F O R E W O R D
A Foreword by Dr. Robert L. Bard
For decades, my work as a cancer imaging specialist has placed me face-to-face with the consequences of occupational exposure. Firefighters, military veterans, law enforcement officers, industrial workers, and first responders walk into my office carrying more than symptoms—they carry histories. Histories of smoke, chemicals, metals, particulates, fuels, solvents, and environments that the human body was never designed to withstand.
I have spent years scanning for
cancer—breast, thyroid, prostate, liver, lymphatic disease—and for inflammatory
conditions that often precede malignancy. In that process, I have met hundreds
of first responders who did everything right on the job, yet were never warned
about the long-term biological cost of service. What has become increasingly
clear to me—especially over the past year—is that heavy metal toxicity is
the next sensible, unavoidable frontier in occupational medicine.
Through the growth and application of DetoxScan.org, we have been able to evaluate individuals who appear “clinically normal” on the surface, yet demonstrate alarming internal burdens of mercury, lead, cadmium, arsenic, aluminum, and other metals. These findings are not isolated. They are patterned. And they correlate strongly with occupational exposure narratives I hear every day.
From Camp Lejeune veterans
exposed to contaminated water, to burn-pit exposure in Iraq and Afghanistan, to
Vietnam-era Agent Orange, to firefighters working plastics-heavy modern
fires and Ground Zero responders from 9/11—one recurring pathogenic thread
emerges: metals that accumulate silently and persist for decades.
Heavy metals are not benign. They
are neurotoxins, endocrine disruptors, mitochondrial poisons, and immune
modulators. Clinically, they are associated with chronic fatigue, cognitive
decline, tremors, neuropathy, thyroid dysfunction, cardiovascular disease,
autoimmune disorders, infertility, mood disturbances, and increased cancer
susceptibility. These are not abstract theories—they are findings we see
repeatedly when exposure history is paired with modern screening.
What has changed—and what gives me great optimism—is access to non-invasive screening technologies, including spectrophotometry and light-based tissue analysis. These tools allow us to assess metal burden safely, rapidly, and without radiation or invasive sampling. When paired with diagnostic imaging, laboratory studies, and clinical history, they expand our investigative lens dramatically.
As a self-described cancer
detective, I can say this plainly: these technologies don’t just give us
answers—they teach us which questions to ask next. They help connect
unexplained inflammation, metabolic dysfunction, and neurological symptoms to
tangible, measurable causes.
Early cancer detection saved
countless lives. I believe early toxic burden detection will do the
same. If we truly want to protect those who protect us, this is the battle we
must now fight—with vigilance, intelligence, and better tools than ever before.
FEATURE STORY
How
A 9/11 Firefighter Turned A Simple Screening into Toxic Exposure Awareness.
By DetoxScan Editorial team
11/20/2025- When retired firefighter Sal “Cousin Sal” Banchitta felt a small lump beneath the skin of his chest, he didn’t wait, minimize, or rationalize it. He picked up the phone. After more than two decades in the fire service—including responding to the 9/11 World Trade Center attacks—Sal knew the silent dangers of occupational exposure. Cancer doesn’t always announce itself loudly. Sometimes it whispers.“I’ve lost too many brothers to assume anything is harmless,” he said. “We weren’t trained to panic—we were trained to act.”
That philosophy brought him to BardDiagnostics, the New York–based medical imaging practice led by Dr. Robert L. Bard, a pioneer in advanced cancer detection and environmental exposure screening. Dr. Bard’s work has become especially relevant to firefighters, veterans, industrial workers, and others with prolonged toxic exposure histories.
Sal expected a quick scan to rule out breast cancer. Instead, he received what both men jokingly called “The Works”—a comprehensive diagnostic and toxic-exposure evaluation that would reinforce just how important proactive screening truly is.
Awareness Starts With Understanding the Risk
Although male breast cancer represents less than 1% of all breast cancer diagnoses, firefighters face elevated risks due to carcinogens released during structural fires—burning plastics, diesel exhaust, heavy metals, PFAS chemicals, cleaning agents, and toxic dust. Research continues to show increased rates of thyroid cancer, prostate cancer, melanoma, lymphoma, and gastrointestinal cancers among firefighters—often appearing years or decades after service.Sal credits the Male Breast Cancer Global Alliance for his awareness. Their national presentations emphasize that men can and do get breast cancer, and early detection dramatically improves survival. “Men don’t check, men don’t ask, and men don’t talk about it,” Sal said. “We’ve got to change that.”
