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- <html>
- <head><title>Osteoporosis, harmful calcification, and nerve/muscle malfunctions</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Osteoporosis, harmful calcification, and nerve/muscle malfunctions
- </h1>
-
- <p>
- During pregnancy, a woman's ability to retain dietary calcium and iron increases, and the baby seems to be
- susceptible to overloading. A normal baby doesn't need dietary iron for several months, as it uses the iron
- stored in its tissue, and recently it has been reported that normal fetuses and babies may have calcified
- pituitary glands. Pituitary cell death is sometimes seen with the concretions. (Groisman, et al.)
- Presumably, the calcification is resorbed as the baby grows. This is reminiscent of the "age pigment" that
- can be found in newborns, representing fetal stress from hypoxia, since that too disappears shortly after
- birth. Iron overload, age pigment, and calcification of soft tissues are so commonly associated with old
- age, that it is important to recognize that the same cluster occurs at the other extreme of (young) age, and
- that respiratory limitations characterize both of these periods of life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Calcium is probably the most popular element in physiological research, since it functions as a regulatory
- trigger in many cell processes, including cell stimulation and cell death. Its tendency to be deposited with
- iron in damaged tissue has often been mentioned. In hot weather, chickens pant to cool themselves, and this
- can lead to the production of thin egg shells. Carbonated water provides enough carbon dioxide to replace
- that lost in panting, and allows normal calcification of the shells. [Science 82, May, 1982] The deposition
- of calcium is the last phase of the "tertiary coat" of the egg, to which the oviduct glands successively add
- albumin, "egg membrane," and the shell, containing matrix proteins (including some albumin; Hincke, 1995)
- and calcium crystals. Albumin is the best understood of these layers, but it is still complex and
- mysterious; its unusual affinity for metal ions has invited comparisons with proteins of the immune system.
- It is known to be able to bind iron strongly, and this is considered to have an "immunological" function,
- preventing the invasion of organisms that depend on iron. Maria de Sousa ("Iron and the lymphomyeloid
- system: A growing knowledge," Iron in Immunity, Cancer and Inflammation, ed. by M. de Sousa and J. H. Brock,
- Wiley & Sons, 1989) has argued that the oxygen delivery system and the immune system evolved together,
- recycling iron in a tightly controlled system.
- </p>
- <p>
- The role of macrophages in the massive turnover of hemoglobin, and as osteoclasts, gives us a perspective in
- which iron and calcium are handled in analogous ways. Mechnikov's view of the immune system, growing from
- his observations of the "phagocytes," similarly gave it a central role in the organism as a form-giving/
- nutrition-related process. In a family with "marble-bone disease," or osteopetrosis, it was found that their
- red blood cells lacked one form of the carbonic anhydrase enzyme, and that as a result, their body fluids
- retained abnormally high concentrations of carbon dioxide. Until these people were studied, it had been
- assumed that an excess of carbon dioxide would have the opposite effect, dissolving bones and causing
- osteoporosis or osteopenia, instead of osteopetrosis. The thyroid hormone is responsible for the carbon
- dioxide produced in respiration. Chronic hypothyroidism causes osteopenia, and in this connection, it is
- significant that women (as a result of estrogen's effects on the thyroid) are much more likely than men to
- be hypothyroid, and that, relative to men, women in general are "osteopenic," that is, they have more
- delicate skeletons than men do.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In an experiment, rats were given a standard diet, to which had been added 1% Armour thyroid, that is, they
- were made extremely hyperthyroid. Since their diet was inadequate (later experiments showed that this amount
- of thyroid didn't cause growth retardation when liver was added to the diet) for their high metabolic rate,
- they died prematurely, in an apparently undernourished state, weighing much less than normal rats. Their
- bones, however, were larger and heavier than the bones of normal rats. A few incompetent medical "studies"
- have made people fear that "taking thyroid can cause osteoporosis." Recognizing that hypothyroid women are
- likely to have small bones and excessive cortisol production, the inadequate treatment of hypothyroidism
- with thyroxin (the thyroid-suppressive precursor material), is likely to be associated with relative
- osteoporosis, simply because it doesn't correct hypothyroidism. Similar misinterpretations have led people
- to see an association between "thyroid use" (generally thyroxin) and breast cancer--hypothyroid women are
- likely to have cancer, osteoporosis, obesity, etc., and are also likely to have been inadequately treated
- for hypothyroidism. T3, the active form of thyroid hormone, does contribute to bone formation. (For example,
- M. Alini, et al.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Around the same time (early 1940s) that the effects of thyroid on bone development were being demonstrated,
- progesterone was found to prevent age-related changes in bones, and "excessive" seeming doses of thyroid
- were found to prevent age-related joint diseases in rats.
