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Evaluation of a Detoxification Regimen for Fat Stored
Xenobiotics
Medical Hypothesis, Vol.9,
1982.
Summary: One hundred and three
individuals undergoing detoxification with Hubbard's procedure volunteered to
undergo additional physical and psychological tests concomitant with the
program. Participants had been exposed to recreational (abused) and medical
drugs, patent medicines, occupational and environmental chemicals. Patients
with high blood pressure had a mean reduction of 30.8 mm systolic, 23.3 mm
diastolic; cholesterol level mean reduction was 19.5 mg/ 100 ml, while
triglycerides did not change. Completion of the detoxification program also
resulted in improvements in psychological test scores, with a mean increase in
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale IQ of 6.7 points. Scores on Minnesota
Multiphasic Personality Inventory profiles decreased on Scales (4-7)
where high scores are associated with amoral and asocial personalities,
psychopathic behavior and paranoia. Medical complications resulting from
detoxification were rare, occurring in less than three percent of the
subjects.
Body
Burden Reductions of PCBs, PBBs and Chlorinated Pesticide Residues in Human
Subjects
Ambio, Vol.13, No.5-6,
1984.
Summary: Prior to detoxification,
adipose tissue concentrations were determined for seven individuals
accidentally exposed to PBBs. The chemicals targeted for analysis included the
major congeners of PBBs, PCBs and the residues of common chlorinated
insecticides. Of the 16 organohalides examined, 13 were present in lower
concentrations following detoxification. Seven of the 3 reductions were
statistically significant; reductions ranged from 3.5 to 47.2 percent, with a
mean reduction among the 16 chemicals of 21.3 percent (s.d. 17.1 percent). To
determine whether reductions reflected movement to other body compartments or
actual burden reduction, a post-treatment follow-up sample was taken four
months later. Follow-up analysis showed a reduction in all 16 chemicals
averaging 42.4 percent (s.d. 17.1 percent) and ranging from 10.1 to 65.9
percent. Ten of the 16 reductions were statistically significant.
Diagnosis and Treatment of Patients Presenting Subclinical
Signs and Symptoms of Exposure to Chemicals Which Accumulate in Human
Tissue
Proceedings of the National
Conference on Hazardous Wastes and Environmental Emergencies, Cincinnati,
Ohio, 1985.
Summary: A discussion of some of
the problems in attempting to diagnose and treat low-level body burdens of
toxic chemicals. A review of 120 patients who were prescribed detoxification
treatment as developed by Hubbard to eliminate fat-stored compounds showed
improvement in 14 of 15 symptoms associated with several types of chemical
exposures.
Reduction of the Human Body Burdens of Hexachlorobenzene and
Polychlorinated Biphenyls
World Health Organization,
International Agency for Research on Cancer, Scientific Publications Series,
Volume 77, 1986.
Summary: Electrical workers paired
by age, sex and potential for polychlorinated biphenyl exposure were divided
into treatment and control groups. Adipose-tissue concentrations of
hexachlorobenzene (HCB), four other pesticides and 10 polychlorinated biphenyl
congeners were determined pre- and post-treatment, and three months
post-treatment. At post-treatment, all 16 chemicals were found at lower
concentrations in the adipose tissues of the treatment group, while 11 were
found in higher concentrations in the control group. Adjusted for re-exposure
as represented in the control group, HCB concentrations were reduced by 30
percent at post-treatment and 28 percent three months post-treatment. Mean
reduction of polychlorinated biphenyl congeners was 61 percent at
post-treatment and 14 percent three months post-treatment. These reductions are
statistically significant (f< 0.001). Enhanced excretion appeared to keep
pace with mobilization, as blood-serum levels in the treatment group did not
increase during treatment.
Excretion of a Lipophilic Toxicant Through the Sebaceous
Glands: A Case Report
Journal of Toxicology
Cutaneous andOcular Toxicology, Vol. 6, No. 1,
1987.
Summary: A 23-year-old woman
worked at a manufacturing facility, hosing the soot and ash accumulated in the
exhaust stack and on the filter pads of an oil-fired generator. She performed
this task without protective gear. After six months, she reported feeling ill
to the plant nurse. One month later, she was removed from the job, and she
remained unable to work for 11 1/2 months because of symptoms relating to toxic
chemical exposure. The toxicants were amenable to removal through the sebaceous
glands and possibly the gastrointestinal tract by Hubbard's detoxification
technique. This was accompanied by remission of her subjective complaints and
she was authorized to return to work.
Improvement in Perception of Transcutaneous Nerve Stimulation
Following Detoxification in Firefighters Exposed to PCBs, PCDDs and
PCDFs
Clinical Ecology, Vol. VI,
No.2, 1989.
