Hi Steve,

 

[Any suggestions for improvement?]

 

Yep I got one... what about "EIS produced by the accepted means/methods and 
practices today will *not* cause Argyria". 

 

or..."It is unknown, at the time of writing, if EIS taken in conjuction with 
particular supplements or other stuff could promote the incidence of *any* 
stage of Argyria".

 

N.

 


 


Date: Mon, 13 Jul 2009 16:25:54 -0500
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: CS>How to tell Stage I argyria from Stage III argyria



OK, so there is no argyria Stage I, II, III or IV  defined, but I would like to 
suggest that defining different stages of argyria would be much more useful 
than the single stage used today. I think that argyria is greatly under 
reported because a person has to turn nearly completely grey or blue for it to 
be reported as argyria. In actuality, once any of the visible tissues turns 
grey/blue that person has argyria and it is just a matter of how severe a case 
it is.

 I would like to suggest different stages, such as those used for cancer, to 
identify argyria and the extent of the argyria. The stages for cancer are (from 
Wikipedia):



Stage I cancers are localized to one part of the body. 
Stage II cancers are locally advanced. 
Stage III cancers are also locally advanced. Whether a cancer is designated as 
Stage II or Stage III can depend on the specific type of cancer; for example, 
in Hodgkin's Disease, Stage II indicates affected lymph nodes on only one side 
of the diaphragm, whereas Stage III indicates affected lymph nodes above and 
below the diaphragm. The specific criteria for Stages II and III therefore 
differ according to diagnosis. 
Stage IV cancers have often metastasized, or spread to other organs or 
throughout the body

How about something for argyria like: 


Stage I - Argyria is localized to light browning of the gums or light browning 
of the skin exposed to sunlight 
Stage II - Argyria is localized to fingernails or a slight coloring of the 
eyes. 
Stage III - Argyria is also localized to the face and neck as a blue/grey color 
or a significant darkening of eyes.
Stage IV - Argyria is generally spread throughout the body or a near or total 
darkening of eyes.

The stages I suggest may not be the best. From what I have read, it may be 
difficult to determine a Stage I condition. Plus, I tried to cover the coloring 
of the eyes (ocular argyrosis) in the proposed stages. Maybe the eyes should be 
separate.

Does anyone else think that this might be better than the current single 
declaration of argyria? Any suggestions for improvement?

Thanks, 
     Steve N 

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