-headedness, loss of

sense

of identity, loss of sense of smell, mouth sores, neck pain, nightmares,

 

nosebleed, pounding heartbeat, ringing in the ears, seizures,

sensitivity

to light, severe allergic reaction, skin peeling, redness, sluggishness,

 

speech difficulties, swelling of the face, neck, lips, eyes, or hands,

swelling of the throat, tender, red bumps on skin, tingling sensation,

tremors, unpleasant taste, unusual darkening of the skin, vaginal

inflammation, vague feeling of

illness, weakness, yellowed eyes and skin.

 

CIPRO causes fluoride poisoning. Will any practioner know how to deal

with

this, considering that the ADA has shielded all from proper knowledge of

 

fluoride toxicity?

 

Andreas Schuld

, Wendy Small, Trent Harris

Parents of Fluoride Poisoned Children (PFPC)

Vancouver, BC, Canada

pf-

 

1) " Poison Control: Fluorides, the deadly toxin within "

http://www.prn.usm.my/bulletin/nst/2001/nst34.html

 

2) 7AM - News: " Cures That Kill? "

http://www.7amnews.com/2001/features/081801.shtml

 

3) Dr. Mercola - " Baycol - Another Fluoride Drug Bites the Dust " (PFPC

News, August 18, 2001)

http://www.mercola.com/2001/aug/18/fluoride_drugs.htm

 

4) Clinical Toxicology Review - " What Are Fluoroquinolones? " CTR,

Massachusetts Poison Control System, Vol. 20, No. 3 (1997)

 

5) FDA TALK PAPER " APPROVAL OF

CIPRO® FOR USE AFTER EXPOSURE TO

INHALATIONAL ANTHRAX " Food and Drug Administration, U.S. Department of

Health and Human Services

Public Health Service 5600 Fishers Lane Rockville, MD 20857 (2000)

 

6) CNN - Reuter's, July 27, 2000

 

7) Fuchs S, Simon Z, Brezis M - " Fatal hepatic failure associated with

ciprofloxacin " Lancet 242:738-739 (1994)

 

150+ Related References : CIPRO - Liver

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Entrez/query?form=4 & db=m & term=cipro & liver

 

 

9) Hootkins R, Fenves AZ, Stephens MK - " Acute renal failure secondary

to

oral ciprofloxacin therapy: a presentation of three cases and a review

of

the literature " Clin Nephrol 32(2):75-8 (1989)

 

10) Reece RJ, Nicholls AJ - " Ciprofloxacin-induced acute interstitial

nephritis " Nephrol Dial Transplant 11(2):393 (1996)

 

11) 90+ Related References : CIPRO - Renal failure

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Entrez/query?form=4 & db=m & term=cipro & renal

 

& failure

 

12) Pradhan KM, Arora NK, Jena A, Susheela AK, Bhan MK - " Safety of

ciprofloxacin therapy in children: magnetic resonance images, body fluid

 

levels of fluoride and linear growth " Acta Paediatr 84(5):555-60 (1995)

 

13) Australian Adverse Drug Reactions Bulletin - Vol. 16, No. 2 (May

1997)

 

14) Ramanujam TR - " Fluoroquinolones - A Review " (2001)

http://www.mcsindia.org/doctors/Epharma/january.asp

 

15) Petition to Require a Warning on All Fluoroquinolone Antibiotics

(HRG

Publication #1399)

http://www.citizen.org/publications/release.cfm?ID=6595

 

16) Information

on Adverse Reactions to Drugs No.128, October 1994

 

17) FDA Medical Bulletin - Vol. 26, No.3 (October 1996)

 

1 27th Meeting of the Drug Evaluation Sub-Committee, Ministry of Health,

 

Colombo (November 1996)

 

19) Shakibaei M, de Souza P, van Sickle D, Stahlmann R - " Biochemical

changes in Achilles tendon from juvenile dogs after treatment with

ciprofloxacin or feeding a magnesium-deficient diet " Arch Toxicol

75(6):369-74 (2001)

 

20) Clinical Toxicology Review, Vol. 20, No. 3 (1997)

 

21) Herrlin K, Segerdahl M, Gustafsson LL, Kalso E - " Methadone,

ciprofloxacin, and adverse drug reactions " Lancet 356(9247):2069-70

(2000)

 