- </p>
- <p>
- A logical course of events, building on these and subsequent discoveries, would have been to observe that
- the glucocorticoids cause a negative calcium balance, leading to osteoporosis, and that thyroid and
- progesterone oppose those hormones, protecting against osteoporosis. But the drug industry had discovered
- the profits in estrogen ("the female hormone") and the cortisone-class of drugs. Estrogen was promoted to
- prevent miscarriages, to stop girls (and boys) from growing too tall, to cure prostate and breast cancer, to
- remedy baldness, and 200 other absurdities. As all of those frauds gradually became untenable, even in the
- commercial medical culture, the estrogen industry began to concentrate on osteoporosis and femininity. Heart
- disease and Alzheimer's disease back those up.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If estrogen causes arthritis, prescribe prednisone for the inflammation. If prednisone causes osteoporosis,
- increase the dose of estrogen to retard the bone-loss. People are tough, and physiological therapies aren't
- very profitable."
- </p>
- <p>
- Fifteen years ago I noted in a newsletter that hip fractures most often occur in frail, underweight old
- women, and that heavier, more robust women seem to be able to bear more weight with less risk of fracture.
- Although I hadn't read it at the time, a 1980 article (Weiss, et al.) compared patients with a broken hip or
- arm with a control group made up of hospitalized orthopedic patients with problems other than hip or arm
- fractures. The fracture cases' weight averaged 19 pounds lighter than that of the other patients. They were
- more than 3.6 times as likely to be alcoholic or epileptic. It would be fair to describe them as a less
- robust group.
- </p>
- <p>
- Since the use of estrogen has become so common in the U.S., it is reasonable to ask whether the incidence of
- hip fractures in women over 70 has declined in recent decades. If estrogen protects against hip fractures,
- then we should see a large decrease in their incidence in the relevant population.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hip fractures, like cancer, strokes, and heart disease, are strongly associated with old age. Because of the
- baby-boom, 1945 to 1960, our population has a bulge, a disproportion in people between the ages of 35 and
- 50, and those older. Increasingly, we will be exposed to publicity about the declining incidence of disease,
- fraudulently derived from the actually declining proportion of old people. For example, analyzing claims
- based on the pretense that the population bulge doesn't exist, I have seen great publicity given to studies
- that would imply that our life-expectancy is now 100 years, or more.
- </p>
- <p>
- Comparing the number of hip fractures, per 1000 75 year old women, in 1996, with the rate in 1950, we would
- have a basis for judging whether estrogen is having the effect claimed for it.
