gel memory foam mattress chemicals

gel memory foam mattress chemicals

gel memory foam mattress australia

Gel Memory Foam Mattress Chemicals

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Serta Motion Perfect III Adjustable Bases Denver Mattress is a Tempur-Pedic® Elite Retailer Doctor's Choice Elite Queen Mattress Sets $50 Off Select Factory Direct Mattresses All Denver Mattress Brand Mattresses On Sale! for a chance to win a $500 Gift Certificate. Wall to Wall Savings: 03/03/17 - 03/16/17 1No interest for 48 months on approved single or combined store purchases totaling $1199 or more of qualifying merchandise made between 03/03/17 and 03/16/17 on an open and current Furniture Row Credit Card issued by Capital One, N.A. Subject to credit approval; based on your creditworthiness.� Minimum purchase of $449 required to receive a no interest offer.� Length of repayment term and monthly payment will vary with purchase price.� Minimum repayment term: 18 months.� Minimum payments will never be less than $25, but may increase due to failure to make required payments or if late fees are assessed.� Purchase price will be divided into equal monthly payments.� Any remaining balance will be charged the standard APR 24.9%.�Penalty APR 28.9%.� Minimum




2If a product is not on a showroom floor it will be available to order at the advertised price while supplies last. Despite our best efforts, typographical and numerical errors in an ad will sometimes occur. We appreciate your understanding that we cannot be held liable for such errors and regret any inconvenience this causes our valued customers. NOTE: The Furniture Row card is offered and administered by Capital One, N.A. You are on Capital One, N.A. web site throughout the application process and Capital One, N.A. Privacy Statement, and Web Site Terms and Conditions apply. Special Financing up to 4 Years1Promo lengths over 24 months available in store only. Don't have a Furniture Row® Credit Card? Apply in just minutes. We offer a wide range of financing options to fit any budget. Financing available with approved credit.susan greenfield and her girlfriend Llina Kempner couldn't wait for their new memory-foam mattress top to arrive. For months, they'd heard friends rave about how the high-tech material molds itself to your body.




But when they unwrapped the three-inch-thick pad in their Manhattan apartment, they noticed a strong, acrid odor. "My nose and my lungs were miserable," recalls Greenfield. For the two nights Kempner slept on the mattress top, she felt nauseated. After Greenfield, who is chemically sensitive, had an asthma attack in the middle of the night, the couple returned the mattress pad. But its stench lingered in the apartment for weeks.Reactions like Greenfield's are relatively rare, but you, too, might lose some sleep when you find out what's really inside your mattress—memory foam or not. The place where you spend one-third of your life is chock-full of synthetic materials, some potentially toxic. Since the mid- to late '60s, most mattresses have been made of polyurethane foam, a petroleum-based material that emits volatile organic compounds that can cause respiratory problems and skin irritation. Formaldehyde, which is used to make one of the adhesives that hold mattresses together, has been linked to asthma, allergies, and lung, nose, and throat cancers.




And then there are cotton pesticides and flame-retardant chemicals, which can cause cancer and nervous-system disorders. In 2005, Walter Bader, owner of the "green mattress" company Lifekind and author of the book Toxic Bedrooms, sent several mattresses to an Atlanta-based lab. A memory-foam model was found to emit 61 chemicals, including the carcinogens benzene and naphthalene. There is no proven health risk from the substances in mattresses, however, mostly because tracking their long-term effects is virtually impossible. Heather Stapleton, an environmental chemist at Duke University, says there's simply not enough data to determine whether low levels of these chemicals will eventually make people sick. "It's the dose that makes the poison," she says. "If they're not getting out, maybe it's not a problem—but we don't know. There are plenty of lab studies that show that these compounds are harmful. It's just a question of what levels people are exposed to." Still, more and more consumers are seeking out mattresses made of natural latex, organic cotton batting, and organic wool.




Sales of California-based Vivètique's latex mattresses have increased by 40 percent annually for the past five years—they now comprise 45 percent of the company's total sales. And they are even sold by discounter 1-800-Mattress. It's hard to say whether you should ditch your conventional bed in favor of a green one, since you'll likely have a tough time figuring out exactly which toxins are lurking under your covers. Take, for example, fireproofing chemicals: Pentabde, a member of the polybrominated diphenyl ether (pbde) family of flame retardants, was used in some mattresses before 2004, when it was phased out. (Pentabde is now known to be toxic to the liver, thyroid, and nervous system.) So let's say that just to be on the safe side you toss your pre-2004 mattress and buy a new one. Last July, the Consumer Product Safety Commission began to require that all mattresses sold in the United States be able to withstand 30 minutes of exposure to an open flame. Mattress makers aren't using Pentabde anymore—but it's not clear exactly what they are using to meet the new standard.




Major manufacturers such as Simmons, Sealy, and Tempur-Pedic won't divulge their flame-retardant formulas, which are considered trade secrets. A Simmons press release touts a "proprietary blend of char-forming, intumescing, flame-resistant components." Tempur-Pedic vaguely states that its products "consistently meet all safety standards." A best guess at what's in today's mattresses comes from Ryan Trainer, executive vice president of the International Sleep Products Association, an industry group. He says most companies use "various types of barrier fabrics" such as cotton treated with boric acid or rayon treated with silica—both relatively benign chemicals—as well as fire-resistant materials such as modacrylic fiber (which contains antimony oxide, a carcinogen) and melamine resin (which contains formaldehyde). With a doctor's prescription, people who are chemically sensitive and have allergies can order a mattress that doesn't pass a flammability test. But organic-mattress companies have found a simple way to fireproof: wrapping their bedding in a layer of wool.

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