Chelation Therapy has been considered an effective procedure in
understanding and alleviating prostate problems and disorders, such
as prostitis, benign prostatic hyperplasia and the most dreaded of
all prostate issues: prostate cancer. With the help of sufficient
medical knowledge and understanding of the main components of the
deficiencies that cause prostate problems, there is no more reason
to panic and lose hope when one is faced by the great challenges of
being a victim of such situation. Among the many terms a person
needs to know in order to understand more the effectiveness of
Chelation Therapy are EDTA, heavy metal detoxification, beta
sisosterol and, of course, the basics of prostate.
EDTA and Heavy Metal Detoxification
In the field of chemistry, EDTA serves simply to be a medical
acronym for the chemical compound ethylenediaminetetraacetic
acid, a polyaminocarboxylic acid that is widely familiar to all
people as an ingredient in detoxifying heavy-metal. The strong
element that makes this acid a very salient component as a chelating
agent (detoxifying heavy metal) springs from the capacity of the
product to “sequester” di- and tricationic metal ions which remain
in constant solution after being bound by EDTA. In chelation
therapy, EDTA is a necessary compound to use to detoxify the metal
ions. However, its medical uses range from veterinary opthalmology,
preventing the worsening of ulcers in animals and in removing
inorganic debris in dentistry. Heavy Metal Detoxification will have
to strongly rely on such compound because without such component,
poisonous metal agents that are ought to be removed in a chelation
therapy will not be converted to a chemically-inert form that is
necessary for the complete activation of the chelating agents. The
necessity of this compound is made more pronounced when we discuss
Beta Sisosterol.
Beta Sisosterol
β-sitosterol isn’t as complicated as its medical term
suggests. It’s essentially one of the things that constitute several
necessary elements in chelation procedures that have chemical
structures similar to that of the normal cholesterol we are very
familiar of. It is not a separate procedure to be infused in some
surgical way in your body but only a chemical compound that is part
of a safe form of chelation therapy (like the suppository ones) to
make the procedure more effective. B-sitosterol is currently used
in Europe for the treatment of prostatic carcinoma and breast cancer
although the benefits are still further being evaluated in the US.
Such development in medical research shows a great promise that with
the help of chelation therapy, especially when it’s suppository,
there's a very good chance any prostate problem will be
prevented from doing more damage to the body than it already is.
The Prostate
Because the female have technically no prostate, the men are more
likely to get worried about acquiring prostate-related disorders.
Having a strong knowledge concerning the prostate is not only an
advantage of people who have studied it over those who have remained
unfamiliar with the concept, it also provides the enlightening
insight that everyone must do the best that one can to avoid
acquiring problems in that area of the body. Quitting smoking,
eating a lot of healthy balanced-food that are rich in zinc and
iodine are a good start. However, if by doctor’s diagnosis the
situation becomes slightly too late to do preventing measures, the
chelation therapy will have to be a necessary procedure. And since
the therapy has still yet to be perfected, make sure you choose the
safest among the chelation therapies in the market. Certain
chelation therapies that are most safe and effective in the market
are those done in oral and rectal ways and those that have
supplementary herbs contained in it.