I sent this message at 8:20 this morning -- but forgot to trim!!
____________________________________________________________________


Hey Ode!  Just catching up on email, and I read yours.  I don't always 
understand your posts, and maybe I'm not understanding your question here 
correctly -- but if I am, then the answer is yes.  My chiropractor routinely 
alters the chemistry of venom with electricity.  He has an electro-stim 
machine, which uses self-adhesive pads attached to wires attached to the 
machine -- through which electricity is conveyed to whatever spot on your 
body.  Typically, this machine is used to deep-stimulte muscles -- such as back 
muscles -- to get them to release from spasms.  But he also uses this machine 
on bites -- snake, brown recluse, tick, bee or wasp stings, etc. -- and it 
neutralizes the proteins/toxins of the venoms.  It works so well on tick bites, 
that I have begun to use my Godzilla to self-treat tick bites successfully.  
Think I'd still head for him if I got a brown recluse bite, though!
MA  




________________________________
From: Ode Coyote <odecoy...@windstream.net>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Wed, April 28, 2010 5:07:14 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Zapper



Next question:  Can venom be altered by altering the chemistry of the blood 
with an electrical current?
I'd say likely so.
Note that most "itch sticks" have ammonium as the base.. a caustic substance.
"Pee on jelly fish stings"..ammonium again.
Ammonium Hydroxide...Sodium Hydroxide.  Alkaline.