22) Ellis RJ, Mayo MS, Bodensteiner DM - " Ciprofloxacin-warfarin

coagulopathy: a case series " Am J Hematol 63(1):28-31 (2000)

 

23) Guzman A, Garcia C, Demestre I - " Subchronic toxicity of the new

quinolone antibacterial agent

irloxacin in beagle dogs " Arzneimittelforschung 50(5):485-94 (2000)

 

24) Kraft K - " Über die Synthese einiger aromatischer Fl

uorverbindungen "

Knoll Research, Chem Ber. 84(2):150-156 (1951)

(describes manufacturing processes of numerous organic fluorides, after

it

was shown that all organic fluoride compounds displayed stronger

anti-thyroid activity than the mere " fluoride ion " )

 

25) Kraft K, Dengel F - " Über die Synthese einiger aromatischer

Fluorverbindungen, II. Mitteilung "

Chem Ber 85(6):577-582 (1952)

(more reports on organic fluoride investigations... " in regards to their

characteristics in lowering BMR as well as anti-bacterial activity " )

 

26) Zutavern EP, Kraft K - " Verfahren zur Herstellung von organischen

Salzen der Fluorwasserstoffsäure " German Patent No. 855118, granted Dec.

 

5, 1950 (Knoll AG)

(Kraft patent on the same organic fluoride compounds used previously in

the treatment of hyperthyroidism, now patented as anti-caries agents!)

 

27) Eichler O, Kraft K - " Verfahren zur Herstellung einer alkalischen,

seifenfreien, reagibles Fluor neben Calciumcarbonat enthaltenden

Zahnpast

a "

German Patent No. 971375, granted Aug. 28, 1951 (Knoll AG)

(patent describing the use of ethanol-amino-hydrofluorides in

toothpaste...)

 

2 Pineau T, Fernandez-Salguero P, Lee SS, McPhail T, Ward JM, Gonzalez

FJ

- " Neonatal lethality associated with respiratory distress in mice

lacking

cytochrome P450 1A2 " Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 92(11):5134-8 (1995)

 

29) Cipro Monograph

http://www.healthsquare.com/pdrfg/pd/monos/cipro.htm

 

30) Coronado VG, Edwards JR, Culver DH, Gaynes RP - " Ciprofloxacin

resistance among nosocomial Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus

aureus in the United States. National Nosocomial

Infections Surveillance (NNIS) System " Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol

16(2):71-5 (1995)

 

31) Smith KE, Besser JM, Hedberg CW, Leano FT, Bender JB, Wicklund JH,

Johnson BP,

Moore KA, Osterholm MT - " Quinolone-resistant Campylobacter jejuni

infections in Minnesota, 1992-1998 "

N Engl J Med 340(20):1525-32(1999)

 

32) CDC Special Report : " Emerging Mechanisms of Fluoroquinolone

Resistance " David C. Hooper

Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston,

Massachusetts, USA

 

33) Kurtz CI, Fitzpatrick R - " Anionic polymers as toxin binders and

antibacterial agents "

US Patent 6,290,946, GelTex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (2000)

 

34) Orlando Sentinel, October 20, 2001

 

35) Bayer Balks at Banning Poultry Antibiotic - FDA, citing resistance,

seeks removal " By Adam Marcus HealthScout Reporter, Dec. 1, 2000

 

36) Chignell CF - " Mechanisms of chemically induced photosensitivity "

Crisp Data Base National Institutes Of Health, CRISP/99/ES50046-20

(1998).

 

37) Photoreceptor/fluoride - 50+ References

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Entrez/query?form=4 & db=m & term=photorecept

 

or & fluoride

 

-----------------------------

 

X-From_: dma- Wed Mar 21 13:15:27 2001

" Maley, Diane " <dma-;

'Andreas Schuld' <br-;

RE: Fluoride

Wed, 21 Mar 2001 10:14:59 -0800

MIME-Version: 1.0

 

Hello Andreas,

 

Thank you for your response. I have forwarded your message to our VP of

content for review and consideration. We do appreciate your comments and

 

will investigate further.

 

Regards,

Diane Maley

Member Services Manger

 

 

Andreas Schuld [br-]

Wednesday, March 21, 2001 10:24 AM

Maley, Diane

Cc: _leaf-

Fluoride

 

 

Dear Diane,

 

This is in response to an answer you provided to an inquiry by Dr.

