Articles | Allergy Relief Blog | Links | Sitemap

Detoxing Engines Can Save Lives and Money at the Fuel Pump
by Dee Scrip

Does the word pollution evoke a passive response from you? I am embarrassed to say that before this article, pollution was an impotent word further weakened by its necessity - we depend on engines of all shapes and sizes to function in modern society.

After completion of research, pollution now elicits a bittersweet awareness, as it legions an invigorated ominous significance.

Every day of our lives, we obliviously inhale poisonous substances into our lungs - poisonous entities with devastating long term and/or immediate life-threatening affects. The process of burning gasoline or diesel in our engines produces:

· Toxic gases known as carbon monoxide · Poisonous nitrogen oxides, a main source of urban smog · Lethal unburned hydrocarbons, a main source of urban ozone

How toxic is carbon monoxide?

Gasoline and diesel, mostly carbon by weight, equate to 5-6 pounds (2.5 kg) of carbon per gallon. The U.S. alone releases approximately 2 billion pounds of carbon into the environment each day, and as it burns, it turns into massive amounts of invisible carbon monoxide gas.

If carbon monoxide released were solid carbon, it would be infamously noticeable, likened to throwing a 5-pound bag of dry cement out the window for every gallon of fuel burned. In the US, that would be equivalent to 333 million bags of dry cement spewed daily onto our roads and into our environment.

When we breathe carbon monoxide, the carbon molecules attach to our hemoglobin, taking up all the oxygen binding locations that are used to release oxygen to our lungs and other tissues in our body. With excessive exposure, our blood loses its ability to transport oxygen, thus inevitable death by suffocation.

How lethal is smog and ozone?

Nitrogen oxides and unburned hydrocarbons are main sources for smog and ozone. Ozone an unfriendly pollutant at ground level, is caused by the reaction between engine exhaust and light. Inflammation and abnormal accumulation of fluid in our lungs, instigated by both smog and ozone, aggravates the effects of asthma and other respiratory problems. As repeated ozone exposure further desecrates our lungs, it becomes more difficult to breathe, and our bodies increasingly labor to extract oxygen. Years later, we can still experience tiredness resulting from the damage done to our lungs.

In addition, the corrosive nature of ozone damages foliage, including agricultural crops and forest vegetation, sources of oxygen for our environment.

But, what can we do? Engines are part of our daily lives.

Time for an emergency call to our Angel of Mercy, the Fuel Doctor!

The Fuel Doctor says help is available. Ironically, we can do something to alleviate these toxic, poisonous, and lethal effects with very little effort - something that will result in longevity, not only for ourselves, but also the earth and future generations of inhabitants -- our children and grandchildren.

A small pill, the size of a penny, simply popped into the tank at each fill up, produces healthy detoxifying results. Independent tests showed that this little pill:

· Reduced toxic carbon monoxide emissions by 78% · Reduced poisonous nitrogen oxides by 73% (main source of urban smog) · Reduced lethal unburned hydrocarbons by 24% (main source of urban ozone)

The Fuel Doctor highly recommends immediate proactive usage.

Known as the UBiee Power Pill, it guarantees to reduce identified toxic emissions, along with an added benefit of increased fuel economy and reduced maintenance costs - a welcome relief for soaring record high fuel prices.

**Attn Ezine editors / Site owners ** Feel free to reprint this article in its entirety in your ezine or on your site so long as you leave all links in place, do not modify the content and include the resource box as listed above.


This article was submitted without an About Box by the Author!




  • Allergy & Asthma Network Mothers of Asthmatics Fills Cupid's Quiver with 10 Valentine Tips

    WASHINGTON, Feb. 6, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Planning to celebrate the most romantic day of the year with your food-allergic sweetheart? Or is it the pollen, pet or mold allergies that have you worried about asthma symptoms flaring? Allergy & Asthma Network Mothers of Asthmatics (AANMA) offers these Cupid-studded tips.

  • Asthma, allergy support

    The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America New England Chapter and ShoreSide Asthma and Allergy Educational Support Group will hold a roundtable discussion titled “Meeting the Challenges of Food Allergies in 2012” at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 9, at Wingate - The Inn at Silver Lake, 21 Chipman Way, Kingston.

  • Low vitamin D status linked to food allergy and eczema in children: Study

    The study – published in Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology – reports that increased exposure to sunlight could reduce the risk of both food allergies and eczema in children.

  • Combination of ICS and LABA appears to reduce severe asthma attacks

    A Henry Ford Hospital study has found that using two types of common asthma medications in combination reduces severe asthma attacks.

  • Breastfeeding tied to stronger lungs, less asthma

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Kids who were breastfed as babies may have better lung function, and a lower risk of asthma, than those who were formula-fed, two new reports suggest. Researchers said that past studies have found conflicting results when it comes to the effects of breastfeeding on kids' lungs, with some research suggesting that moms with asthma who breastfeed may be putting their ...





© 2005, Allergy Relief Blog All Rights Reserved Worldwide | Legal Information