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BPAs in plastics and drinking water are a concern, but printed receipts are the most enriched source. Online research about phthalates is important, referencing Dr. Shana Swan's website. Phthalates, according to NIH-funded research, can dramatically alter male fertility if exposure occurs before birth, impacting sperm and testosterone. Androgens like DHT and testosterone converted to estrogen play a powerful role in masculinizing the brain and body during puberty.

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If you want to reduce exposure to estrogenic and endocrine-disrupting chemicals, especially to boost testosterone levels naturally, get rid of the chemical strip at the top of your razor. The speaker does not specify what chemicals are in the strip due to potential censorship. Research the ingredients and consider that these chemicals may enter your skin when shaving. These chemicals are found in sunscreen, hair gel, toothpaste, lotions, and deodorants. The skin is the largest organ and absorbs what you put on it, so detoxification requires considering skincare products.

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The most important thing you can do to reduce environmental exposure to hormone disruptors is to filter your drinking and cooking water. Water treatment plants are not equipped to remove ethinyl estradiol from birth control pills, which are consumed and excreted by one hundred million women worldwide. Pharmaceutical estrogens are turning up in bodies of water all over the globe, which we then draw from to drink. Veterinarian estrogen use is more than five times the use of oral contraceptives. Municipal water companies probably aren't testing for hormones, so you have to filter them out using an activated charcoal filter or a membrane filter like in a reverse osmosis system. Different geographies will have different amounts of estrogen in the water, but even a little adds to your total estrogenic exposure. You have to have your drinking water tested to know for sure.

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Microplastics such as BPA, PCBs, and Triclosan mimic estrogen, which lowers testosterone. Adequate testosterone prevents diseases and promotes muscle growth, strength, and healthy libido. Drinking from plastic bottles, even those containing alkaline water, can be harmful. It's better to drink from glass to benefit both your wallet and testosterone levels. The speaker always drinks from glass and uses BPA-free plastic only when necessary, such as for blender bottles. While eliminating all toxic exposures is difficult, switching to glass is a significant step for your health.

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Polyester sheds microplastics into the water supply and onto the skin. Polyester is a kind of plastic. Polyester can expose people to harmful chemicals. A study found high levels of BPA in active wear from brands like Nike, Adidas, Patagonia, and Fabletics. In some cases, BPA levels were over 22 times the allowable amount. BPA has been linked to infertility, cancer, and heart disease. Polyester may be an endocrine disruptor, which can disrupt the body's ability to produce and regulate hormones, potentially leading to elevated body fat and low testosterone.

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Testosterone levels are half of what they were in middle-aged men in the 1940s, and women's levels are also lower. The cause is estrogenics, or hormone disruptors, which fit hormone receptors but don't function like real hormones, effectively blocking them. These estrogenics are pervasive and unavoidable, found in drinking water, fragrances, food, weed killers, soaps, sunscreens, and plastics. They allegedly cause weight gain, illness, disinterest in sex, and infertility. The speaker advises viewers to eliminate these estrogenics and subscribe for more information.

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That a few ways in limiting your exposure to microplastics, avoiding drinking water from plastic bottles, avoiding diabolical canned soups, avoiding sea salts, avoiding nonstick pans, avoid carbonated water, avoiding rubbing those receipt. Don't turn over your clothing so much. Avoid microwave popcorn. Avoid putting any kind of plastic into the microwave. Avoiding paper cups.

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Drinking out of plastics containing BPA, which is a chemical known as an EDC. EDC stands for endocrine disrupting chemical. When they make the plastic, it's in there. It leaches into whatever you're drinking. You drink it, and your testosterone level plummets. Guys, if you wanna be healthier, limit the beer and also make sure you're drinking out of metal or glass.

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If you can keep your mitochondria healthy- How? Exercise and reduce consumption of highly processed carbohydrates. We need to be avoiding these microplastics as well. You know, the problem with microplastics, they're very ubiquitous. We're not really sure. We're just now becoming aware of it. Nobody really knew that before. Look it up, but it could cause small foci in different populations of cells. The problem is we chronically abuse it without realizing what we need to do to keep it healthy. So even if you are exposed to chemical carcinogens, even if you are exposed to all these things, but you're keeping your body as healthy as you possibly can, you could possibly delay or even prevent the damage to the mitochondria, even though you are being exposed to this.

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Phthalates, found in fragrances like colognes, perfumes, and air fresheners, harm the reproductive system of both men and women. To identify if products contain harmful chemicals, use apps like Skin Deep or Think Dirty. These apps allow you to scan products and check their toxicity rating. Aim for a rating under 3; anything above that is considered toxic and should be discarded. It's essential to evaluate everything in our environment through this lens, as we are living in a toxic culture.

