Preventing infertility in men and women. Image credit: GetMe Giddy
A study by Global Reproductive Health reports that heavy metals, which hinder fertility, can be removed from the body through Modern Mayr Detoxication. Researchers at the Genova Diagnostics Laboratory—Mr. Oluwole Ogunsola, Dr. Atinuke Adeyi, and Prof. Oladapo Ashiru—conducted a test titled “Successful removal of heavy metals and environmental toxins using modern Mayr chelating detoxication in a patient: a model for pre‑fertility treatment screening.” The study began with a bio‑energetic test that identified the specific heavy metals present in the patient’s body.
In an interview, Prof. Ashiru explained, “We now know from several studies that environmental toxins such as petrochemicals in water, food, air, and products we apply to our bodies have serious consequences for reproductive capacity. At Medical Art Center we have devised a way to eliminate these toxins before natural conception or assisted reproductive technology conception. This treatment improves pregnancy rates, reduces miscarriage, and increases the take‑home‑baby rate.”
The study describes how heavy metals enter the body, circulate in the blood, and deposit in tissues, following a cyclic contamination pathway from industry to atmosphere, soil, water, food, and finally humans. At Martlife Detox Clinic, a comprehensive treatment plan based on the Mayr method of detoxification is offered to remove these metals. The protocol starts with a bio‑energetic test to determine which metals are present, followed by targeted therapies to extract the metals and neutralize their effects on the reproductive organs.
Patient A underwent a metal‑toxicity test using urine samples at Genova Diagnostics in the United States, then received a bio‑energetics test and a month‑long detoxification plan. A repeat test after detoxification showed a significant reduction in metal levels. The initial test had revealed markedly high values of copper, manganese, vanadium, rubidium, gadolinium, and cesium, which were confirmed by the bio‑energetics test. The follow‑up test demonstrated that the detoxification process was successful.
The findings conclude that the modern Mayr method effectively reduces toxic heavy‑metal levels. Moreover, the bio‑energetics test—being less invasive, cheaper, and faster than urine testing—could serve as an alternative means of detecting toxins in the body.
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