Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not harmful to draw a little bit of blood. As long as it’s under 5% of total blood volume it has no impact on health.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6045434/table/T1/
I just want to look at zinc, copper, iodine, and folate. My stupid pediatrician won’t test for it. He is useless.
It sounds like your pediatrician is doing his job of protecting your child from his mother's stupidity. What are you planning to do with these results after you have put your child through the unnecessary pain of a blood draw? The options are to supplement or remove. Both of these options, with these particular vitamins and minerals, can be extremely dangerous and potentially fatal. Your child is not a lab experiment.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not harmful to draw a little bit of blood. As long as it’s under 5% of total blood volume it has no impact on health.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6045434/table/T1/
I just want to look at zinc, copper, iodine, and folate. My stupid pediatrician won’t test for it. He is useless.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not harmful to draw a little bit of blood. As long as it’s under 5% of total blood volume it has no impact on health.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6045434/table/T1/
I just want to look at zinc, copper, iodine, and folate. My stupid pediatrician won’t test for it. He is useless.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds MAHA-coded? But if you have concrete concerns about a vitamin or mineral deficiency, go to your pediatrician, ask for a lab order, and go to Children’s.
Anonymous wrote:Ask Peter Attia for his recommendations.