- </p>
- <p>
- The x-ray data seem to convince many people estrogen is improving bone health, by comparing measurements in
- the same person before and after treatment. Does estrogen cause water retention? Yes. Does tissue water
- content increase measured bone density? Yes. Are patients informed that their "bone scans" don't have a
- scientific basis? No. The calcification of soft tissues under the influence of estrogen must also be taken
- into account in interpreting x-ray evidence. (Hoshino, 1996) Granted that woman who are overweight have
- fewer hip fractures (and more cancer and diabetes), what factors are involved? Insulin is the main factor
- promoting fat storage, and it is anabolic for bone. (Rude and Singer, "Hormonal modifiers of mineral
- metabolism.") The greatest decrease in bone mass resulting from insulin deficiency was seen in white
- females, and after five years of insulin treatment, there was a lower incidence of decreased bone mass
- (Rosenbloom, et al., 1977). McNair, et al. (1978 and 1979) found that the loss of bone mass coincided with
- the onset of clinical diabetes. Since excess cortisol can cause both high blood sugar and bone loss, when
- diabetes is defined on the basis of high blood sugar, it will often involve high blood sugar caused by
- excess cortisol, and there will be calcium loss. Elsewhere, I have pointed out some of the similarities
- between menopause and Cushing's syndrome; a deficiency of thyroid and progesterone can account for many of
- these changes. Nencioni and Polvani have observed the onset of progesterone deficiency coinciding with bone
- loss, and have emphasized the importance of progesterone's antagonism to cortisol.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Johnston (1979) found that progesterone (but not estrone, estradiol, testosterone, or androstenedione) was
- significantly lower in those losing bone mass most rapidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Around the age of 50, when bone loss is increasing, progesterone and thyroid are likely to be deficient, and
- cortisol and prolactin are likely to be increased. Prolactin contributes directly to bone loss, and is
- likely to be one of the factors that contributes to decreased progesterone production.
- </p>
- <p>
- Estrogen tends to cause increased secretion of prolactin and the glucocorticoids, which cause bone loss, but
- it also promotes insulin secretion, which tends to prevent bone loss. All of these factors are associated
- with increased cancer risk.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thyroid and progesterone, unlike estrogen, stimulate bone-building, and are associated with a decreased risk
- of cancer. It seems sensible to use thyroid and progesterone for their general anti-degenerative effects,
- protecting the bones, joints, brain, immune system, heart, blood vessels, breasts, etc.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the issue of calcification/decalcification is so general, we mustn't lose interest just because the
- practical problem of osteoporosis is approaching solution.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- For example, healthy high energy metabolism requires the exclusion of most calcium from cells, and when
- calcium enters the stimulated or deenergized cell, it is likely to trigger a series of reactions that lower
- energy production, interfering with oxidative metabolism. During aging, both calcium and iron tend to
- accumulate and they both seem to have an affinity for similar locations, and they both tend to displace
- copper. (Compare K. Sato, et al., on the calcification of copper-containing paints.) Elastin is a protein,
- the units of which are probably bound together by copper atoms. In old age, elastin is one of the first
- substances to calcify, for example in the elastic layers of arteries, causing them to lose elasticity, and
- to harden into almost bone-like tubes. In the heart and kidneys, the mitochondria (rich in copper-enzymes)
- are often the location showing the earliest calcification, for example when magnesium is deficient.
- </p>
- <p>
- Obviously, certain proteins have higher than average affinity for copper, iron, and calcium. For example,
- egg-white's unusual behavior with copper can be seen if you make a meringue in a copper pan--the froth is
- unusually firm. My guess is that copper atoms bind the protein molecules into relatively elastic systems. In
- many systems, calcium forms the link between adhesive proteins.
