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Everyone throws the word "toxins" around now, referring to food based as well as environmental sources. For example, I was telling someone about how I enjoy eating liver, especially because it's one of the most nutritious foods per gram in the world. Their response? "It's also one of the most toxic." All kinds of people recommend a variety of foods because they have less "toxins", from vegans to zero-carb paleos, to everyday standard-American-dieters.

This question asks what people do to avoid them, but I'd like to more about them in general.

So, from a Paleo perspective, what is your take on toxins? Which ones are the worst, and importantly, why should we worry about them? Which ones aren't really a problem? I think a list with some hard science evidence would a great resource for Paleo beginners and the community in general, since it seems to be a very important part of the diet and lifestyle.

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Great question. Here's a great, timely, blog posting... blog.cholesterol-and-health.com – wjones3044 Dec 31 2010 at 0:02
I'll tackle a comprehensive answer this weekend... – Stephen-Aegis Jan 20 2011 at 23:51

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I avoid the following toxins: gluten, linoleic acid, fructose, ethanol, lectins, aflatoxins, acrylamides, BPA, chlorine, parabens, sulphates, perfluorooctanoic acids, nitrates/nitrites, fluoride, VOCs, radon, pesticides

I still consume: oxalates, glycoalkaloids

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what about methyl-parabens in blueberries as a toxin? It is certainly a xenoestrogen. BTW: would you know what ALEs are and a good source primer on this topic. PALEOHACKS seems a little lacking in that area. – PersonMan May 21 2011 at 15:01
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I eat way too much fish and may end up with the toxin MERCURY in my brain!

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liver filters out the crap of an animals diet.

If that animal eats crap then the liver is most likely not going to be that good If you are eating liver from a grass fed animal, then eat away.

Liver is great, as well as bacon and chicken hearts.

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