A Next-Level Diagnostic Experience
Upon arrival, Dr. Bard conducted a targeted chest ultrasound—the imaging gold standard for evaluating masses, cysts, and tissue abnormalities in both men and women. Ultrasound is non-radiating, highly accurate, immediate, and ideal for dense or uneven tissue structures.But Dr. Bard didn’t stop there. Given Sal’s long history of fire service, 9/11 exposure, and environmental contact, Dr. Bard recommended a broader scan:
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Chest and breast ultrasound
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Thyroid imaging—given increased cancer rates among firefighters
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Liver evaluation—often affected by toxins, medications, and inflammation
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Lymphatic assessment
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Heavy metal and mineral screening using non-invasive technology, including the OligoScan(tm)
“Cancer is important to rule out,” Dr. Bard explained, “but firefighters may have multiple simultaneous risks. Our job is not just to search for disease—but for patterns, causes, and preventable dangers.”
The lump turned out to be a benign cyst, resting just beneath the skin—noncancerous, with no irregular vascularity, calcifications, or malignant patterns. Still, Dr. Bard advised monitoring over time, reinforcing the medical rule: every unexplained mass deserves follow-up.
HEAVY METAL SCREENING AND WHAT IT MEANS
To support tissue recovery and inflammation reduction, Dr. Bard applied a near-infrared therapeutic device, an increasingly recognized modality for circulation and cellular repair. But the most unexpected finding came from Sal’s toxic exposure evaluation—extremely high mercury levels. “You don’t walk out of a burning building clean,” Dr. Bard noted. “Toxins accumulate. They store. They reveal themselves later.”
Mercury, a potent neurotoxin, has been linked to:
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Memory issues
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Fatigue and sleep disruption
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Mood changes
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Tremors and neurological changes
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Thyroid dysfunction
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Cardiovascular effects
Sal now has a roadmap: follow-up testing, detox evaluation, dental consultation, and clinical monitoring—information he never would have discovered without going in for that lump.
“I walked in thinking one thing,” Sal said. “I walked out realizing there’s a bigger story about my health. And now I can do something about it.”
Why Firefighters Must Lead the Prevention Movement
Firefighters often embody the cultural mindset of endurance—push through, stay strong, don’t complain. Many delay medical care until symptoms become unmanageable. But Sal argues that bravery must evolve. “We risked everything for strangers. The least we can do is book a screening for ourselves.”
Today’s fire service health recommendations increasingly encourage:
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Annual full-body skin exams
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Breast/chest screening and ultrasound
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Colon and prostate testing per age and risk level
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Thyroid function labs and imaging
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Liver health assessments
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Heavy metal and toxin evaluation
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Cardiovascular screening
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Mental health support and monitoring
Early detection doesn’t just save lives—it preserves careers, families, and futures.
Who Is “Cousin” Sal Banchitta?
To firehouses across America, Sal isn’t just Sal—he’s “Cousin Sal.” A storyteller, bridge-builder, and unapologetic truth-teller, he has become a recognizable public advocate for first responder health.A 9/11 first responder, survivor, and retired New York firefighter, Sal now travels nationwide speaking about toxic exposures, cancer risks, medical screening, and the human cost of service. He is a prominent voice for F.A.C.E.S. — Firefighters Against Cancers & Exposures, a national outreach program of the AngioInstitute, dedicated to education, prevention, and life-saving diagnostic access.
Through his public platform CousinSal.org, Sal brings humor, urgency, relatability, and compassion to conversations many firefighters avoid—until it’s too late. “We spent years saving others. Now it’s time to save ourselves—and each other,” he says.
The Takeaway: DON'T WAIT!
Sal’s appointment serves as a blueprint for every firefighter, veteran, industrial worker, or high-exposure professional:
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If something feels wrong, get checked.
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If nothing feels wrong, get checked anyway.
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Early detection is not luck—it’s a choice.
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One appointment can change the rest of your life.
His story isn’t extraordinary—it’s instructive. A simple scan ruled out cancer, revealed hidden risks, and empowered preventive action. Multiply that by thousands, and lives will be saved.
“Health is not a guarantee,” Sal said. “It’s a responsibility.”









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