Summary: Seventeen firefighters
with a history of acute exposure to polychlorinated biphyenyls, dibenzofurans,
and dibenzodioxins were evaluated for peripheral neuropathy. Neuropathic
evaluation was done using the Neurometer®, a transcutaneous nerve
stimulation device. Prior to detoxification, five of the 17 had abnormal
current perception threshold measurements. Following treatment, all showed
improvement. Most strikingly, the current perception thresholds of two patients
returned to normal range after detoxification. This finding raises the
possibility that damage heretofore thought to be permanent may in many
instances be partially reversible.
Occupational, Environmental and Public Health in Semic: A Case
Study of Polychlorinated Biphenyl (PCB) Pollution
Proceedings of the Annual
Meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineers, New Orleans, Louisiana,
October, 1989.
Summary: Eleven workers with
readily observable symptoms of exposure to PCBs and other chemicals were chosen
for detoxification from a group of 24 male volunteers from a factory using PCBs
in the manufacture of capacitors. The remaining 13 served as a control group.
Detoxification treatment reduced both the body burdens and the symptoms of
treated workers while no such improvements occurred in the control group. This
study, undertaken in cooperation with the University Medical Center of
Ljubljana and the Institut fur Toxikologie, University and Technical
Faculty of Zurich, supports the use of health screening and detoxification for
individuals affected by toxic exposures.
Human Contamination and Detoxification: Medical Response to an
Expanding Global Problem
Proceedings of the MAB UNESCO
Task Force on Human Response to Environmental Stress, Moscow,
1989.
Summary: Individuals with a
variety of workplace exposures were unable to work or had reduced work
capacity. Following detoxification, each was able to return to work. Though the
results presented are anecdotal, they confirm previous findings in the
peer-reviewed literature (Schnare et al., 1982; Roehm, 1983; Schnare et al.,
1984; Schnare and Robinson, 1985; Tretjak et al., 1989) and demonstrate that
this approach can be effective in reducing body burdens of toxic compounds and
returning individuals to the workplace.
Neurobehavioral Dysfunction in Firemen Exposed to
Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs): Possible Improvement after
Detoxification,
Archives of Environmental
Health, Vol.44, No. 6, 1989.
Summary: Fourteen firemen were
exposed to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and their by-products at the site
of a transformer fire and explosion. Six months after the fire, they underwent
neurophysiological and neuropsychological tests. They were re-studied six weeks
after detoxification. A control group of firefighters was selected from firemen
who resided in the same city but were not engaged in the fire in question.
Initial testing showed that firemen exposed to PCBs had poorer neurobehavioral
function than the control group. Significant reversibility of impairment was
noted after detoxification.
PCB
Reduction and Clinical Improvement by Detoxification: An Unexploited Approach?
Human and Experimental
Toxicology, Vol.9, 1991.
Summary: A female worker from a
capacitor factory, with a history of exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls
(PCBs) and other lipophilic industrial chemicals, was admitted for treatment at
the University Medical Centre of Ljubljana, Slovenia (then Yugoslavia). She
presented with severe abdominal complaints, chloracne, liver abnormalities and
a bluish-green nipple discharge of approximately 50 ml in quantity. High PCB
levels were noted in adipose tissue (102 mg kg'), serum (512 ug/1'), skin
lipids (66.3 mg kg'), and in the nipple discharge (712 ug 1'). After
detoxification, PCB levels in adipose tissue were reduced to 37.4 mg kg' and in
serum to 261 ug', respective reductions of 63 percent and 49 percent. Excretion
of intact PCBs in serum, appreciable before treatment, was enhanced by up to
five-fold during detoxification. The nipple discharge ceased early in the
detoxification regimen.
Xenobiotic Reduction and
Clinical Improvements in Capacitor Workers: A Feasible Method
Journal of Environmental
Science and Health,
Vol. A25, No.7,1990.
Summary: Eleven capacitor workers,
occupationally exposed to PCBs and other industrial chemicals, underwent
detoxification. Thirteen co-workers served as controls. Mean PCB levels prior
to detoxification were 28.0 mg/kg in adipose and 188.0 ug/L in serum. Following
detoxification, PCBs were reduced in serum by 42 percent (p<0.05) and in
adipose by 30 percent for patients without concurrent disease. Patients with
concurrent disease had a 10 percent reduction in adipose levels, while serum
levels remained unchanged. Both adipose and serum PCB levels increased in
members of the control group. At a four-month follow up examination, these
differences were maintained, though the mean adipose PCB values in all groups
were higher than at post-treatment. All patients reported marked improvement in
clinical symptoms post-treatment, with most of these improvements retained at
follow-up. No such improvements were noted in controls.