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If you drink Starbucks, be aware that the paper cups have a plastic lining that can release microplastics into your drink. These microplastics can penetrate cells, cause inflammation, and carry toxic chemicals into your body. They have been found in human lungs, blood, and placenta, raising concerns about babies being born with plastic in their bodies.

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Plastics are considered the number one pollutant in the human body, and phthalates found in plastic can cause enormous damage. Phthalates can damage fatty acids, cause zinc deficiency, and create hormone imbalances, specifically affecting thyroid hormones, testosterone, and estrogen. They have also been found to damage the pancreas, potentially contributing to diabetes and insulin resistance. To detoxify plastics, one can use an infrared sauna and increase intake of cruciferous vegetables to support the body's detoxification processes.

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"Plastics, personal care products, sunscreens, food containers, pesticides, and even many plant based health foods like soy and flax seeds all contain chemicals that act as potent endocrine disruptors in the body, lowering your testosterone levels and increasing your estrogen levels unnaturally." "Pervasiveness of endocrine disrupting chemicals in our modern society has become rampant and disturbing." "For example, pesticides sprayed on our food supply have all been known to cause chemical castration." "In this study, the researchers tested 37 widely used pest icides to see if any of them had any anti androgenic effects in vivo." "Out of the 37 tested chemicals, 30 were shown to be anti androgenic."

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The primary source of BPA is in the lining of cans, unless a company has switched to an alternative lining and indicates it. BPA is estrogenic, while phthalates are antiandrogenic; both are undesirable. Manufacturers now sell BPA-free products, but often use BPS and BPF instead, which are analogs and just as harmful. Therefore, a "BPA-free" label on a can doesn't guarantee safety, as other endocrine disruptors may be present. It's better to drink from glass, ceramic, or metal vessels, but avoid cans, including aluminum cans. Metal water bottles made of steel are acceptable because they are not lined with BPA.

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Most household kitchen taps release estrogen from birth control pills and natural hormones excreted by people. Water treatment plants can't remove these pharmaceutical estrogens, which end up in bodies of water worldwide. Filtering water with activated charcoal or reverse osmosis systems can help reduce estrogen exposure. Different regions have varying levels of estrogen in water, but any amount can contribute to overall estrogenic exposure.

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do not drink out of plastic water bottles. What do I do instead of bottled water? I have a reverse osmosis filter in my house. It just sits on my countertop. This will remove all the microplastics, and then I remineralize this reverse osmosis water with a microplastic free sea salt. When you cut like this on a plastic cutting board, small pieces of plastic from the cutting board are going to end up in your food. Those small pieces of plastic, those microplastics, you are eating them when you are using a plastic cutting board. Number three, and you may not be aware of this, you should rinse your dishes and dry them before you use them. Yes. It's extra work, but there is a significant amount of microplastics that accumulate just from being indoors.

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BPA-free bottles may contain replacement chemicals that are 10 times worse for hormones. Safe plastic alternatives can be more potent hormone disruptors than BPA. Plastic mimics estrogen more powerfully than BPA, accumulates in the brain and fat tissue, overwhelms the liver, disrupts thyroid function, and creates metabolic chaos. These chemicals are in receipts, food containers, water bottles, and personal care products. The plastic detox protocol includes DIM 200mg daily, Calcium D Glucarate 1000mg, NAC 600mg twice daily, and/or milk thistle. Daily habits include using glass containers, filtering water, avoiding heated plastics, and regular sauna sessions. Warning signs of plastic exposure include hormone imbalances, thyroid issues, unexplained weight gain, mood changes, and energy crashes. A complete plastic detox protocol with supplement recommendations is available via a link.

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Ninety percent of hormone imbalances are due to stress, poor diet, lifestyle, or endocrine disruptors, not gland diseases or tumors. Studies show nonstick cookware accelerates menopause. YogaWear sheds plastic microfibers, and people ingest about a credit card of plastic weekly. Everyone tests positive for BPA in their urine. Skincare products, especially those containing phthalates, introduce chemicals into the body through the skin.

