Sunday, December 30, 2018

How LED Lighting May Compromise Your Health and Questions Why

I knew artificial lighting was not good for you. I was using a fluorescent light bulb
once until it burned out and when I changed it I found a dead wasp stuck in the twist
of the light the wasp was bleached white over time. So what is that doing to me 
over time and what about the LED types?

Also the question if those lights do that why is it there in the first place?
Wanting our eyesight to be altered? It brings up the point, why do it knowing
something like that is bad for us long term. Why else did they do it?
Why the effort to get rid of the near-infrared or infrared-A from the lights?

There are many saying that LED lights are the same lights people seen
from the light on a UFO. It would point about reverse engineering
lights that can harm us. And if so what else are we heading for?
The point of going with things that can hurt us. And a needed note
to be aware about things around you. Only you can take of yourself!

This story is about questions that many should be asking about!

~~~~~How LED Lighting May Compromise Your Health
Can light affect your health? In this interview, Dr. Alexander Wunsch, a world class expert on photobiology, shares the hidden dangers of light-emitting diode (LED) lighting that most people are completely unaware of.

In fact, this could potentially be one of the most important video interviews I've done, as it has enormous impacts — not only on preventing blindness as you age but it is also a pervasive hidden risk factor for sabotaging your health.

Physicists think that infrared radiation is just thermal waste. But from the viewpoint of a physician, this is absolutely not true; in the last 30 years there have been hundreds of scientific papers published on the beneficial aspects of a certain part in the spectrum, which is called near-infrared or infrared-A."

Near-Infrared Is Critical for Mitochondrial and Eye Health
The near-infrared range affects your health in a number of important ways. For example, it helps prime the cells in your retina for repair and regenerate.

Since LEDs have virtually no infrared and an excess of blue light that generates reactive oxygen species (ROS), this explains why LEDs are so harmful for your eyes and overall health.

Chromophores are molecules that absorb light. There's an optical tissue window that ranges from 600 to 1,400 nm, which means it is almost completely covered by the infrared-A part of the spectrum. This optical tissue window allows the radiation to penetrate several centimeters or at least an inch or more into the tissue.

Chromophores are found in your mitochondria and in activated water molecules. In your mitochondria, there's also a specific molecule called cytochrome c oxidase, which is involved in the energy production within the mitochondria. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) — cellular energy — is the end product.

ATP is the fuel your cells need for all of their varied functions, including ion transport, synthesizing and metabolism. Remarkably, your body produces your body weight in ATP every day. And, while you can survive for several minutes without oxygen, were all ATP production to suddenly stop, you'd die within 15 seconds.
https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2016/10/23/near-infrared-led-lighting.aspx

~~~~~Can Small LED Lights Impact Your Health Negatively?
The Secret Risks of LED Lights
One of the main concerns with LED lights relates to red LED lights, one of the oldest varieties still on the market. Those red LEDs were made with a substance called AGA (aluminum gallium arsenide), which is toxic in concentrated amounts. If you are directly exposed to this material on work sights or through contact with broken bulbs, it can be hazardous to your health. Side effects of toxicity from AGA include respiratory, kidney, and reproductive issues in laboratory studies. The lead content in red LEDs is also toxic when directly exposed, and should be avoided.
https://www.scienceabc.com/eyeopeners/can-small-led-lights-impact-health-negatively.html