Covers evidence-based detoxification strategies, what actually works versus what is marketing, and how different people process environmental exposures differently. Directly relevant to GSTP1, NAT2, and NQO1 research on individual detoxification capacity.
The follow-up to Slow Death by Rubber Duck — Smith and Lourie test the popular 'detox' industry (juice cleanses, saunas, chelation, organic-only diets, hair analysis) against biomarker data, showing which strategies actually reduce measured chemical body burden and which don't.
A follow-up bestseller that sharpened the popular conversation about which detoxification interventions are supported by measurement and which are marketing.
These peer-reviewed studies connect to the core ideas in this book. Each result has been scored for reliability.
Two researchers document exactly how environmental chemicals enter the body and accumulate — using themselves as test subjects. Covers BPA, phthalates, organophosphates, and other compounds relevant to NAT2 slow acetylator and PON1 genetic research on chemical sensitivity.
A toxicologist explains how to accurately interpret environmental risk — cutting through both industry denial and environmental overclaiming. Relevant for anyone researching NAT2, GSTM1, and chemical sensitivity variants.