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Drinking water in plastic water bottles can cause hormone issues. Plastic water bottles contain a chemical called BPA. Bisphenol eight, which is known to be an endocrine disruptor. Your endocrine system is your body's hormone producing system. These endocrine disruptors can mimic hormones, which means they can either overstimulate or understimulate certain endocrine glands, and then you have hormone problems. Well, carry your water in a metal water bottle. I love my Yeti. If you have a plastic water bottle sitting in the car in the sun, throw it away. Don't warm up your foods in plastic containers. Don't store them in plastic containers. Even though a bottle may stay BPA free, there's another chemical called BPA S. This is an endocrine disruptor as well. Try that and let your endocrine system work the way it's supposed to.

Dhru Purohit Show

#1 Toxicologist: "You're EXPOSED To Hidden Chemicals Causing Cancer & A Decreased Lifespan!"
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Dr. Vivian Chen discusses how everyday objects in the home contribute to toxin exposure, with a focus on endocrine disruptors and microplastics. The conversation unfolds as a practical ranking exercise: cookware comes up first, with Teflon-based nonstick pans identified as high-risk due to PFAS leaching, especially when scratched. Cast iron and stainless steel are proposed as safer alternatives, with caveats about iron transfer from cast iron to acidic foods and the heat handling required for stainless steel. The discussion then broadens to identify the main sources of endocrine disruptors, emphasizing plastics, BPA, phthalates, and the critical role of reducing contact time with plastic containers through glass storage and careful can usage. The host and guest explore common household items such as fragrances, cleaning products, aluminum foil, and scented products, ranking them on a risk scale and pointing listeners to resources like the Environmental Working Group for safer product choices. They stress that eliminating all exposure is unrealistic, so the goal is minimization and practical swaps that can meaningfully lower the toxin load, such as switching to glass, choosing glass or stainless steel for cooking and storage, and avoiding heating plastics. The dialogue delves into air quality and the invisible routes of exposure, including microplastics in the air from tires and indoor sources; strategies like high-quality air filters and opening windows are offered to reduce indoor contamination. They also cover lifestyle habits that bolster the body's detox pathways, including maximizing fiber intake, maintaining regular bowel movements, and exercising, which supports lymphatic and mitochondrial function. The conversation touches on detox-supportive foods like cruciferous vegetables and broccoli sprouts rich in sulforaphane, as well as the potential role of sauna, red light therapy, and sleep in facilitating detoxification. Throughout, the emphasis is on actionable, incremental changes rather than alarmism, with anecdotes about real-world effects—such as improvements in congestion and skin issues after eliminating certain products—and reminders that small, consistent steps can accumulate into significant health benefits over time.

Huberman Lab

The Effects of Microplastics on Your Health & How to Reduce Them
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In this episode of the Huberman Lab podcast, Andrew Huberman discusses microplastics, which are tiny plastic particles found everywhere, including in the air, food, and even human tissues. While there is no causal data linking microplastics to specific diseases, there is significant correlative evidence suggesting potential health risks. Microplastics can disrupt cellular and organ health and have been found in various human tissues, including the brain, testicles, and placenta, raising concerns about their impact on health, particularly for pregnant women and young children. Huberman emphasizes the importance of limiting exposure to microplastics and suggests practical steps to do so. These include avoiding bottled water, especially those that have been heated, and using reverse osmosis filters for tap water. He also advises against consuming sea salt and canned soups, which often contain bisphenol A (BPA), a known endocrine disruptor. Other recommendations include using glass or stainless steel containers instead of plastic, avoiding microwave popcorn, and being cautious with clothing that sheds microfibers. Research indicates that microplastics may correlate with conditions like irritable bowel syndrome and hormonal disruptions, particularly in relation to testosterone levels. The episode highlights the need for further research into the long-term effects of microplastics on human health and encourages listeners to be proactive in reducing their exposure. Huberman concludes by stressing the importance of being informed about microplastics and making conscious choices to protect health.

The Ultimate Human

Top 5 Ways to Eliminate Toxins from Your Daily Life | TUH #170
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Invisible toxins from everyday products, including personal care items and cookware, are negatively impacting our health. These toxins, such as endocrine disruptors, neurotoxins, and carcinogens, accumulate in the body and can lead to hormonal imbalances, chronic diseases, and oxidative stress. Common sources include plastics, cleaning agents, and even dental products. To reduce exposure, it's recommended to switch to glass or stainless steel, avoid non-stick cookware, and choose natural personal care products. Supporting detox pathways through nutrition and lifestyle changes is essential for maintaining health in a toxic environment.

