Re: Am I experiencing mercury detox symptoms??
Since Chlorella was mentioned I would like to add just one thing.
I was very skeptical of Chlorella, because some doctors where very much against it and issued quite stern warnings.
However, it seems that most if not all there warnings seem to stem from the fact that Chlorella quality varies significantly, and Chlorella grown in some areas in outdoor pools may itself already come with significant toxins, since those algae gather them from their surroundings (that's why they are used in industrial heavy metal cleaning, an area where their use is quite well researched, different from any claims about how it works inside a human body).
So I got myself Chlorella from a definitely clean source - grown indoors, no contact with the environment, and recent lab test results were available too. More expensive than a lot of other Chlorella sources, but at least I knew they were "clean".
After about 3 years of eating LOTS of that stuff, initially because "it does not seem to hurt" and "it tastes quite good", I am know fairly certain that stuff actually helps. However, it does NOT act as a (mobilizing) chelator, at least not to any significant amount as far as I can tell. It really only works with mercury that already somehow makes it into your bowels. I will not go into the numerous several week long tests I made (many times, and also in comparison to what happens when I use medicinal coal, which is part of "official medicine" for binding toxins in the digestive tract).
So, yes on Chlorella - if they come from a clean source! - and only as support, it does not replace using chelators.
PS: For some pretty good reports you may want to look at a few cheap Kindle books on Amazon, where some people wrote up their own experiences with chelation. Example: "Getting the Mercury Out" by Aine Ni Cheallaigh. I think those books are better than reading forum posts because they are more complete, and the people writing them have actually had success, at least enough to warrant writing a (small) book.
If you go for forum posts, make sure the people have actually DONE what they are writing about. There are a lot of people who seem to be there just because they like to argue with someone, and I find that most of the time they use resources other than their own actual experiences (I accept experiences of practitioners of medicine). Also, they should have done this for a few YEARS - ignore posts from people who just started 4 months ago and claim success. Also ignore people who don't seem to have made significant progress after a few years.