Priceless. Thanks very much. BTW, ascorbic acid powder is by far the
cheapest form, so the recipe for sodium ascorbate would seem to be
worth quite a financial savings to those who follow this advice.
On Friday, Nov 7, 2008, at 08:49 Asia/Tokyo, Brooks Bradley wrote:
For interested parties on the list that may not
know where to begin....to familiarize themselves, somewhat, with the
Work of Dr. F. Klenner, this introduction to some of his early
works----might be illuminating. (see url at bottom of page).
Dr. Robert F. Cathcart. M.D., has been most
successful in his Vitamin C protocol developments.
Try Http//WWW.orthomed.com/titrate.htm for some
interesting commentary on addressing clinical/sub-clinical scurvy.
Few members of the general public realize how very prevalent low
systemic levels of vitamin C are presenting among them. Also, it is
useful to note that one should be quite explicit as to what "type" of
ascorbate (e.g. sodium ascorbate, ascorbic acid, calcium ascorbate,
etc.). This will mitigate against misunderstandings by persons with
whom you may be in contact.
One additional comment: At present, there are an increasing
number of individuals using ascorbic acid powder and solutions as a
direct nasal spray......in address to various sinus presentations.
Our research STRONGLY INDICATES such a protocol
will cause damage to the mucous membranes (at least this has proven
the case in our experimental research). The simple solution is to use
either powdered sodium ascorbate "snuffed", or a buffered solution of
acorbic acid powder mixed with enough sodium bicarbonate to yield a
near neutral ph. This is quite simple in reality.......one can place
1 level teaspoon of ascorbic acid powder/crystals in about 3 ounces
of water and add about 1/2 teaspoon of common baking soda (sodium
bicarbonate) and stir well. The parent mixture will, immediately,
become sodium ascorbate-----one of the ideal forms of ascorbate to
ingest. Such a mixture has demonstrated to never
cause any untoward effects in any of our experimental
volunteers.......all epithelial tissues are quite accepting, and no
damage has ever been evident. Sincerely, Brooks
Bradley
p.s. Sodium ascorbate is several thousand percent MORE absorbable by
human tissue.....than is ascorbic acid...and it IS NOT a tissue
burner.
Http://www.seanet.com/~alexs/ascorbate/198x/smith-lh-
clinical_guide_1988.htm
Another excellent source of Vitamin C information is
Http//www.vitamincfoundation.org
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