Anyone have any experience with deuterium-depleted water
Deuterium-depleted water : Anyone have... - Advanced Prostate...
Deuterium-depleted water
I think all natural sources of water are without dueterium.
"The analysis of deuterium–protium ratios in comets found results very similar to the mean ratio in Earth's oceans (156 atoms of deuterium per million hydrogen atoms). "
Deuterium is expensive stuff. I recollect it useful in building nuclear weapons. I can't imagine it would have any plausible health benefits.
Oxygenated water pseudoscientific nonsense
Deuterium is the isotope H 2 (often given the symbol D) which makes up about 1 out of 10,000 of the hydrogen atoms found in nature. Although extensive research has shown that organisms are unable to survive on heavy …
Interesting subject.
Nothing in the PCa literature & there are numerous other complementary agents with a ton of PCa studies behind them, so I'm not going to go looking for a source.
However, a Swedish study from the Karolinska suggests how the water might be used [1]:
"In the proposed scenario, reversal of the normally positive deuterium gradient across the inner membrane leads to an increased export of protons from the matrix to intermembrane space and an increase in the mitochondrial membrane potential, enhancing the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The resulting oxidative stress leads to slower growth and can induce apoptosis.
"However, further deuterium depletion in ambient water triggers a feedback mechanism, which leads to restoration of the redox equilibrium and resumed growth."
So I could see it being used briefly, when beginning a new treatment where cell death is dependent on ROS.
See also Wiki [2].
-Patrick
Could have. I visited Flint a few years ago and drank some water.
Tasted nasty.
LOL...... No one to visit there,.........they'er all gone...........
Good Luck, Good Health and Good Humor.
j-o-h-n Wednesday 02/03/2021 2:58 PM EST