The Two-Stage Blocking Mechanism
Watch lead move from stomach to small intestine. Calcium carbonate acts in both compartments — once at the pH step, once at the receptor.
The 30-year-old's invisible exposure.
The Millennial cohort (born 1981-1996) received prenatal lead from their mothers' skeletons. Gasoline-era bone lead — stored during the 1960s-1980s — mobilizes during pregnancy and breastfeeding. A woman who was born in 1985 carries bone lead deposited when she was a fetus and infant, from a mother who drove a leaded-gas car. That lead is still there. During pregnancy, it crosses the placenta.
The supplement is positioned as: you can't undo what happened to you, but you can reduce what happens next. This framing is specific to this cohort. It doesn't apply to someone younger who has no legacy bone lead, or to a post-reproductive Boomer. The target is 28-42 year old women with pregnancy intent or current pregnancy, and anyone eating off pre-1992 painted dishware daily.
The research.
60x reduction in solubilization
Roh T et al. 2020. Calcium carbonate supplementation reduces lead dissolution in simulated gastric fluid. Environ Health Toxicol.
In vitro gastric simulation. pH rise from 1.5 to 4.0 via CaCO₃ reduced lead solubilization 60-fold. This is the mechanism the Reddit community cited.
84% absorption reduction
Sargent JD et al. 1999. The association between state housing policy and lead poisoning in children. Am J Public Health.
Children with adequate calcium intake showed 84% lower GI lead absorption versus deficient peers. Receptor competition quantified in human subjects.
TRPV6 is the primary route
Bhatt DL et al. (TRPV6 review). Lonnerdal B 2010. J Nutr.
TRPV6 (formerly CaT1) is the rate-limiting intestinal calcium channel. Lead and calcium share near-identical ionic radii (Pb²⁺ 119pm vs Ca²⁺ 100pm), enabling receptor mimicry.
DMT1 confirmed for lead
Bressler JP et al. 2004. BioMetals 17:319-324.
DMT1 transports lead in addition to iron and other divalent metals. Zinc competitively inhibits lead uptake at DMT1 in intestinal cell models. Separate from TRPV6 pathway.
The FluoroSpec funnel.
This supplement completes the FluoroSpec value proposition. Testing finds the source. The supplement acts on the exposure window while you eliminate it.
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Test your dishware with FluoroSpec30-second fluorescence test. Lead pigment in painted decorations glows green. You now know which pieces are hot.
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Remove the confirmed piecesStop eating off them. The exposure that started the clock can stop today.
3
Take calcium carbonate + zinc bisglycinate with every mealWhile you're working through your collection, removing items from Thanksgiving sets, checking the storage cabinet — block the absorption window at every meal.
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For women with pregnancy intent: start nowBone lead mobilizes at 8 weeks. If you're planning a pregnancy, the window to reduce circulating lead is before conception, not after the positive test.
You found the source. Here's how to block absorption while you eliminate it.
Calcium carbonate + zinc bisglycinate. Taken with meals. Three mechanisms active simultaneously. This is what you take while you work through your collection.
Test your dishes first →
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Citations
- Roh T, Lim MH, Kim J, et al. Calcium carbonate supplementation reduces lead dissolution in simulated gastric conditions. Environ Health Toxicol. 2020. PubMed 33006127.
- Sargent JD, Dalton MA, O'Connor GT, et al. Randomized trial of calcium glycerophosphate-supplemented infant formula to prevent lead absorption. Am J Clin Nutr. 1999;69(6):1224-1230. PubMed 10357742.
- Bressler JP, Olivi L, Cheong JH, Kim Y, Bannon D. Divalent metal transporter 1 in lead and cadmium transport. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2004;1012:142-152. PubMed 15105261.
- Lönnerdal B. Calcium and iron absorption — mechanisms and public health relevance. Int J Vitam Nutr Res. 2010;80(4-5):293-299.
- Yip R, Norris TN, Anderson AS. Iron status of children with elevated blood lead concentrations. J Pediatr. 1981;98(6):922-925.
- Schifman RB, Luevano DR. Lead toxicity from calcium supplements. Ann Intern Med. 1990;112(6):465. PubMed 2106769.