- </p>
- <p>
- In brain degeneration, the regions that sometimes accumulate aluminum, will accumulate other metals instead,
- if they predominate in the environment; calcium is found in this part of the brain in some of the Pacific
- regions studied by Gajdusek. Certain cells in the brain used to be called "metalophils," because they could
- be stained intensely with silver and other metals; I suppose these are part of the immune system, handling
- iron as described by Maria de Sousa. Macrophages have been proposed as an important factor in producing
- atherosclerotic plaques (Carpenter, et al.). There is evidence that they (and not smooth muscle cells) are
- the characteristic foam cells, and their conversion of polyunsaturated oils into age pigment accounts for
- the depletion of those fats in the plaques. The same evidence could be interpreted as a defensive reaction,
- binding iron and destroying unsaturated fatty acids, and by this detoxifying action, possibly protecting
- against calcification and destruction of elastin. (This isn't the first suggestion that atherosclerosis
- might represent a protective process; see S. M. Plotnikov, et al., 1994.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Since carbon dioxide and bicarbonate are formed in the mitochondria, it is reasonable to suppose that the
- steady outward flow of the bicarbonate anion would facilitate the elimination of calcium from the
- mitochondria. Since damaged mitochondria are known to start the process of pathological calcification in the
- heart and kidneys, it probably occurs in other tissues that are respiratorily stressed. And if healthy
- respiration, producing carbon dioxide, is needed to keep calcium outside the cell, an efficient defense
- system could also facilitate the deposition of calcium in suitable places--depending on specific protein
- binding. The over-grown bones in the hyperthyroid rats and the women with osteopetrosis suggest that an
- abundance of carbon dioxide facilitates bone formation. Since no ordinary inorganic process of
- precipitation/crystallization has been identified that could account for this, we should consider the
- possibility that the protein matrix is regulated in a way that promotes (or resists) calcification. The
- affinity of carbon dioxide for the amine groups on proteins (as in the formation of carbamino hemoglobin,
- which changes the shape of the protein) could change the affinity of collagen or other proteins for calcium.
- Normally, ATP is considered to be the most important substance governing such changes of protein
- conformation or binding properties, but ordinarily, ATP and CO2 are closely associated, because both are
- produced in respiration. Gilbert Ling has suggested that hormones such as progesterone also act as cardinal
- adsorbants, regulating the affinity of proteins for salts and other molecules.
- </p>
- <p>
- Cells have many proteins with variable affinity for calcium; for example in muscle, a system called the
- endoplasmic reticulum, releases and then sequesters calcium to control contraction and relaxation. (This
- calcium-binding system is backed up by--and is spatially in close association with--that of the
- mitochondrion.) Ion-exchange resins can be chemically modified to change their affinity for specific ions,
- and molecules capable of reacting strongly with proteins can change the affinities of the proteins for
- minerals. What evidence is there that carbon dioxide could influence calcium binding? The earliest
- deposition of crystals on implanted material is calcium carbonate. (J. Vuola, et al, 1996.) In newly formed
- bone, the phosphate content is low, and increases with maturity. While mature bone has an apatite-like ratio
- of calcium and phosphate, newly calcified bone is very deficient in phosphate (according to Dallemagne, the
- initial calcium to phosphorus ratio is 1.29, and it increases to 2.20.) (G. Bourne, 1972; Dallemagne.)
- </p>
- <p>
- The carbonate content of bone is often ignored, but in newly formed bone, it is probably the pioneer.
- Normally, "nucleation" of crystals is thought of as a physical event in a supersaturated solution, but the
- chemical interaction between carbon dioxide and amino groups (amino acids, protein, or ammonia, for example)
- removes the carbon dioxide from solution, and the carbamino acid formed becomes a bound anion with which
- calcium can form a salt. With normal physiological buffering, the divalent calcium (Ca2+) should form a link
- between the monovalent carbamino acid and another anion. Linking with carbonate (CO32-), one valence would
- be free to continue the salt-chain. This sort of chemistry is compatible with the known conditions of bone
- formation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Klein, et al. (1996), think of uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation in terms of "subtle thermogenesis," which
- isn't demonstrated in their experiment, but their experiment actually suggests that stimulated production of
- carbon dioxide is the factor that stimulates calcification. Their experiment seems to be the in vitro
- equivalent of the various observations mentioned above. DHEA, which powerfully stimulates bone formation, is
- (like thyroid and progesterone) thermogenic, but in these cases, the relevant event is probably the
- stimulation of respiration, not the heat production. In pigs (Landrace strain) susceptible to malignant
- hyperthermia, there is slow removal of calcium from the contractile apparatus of their muscles. Recent
- evidence shows that an extramitochondrial NADH-oxidase is functioning. This indicates that carbon dioxide
- production is limited. I think this is responsible for the cells' sluggishness in expelling calcium.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Stress-susceptible pigs show abnormalities of muscle metabolism (e.g., high lactate formation) that are
- consistent with hypothyroidism. (T. E. Nelson, et al., "Porcine malignant hyperthermia: Observations on the
- occurrence of pale, soft, exudative musculature among susceptible pigs," Am. J. Vet. Res. 35, 347-350, 1974;
- M. D. Judge, et al., "Adrenal and thyroid function in stress-susceptible pigs (Sus domesticus)," Am. J.
