Silica

Silica is the foundational mineral for connective tissue integrity. Reducing aluminum burden via silica supplementation, combined with anti-inflammatory support, can produce measurable symptom improvement. Supplementing silica can help res…

4 sources - 19 claims

Silica is the foundational mineral for connective tissue integrity. Reducing aluminum burden via silica supplementation, combined with anti-inflammatory support, can produce measurable symptom improvement. Supplementing silica can help restore skin firmness via its role in collagen production. Unlike calcium, which primarily hardens structures, silica contributes flexibility and tensile strength. Monomethylsilantriol (oral silica) is administered at 100–200 mg three times per day. Research supports silica water use for both removing existing aluminum from the body and guarding against future accumulation. When silicon is exposed to oxygen it becomes silica, a trace mineral with wide-ranging structural and metabolic roles in the human body. Silica stimulates type 1 collagen synthesis, the most abundant collagen in the body, found in skin, tendons, ligaments, and bone matrix. Silica is a structural mineral that provides rigidity, elasticity, and resilience throughout the body's connective tissues. Silica binds to aluminum in the body, and both are then eliminated via the kidneys, reducing aluminum burden in the brain. Silica binds to aluminum that has already accumulated in tissues…