Treatment of Pesticide-Exposed Patients with Hubbard's Method
of Detoxification.
Presentation at the 120th
Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, 1992.
Summary: A review of the efficacy
of detoxification in addressing the complaints of 155 patients who had
experienced significant exposures to pesticides. Treatment effected reductions
in chemical levels in adipose tissue, and a concomitant decrease in symptomatic
complaints.
Neurotoxicity and Toxic Body Burdens: Relationship and
Treatment Potentials
Proceedings of the
International Conference on Peripheral Nerve Toxicity,
1993.
Summary: Many chemicals have
neurotoxic health effects of long duration, leading to the conclusion that
these effects are essentially irreversible. This paper proposes that the
accumulation and persistence of neurotoxic chemicals in adipose tissue may play
a role in the prolongation of neurotoxic effects. If this were the case, an
approach designed to reduce body burdens of fat-soluble compounds should lead
to a similar reduction in neurotoxic effects. Transcutaneous current perception
thresholds were measured using the Neurometer device in 48 patients exhibiting
neurotoxic effects both before and after detoxification. Following
detoxification, marked improvements were noted in both peripheral neuropathy
and self-reported patient profiles.
Reduction of Drug Residues: Applications in Drug
Rehabilitation
Presentation at the 123rd
Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, 1995
Summary: Drug residues and their
lipophilic metabolites are associated with persistent symptoms; their
mobilization into blood correlates with drug cravings. The concentration of
drug metabolites in both sweat and urine was measured in eight individuals who
had been actively using drugs prior to detoxification. Cocaine, opiate, and
benzodiazepan metabolites were detected by fluorescent immunoassay in both
sweat and urine. Low levels (not indicative of use) continued to be eliminated
for several weeks. In two cases, drug levels were below detection prior to
treatment but became detectable during detoxification. A separate series of 249
clients with a history of drug abuse rated the severity of their symptoms
before and after detoxification. Chief symptomatic complaints prior to
detoxification included fatigue, irritability, depression, intolerance of
stress, reduced attention span and decreased mental acuity. (These same
symptoms were dominant in those who had ceased active drug abuse over a year
prior to treatment.) Following detoxification, both past and current users
reported marked improvements in symptoms, with most returning to normal
range.
Treatment of Children with the Detoxification Method Developed
by Hubbard
Presentation at the 123rd
Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, 1995
Summary: Eighteen children from
ten families were referred for detoxification. Their chief complaints included
environmental sensitivity, headaches, chronic fatigue, allergies, respiratory
problems and recurrent infections. In each case, the entire family had become
ill following a known change (e.g., application of pesticides, installation of
improperly cured carpet) in their environment. The ages of the children ranged
from neonatal to 15 at the time of exposure, with treatment ages ranging from 4
to 21. Treatment resulted in improvements in symptom profiles, with at least 89
percent of the children reporting long-term improvements in their
symptoms.
Precipitation of Cocaine Metabolites in Sweat and Urine of
Addicts Undergoing Sauna Bath Treatment
Fifty-Seventh Annual Scientific
Meeting, National Institute on Drug Abuse, College on Problems of Drug
Dependency, 1995
Summary: Four subjects (three
males and one female) admitted to a residential treatment program were selected
for study. All met DSM-III-R Criteria for cocaine dependence and ingested
cocaine by smoking. The duration of their use of the drug ranged from eight
months to 18 years, and they reported cocaine use on over 75 percent of days in
the month just prior to treatment. Three reported last use of cocaine within 48
hours of admission; one reported last use 25 days prior to program entry. Urine
and sweat samples were collected from subjects every two to three days during
detoxification and analyzed by fluorescent immunoassay. Cocaine metabolites
were detectable in both sweat and urine of all subjects. Three of the four
subjects showed a measurable increase in sweat or urine cocaine metabolite
concentrations at the beginning of detoxification. Two subjects demonstrated
negative urine samples prior to detoxification, but demonstrated the presence
of metabolites when detoxification commenced.
Reduction of the Radioisotope Cs-137 Using the Detoxification
Method Developed by Hubbard
Presentation at the 124th
Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Associations,
1996.
Summary: Fourteen children living
in the plume path of the destroyed Chernobyl reactor underwent detoxification.
Each was periodically measured using a portable radiation detection system
capable of measuring the characteristic gamma ray emitted during the
radioactive decay of Cs-137. (Five such measures were made over the course of
approximately four weeks.) Elimination rates were compared to expected rates of
elimination from published studies. Children uniformly eliminated Cs-137 more
rapidly than expected, with the exception of two cases in which children were
eating contaminated treats from home. (Rapid elimination of Cs-137 resumed when
these items were eliminated from their diets.) |