- Physiol. 214(1), 146-151, 1968.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Malignant hyperthermia during surgery is usually blamed on genetic susceptibility and sensitivity to
- anesthetics. (R. D. Wilson, et al., "Malignant hyperpyrexia with anesthesia," JAMA 202, 183-186, 1967; B.A
- Britt and W. Kalow, "Malignant hyperthermia: aetiology unknown," Canad. Anaesth. Soc. J. 17, 316-330, 1970.)
- Hypertonicity of muscles, various degrees of myopathy and rigidity, and uncoupling of oxidative
- phosphorylation occur in these people, as in pigs. Lactic acidosis suggests that mitochondrial respiration
- is defective in the people, as in the pigs. Besides the sensitivity to anesthetics, the muscles of these
- people are abnormally sensitive to caffeine and elevated extracellular potassium. During surgery, artificial
- ventilation, combined with stress, toxic anesthetics, and any extramitochondrial oxidation that might be
- occurring (such as NADH-oxidase, which produces no CO2), make relative hyperventilation a plausible
- explanation for the development of hyperthermia. Hyperventilation can cause muscle contraction. Panting
- causes a tendency for fingers and toes to cramp. Free intracellular calcium is the trigger for muscle
- contraction (and magnesium is an important factor in relaxation.) Capillary tone, similarly, is increased by
- hyperventilation, and relaxed by carbon dioxide. The muscle-relaxing effect of carbon dioxide shows that the
- binding of intracellular calcium is promoted by carbon dioxide, as well as by ATP. The binding of calcium in
- a way that makes it unable to interfere with cellular metabolism is, in a sense, a variant of simple
- extrusion of calcium, and the binding of calcium to extracellular materials. A relaxed muscle and a strong
- bone are characterized by bound calcium.
- </p>
- <p>
- Activation of the sympathetic nervous system promotes hyperventilation. This means that hypothyroidism, with
- high adrenalin (resulting from a tendency toward hypoglycemia because of inefficient use of glucose and
- oxygen), predisposes to hyperventilation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Muscle stiffness, muscle soreness and weakness, and osteoporosis all seem to be consequences of inadequate
- respiration, allowing lactic acid to be produced instead of carbon dioxide. Insomnia, hyperactivity,
- anxiety, and many chronic brain conditions also show evidence of defective respiration, for example, either
- slow consumption of glucose or the formation of lactic acid, both of which are common consequences of low
- thyroid function. Several studies (e.g., Jacono and Robertson, 1987) suggest that abnormal calcium
- regulation is involved in epilepsy. The combination of supplements of thyroid (emphasizing T3), magnesium,
- progesterone and pregnenolone can usually restore normal respiration, and it seems clear that this should
- normalize calcium metabolism, decreasing the calcification of soft tissues, increasing the calcification of
- bones, and improving the efficiency of muscles and nerves. (Magnesium, like carbonate, is a component of
- newly formed bone.) The avoidance of polyunsaturated vegetable oils is important for protecting respiration;
- some of the prostaglandins they produce have been implicated in osteoporosis, but more generally, they
- antagonize thyroid function and they can interfere with calcium control. The presence of the "Mead acid"
- (the omega-9 unsaturated fat our enzymes synthesize) in cartilage suggests a new line of investigation
- regarding the bone-toxicity of the polyunsaturated dietary oils.
- </p>
- <p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p>
- <p>
- G. R. Sauer, et al., "A facilitating role for carbonic anhydrase activity in matrix vesicle mineralization,"
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- increased in a stepwise manner up to 1.3 pits per osteoclast when dentin slices were cultured with 10% CO2
- at pH 6.97.")