Eversole, and which had been forwarded to us for comment.

 

At RealAge.com this statement can be found:

 

" Because good decisions can only be made on the basis of

good information, we start with the very best science. "

 

A statement like this certainly raises hopes in the reader that science

is

evaluated properly so that the best advice is being given. Unfortunately

 

this is not the case at RealAge.com and their statement on fluoridated

water.

 

In your reply to Dr. Eversole you wrote:

 

Thank you for contacting RealAge regarding todays Tip. The reasearch

studies that we used did refer to different studies that indicated that

fluoride does help with bone density.

http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/321/7265/860?view=full & pmid=11021862

This study was published in the same issue of the BMJ which published

the

findings by the York Review on fluoridation. Vital confounding factors

were

once again excluded in this study. The other studies cited in this paper

 

have been severely critized for similar shortcomings.

 

On the other hand there are at least 10 studies that show an INCREASE of

 

hip fracture incidence in fluoridated communities. In 1995, H.

Jaqmin-Gedda

et al, scientists from the University of Bordeaux, France, studied

hip-fracture rates in 75 civil parishes in southwestern France and found

 

(after adjustment for multiple alternative variables) an increased

risk(odds ratio) for hip fracture of 1.86, i.e. 86% more likely, in

parishes with water fluoride levels higher than 0.11ppm.

[Jacqmin-Gadda H - " Fluorine concentration in drinking water and

fractures

in the elderly. " JAMA 273: 775-776 (1995)]

 

In 1992, C. Danielson et al. reported that the risk of hip fracture was

approximately 30% higher for women and 40% higher for men in fluoridated

 

areas (1.0ppm). Among women at age 75, the risk was about twice as high.

 

[Danielson C, Lyon JL, et al. - " Hip fractures and fluoridation in

Utah's

elderly population. " Jama 268(6): 746-748(1992)]

 

Kurttio and colleagues studied over 144,000 elderly rural Finnish people

 

admitted to hospitals with their first hip fracture, who lived at the

same

address from 1967 to 1980. They found that women aged

50-64 years old exposed to natural water fluoride levels greater than

1.5

mg/liter had significantly more hip fractures than similar women least

exposed to fluoride at 0.1 mg/liter or less.

[Kurttio P, Gustavsson N, et al. - " Exposure to natural fluoride in well

 

water and hip fracture: A cohort analysis in Finland. " American Journal

of

Epidemiology 150(: 817-824 (1999)]

 

Regarding fluoride and the thyroid, you wrote:

 

Also, regarding fluoride and the effects on the thryroid please see the

following:

Fluoride is a halogen like iodine and is therefore briefly picked up by the

thyroid gland, but, unlike iodine, fluoride is not incorporated into

 

thyroid hormone. It does NOT interfere with thyroid function in any way

and there

is NOT concern about using fluoride even if a person is indeed

hypothyroid.

This is, of course, particularly true if that patient is taking

thyroxine,

which is certainly not interfered with by fluoride or any other substance.

 

Ref:

Robert Volp?, M.D., F.R.C.P.©, F.A.C.P., Professor Emeritus,

Department of

Medicine, University of Toronto. Director, Endocrine Research

Laboratory,

Wellesley Hospital, Toronto.

This is a statement found in a pamphlet found on the Internet, and which

is

sponsored by Knoll's Pharmaceuticals - the very same company who started

 

making fluorinated anti-thyroid medications in the first place - and

which

were on the market for several decades. This is considered the " best

scientific evidence " ? There are literally hundreds of studies dating

back

more than one hundred years detailing the effects of fluoride upon

thyroid,

thyroid hormones, iodine uptake, etc. EVERY fluoride compound has been

found to be an anti-thyroid, which includes fluoride in the water

supply,

Prozac (Fluoxetine), fluoridated pesticides, etc. These studies can be

found here:

 

http://www.bruha.com/fluoride/html/f___thyroid.html

 

It is indeed unfortunate that not more care is taken by RealAge.com to

investigate scientic evidence properly, as this neglect certainly

results

in harmful and misleading information given to the people.

 

Regards,

 

Andreas Schuld

Parents of Fluoride Poisoned Children (PFPC)

Vancouver, BC, Canada

pf-; _________________

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

DietaryTi-

www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Genes

 

 

 

 

AIM Barleygreen

" Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future "

 

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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