Abstract

Spitting is a human reflex as old as civilization, related, mainly, as is shown, to the evacuation of internal contamination with alpha-emitting nanoparticulates, a contamination with many causes, from car fumes and industrial smokes, coal ashes and cement, radon, phosphated fertilizers, to depleted uranium weapons and natural dust and tap water in areas of high natural radioactivity, as well as cigarettes, for the main sources. Strong levels of coal ash pollution together with high natural radioactivity explain for instance the spitting “custom” in Chinese streets, together with long distances between workplace and home, widespread cigarette use, and lack of public toilets. Alphaemitting nanoparticulates become a part of the digestion cycle in meat-eaters, but not without collateral damage.

Highlights

  • Recent findings have allowed to better understand the pituitary gland

  • It allows the body to capture some of the alpha emitting nanoparticulates and excrete them, or alternatively recycle them into the digestion process

  • Loss of miction and defecation control is a well-known effect of irradiation in general, and bowel and urinary incontinence a widespread element in Gulf War veterans – irritable bowel syndrome, in other words, finds its main explanation in alpha-emitting nanoparticulates

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Summary

Introduction

Recent findings have allowed to better understand the pituitary gland. These findings have confirmed the validity of the argument that it is a scattered diffusion. Even limited levels of contamination in the walls of the bowels create, for instance, an opening of the ways

Results
Conclusion
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