The Rich Roll Podcast

THE FITNESS DOCTOR: The BEST and WORST Behaviors For Overall Health | Dr. Rhonda Patrick
Guests: Dr. Rhonda Patrick
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Dr. Rhonda Patrick discusses the importance of cardiorespiratory fitness as a key marker for longevity, emphasizing that vigorous exercise can significantly improve health outcomes. She highlights that engaging in high-intensity interval training (HIIT) can have effects on blood pressure comparable to antihypertensive drugs. The conversation begins with a focus on fitness, detailing various types of exercise, including endurance, strength training, and HIIT, and their distinct benefits for both physical and mental health. Patrick shares her personal fitness journey, noting the importance of resistance training for muscle mass and overall health, especially as one ages. She explains that vigorous exercise not only enhances cardiovascular health but also produces lactate, which serves as a signaling molecule that promotes brain health by increasing brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), crucial for neurogenesis and cognitive function. The discussion then shifts to microplastics, which are pervasive in the environment and potentially harmful to human health. Patrick explains that microplastics can enter the body through food, water, and air, accumulating particularly in the brain. Recent studies have shown alarming correlations between microplastics in the brain and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's. She emphasizes the need for more research on microplastics and their health impacts, particularly their role in inflammation and cardiovascular disease. Patrick advises on practical steps to reduce exposure to microplastics, such as avoiding heating plastic containers, using glass or stainless steel for food and drink, and filtering water with reverse osmosis systems. She also discusses the dangers of plastic-associated chemicals like BPA and phthalates, which can disrupt hormonal systems and are linked to various health issues, including fertility problems and neurodevelopmental disorders in children. The conversation touches on the regulatory landscape, highlighting the lack of stringent regulations on microplastics and plastic-associated chemicals in consumer products. Patrick calls for greater awareness and consumer pressure to encourage companies to test for and reduce harmful substances in their products. In conclusion, she stresses the importance of maintaining a healthy lifestyle through exercise and nutrition while being mindful of environmental toxins, particularly microplastics and their associated chemicals. Patrick encourages listeners to educate themselves and take actionable steps to minimize their exposure to these harmful substances.

Genius Life

Toxicologist REVEALS The Most Common Sources Of Toxins In Our Food & Environment - Dr Yvonne Burkart
Guests: Yvonne Burkart
reSee.it Podcast Summary
As a toxicologist, Yvonne Burkart highlights that drinking water is a significant, often overlooked source of toxins. Tap water across the U.S. can contain heavy metals, pesticides, and disinfection byproducts, while bottled water may not be a safer alternative due to contaminants and microplastics from plastic packaging. She emphasizes the need for better filtration systems and suggests boiling tap water to reduce microplastics. Burkart also discusses the dangers of endocrine disruptors found in everyday products, including fragrances and personal care items, which can have harmful health effects, particularly on children. She advocates for a "low tox" lifestyle, focusing on clean air, water, and food, and encourages consumers to read ingredient lists carefully to avoid greenwashing. Burkart stresses the importance of organic foods, citing studies linking pesticide exposure to neurotoxic effects in children. She recommends prioritizing organic purchases based on the Environmental Working Group's Dirty Dozen and Clean 15 lists. Burkart also discusses the role of diet and lifestyle in detoxification, emphasizing the benefits of exercise, proper hydration, and consuming sulfur-rich foods to boost glutathione levels. She concludes by encouraging consumers to trust their intuition and make informed choices to minimize exposure to harmful chemicals.

Genius Life

“Plastic Is Hacking Our Hormones!” The Hidden Health Crisis That's Making Us Sick - Dr. Leo Trasande
Guests: Leo Trasande
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Dr. Leo Trasande discusses the growing concern over environmental toxins, particularly phthalates, which are used to soften plastics and are prevalent in many consumer products. He emphasizes the lack of training in medical schools regarding environmental health, leading to inadequate responses to patients' concerns about potential chemical exposures. Phthalates, found in food packaging and personal care products, are linked to various health issues, including obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular mortality. Trasande highlights that phthalates disrupt metabolism and hormone function, particularly in developing fetuses, potentially leading to long-term health consequences. The production of plastics has surged since World War II, with significant environmental and health implications. Trasande's recent study estimates that phthalate exposure contributes to 356,000 cardiovascular deaths annually, particularly affecting populations in lower-income regions. He stresses the importance of reducing plastic use, especially in non-essential applications, and suggests practical steps for individuals to minimize exposure, such as avoiding ultraprocessed foods and using glass or stainless steel containers. Trasande calls for greater awareness and regulatory action on plastic-related health risks, advocating for a shift in how society approaches plastic consumption and production. He encourages consumers to support safer alternatives and highlights the need for continued research into the health effects of microplastics and other chemical exposures.
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