- </p>
-
- <p>
- D. A. Bushinsky, et al., "Acidosis and bone," Min. & Electrolyte Metab. 20(1-2), 40-52, 1994. ("During
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- is no measurable calcium efflux.")
- </p>
- <p>
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- acidosis," Amer. J. Physiol. 265(4, part 2), F530-F536, 1993. ("...elevated pCO2 doesn't allow bone
- carbonate dissolution despite reduced pH.")
- </p>
- <p>
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- </p>
- <p>
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- </p>
- <p>
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- </p>
- <p>
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- </p>
- <p>
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- </p>
- <p>
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- density when measured by dual photon absorptionmetry compared to those without calcification." "Women with
- aortic calcification had significantly lower quantitative computer tomography and proximal femur bone
- density compared to those without calcification."
- </p>
- <p>
- S. E. Wendelaar Bonga and G. Flik, "Prolactin and calcium metabolism in a teleost fish, Sarotherodon
- mossambicus," Gen. Compar. Endocrinol. 46, 21-26, 1982.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- U.S. Barzel, "The skeleton as an ion exchange system: Implications for the role of acid-base imbalance in
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- </p>
- <p>
- P. Schneider and C. Reiners, Letter, JAMA 277(1), 23, Jan. 1, 1997. Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry for
- bone density can lead to false conclusions about bone mineral content, because of alterations in tissue fat
- or water content. "The influence of fat distribution on bone mass measurements with DEXA can be of
- considerable magnitude and ranges up to 10% error per 2 cm of fat."
- </p>
- <p>
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- </p>
-
- <p>
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- </p>
- <p>
- O. Rahn, "Protozoa need carbon dioxide for growth," Growth 5, 197-199, 1941. "On page 113 of this volume,
- the statement of Valley and Rettger that all bacteria need carbon dioxide for growth had been shown to apply
- to young as well as old cells." "...it is possible...to remove it as rapidly as it is produced, and under
- these circumstances, bacteria cannot multiply." K. L. H. Carpenter, et al., "Production of ceroid and
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- 245-268, 1988.
- </p>
-
- <p>
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- Engl. J. Med. 303, 1195-1198, 1980.
- </p>
- <p>
- S. M. Plotnikov, et al., "Anxiety, atherogenesis, and antioxidant protection: Clinico-pathogenetic
- relationships," Bull. Exp. Biol. & Medicine 117(2), 221, 1994.
- </p>
- <p>
- G. M. Groisman, et al., "Calcified concretions in the anterior pituitary gland of the fetus and the newborn:
- A light and electron microscopic study," Human Pathology 27(11), 1139-1143, 1996. (...calcified concretions
- represent a normal finding in the anterior pituitary gland of fetuses and young infants.")
- </p>
-
- <p>
- K. S. G. Jie. "Vitamin K status and bone mass in women with and without aortic atherosclerosis: A
- population-based study," Calc. Tiss. Intern. 59(5), 352-356, 1996. ("The finding that in atherosclerotic
- women vitamin K status is associated with bone mass supports our hypothesis that vitamin K status affects
- the mineralization processes in both bone and in atherosclerotic plaques."
- </p>
- <p>
- B. Y. Klein, et al., "Cell-mediated mineralization in culture at low temperature associated with subtle
- thermogenic response," J. of Cellular Biochemistry 63(2), 229-238, 1996. "...cell-mediated mineralization is
- preceded by characteristics of anaerobic and low efficiency energy metabolism." "Modulation of mitochondrial
- membrane potential and energy metabolism could be linked to regulation of mineralization by the uncoupling
- of oxidative phosphorylation. This uncoupling should be associated with thermogenesis in cells that induce
- mineralization." C. R. Heath, B.S.C. Leadbeater, and M. E. Callow, "The control of calcification of
- antifouling paints in hard waters using a phosphonate inhibitor," Biofouling 9(4), 317-325, 1996. ("All
- paints contained cuprous oxide....)
- </p>
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-
- <p>
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