Dear Brooks,

Thank you SO much for your response. This was exactly the
information/opinion/experience I was looking for.

 

I have been using DMSO sporadically for aching muscles and will start
experimenting with EIS, in the proportions you used.

 

My gratitude,

Nenah

 

Nenah Sylver, PhD

author: The Rife Handbook of Frequency Therapy (2009),

now available in HARDCOVER

& The Holistic Handbook of Sauna Therapy

 <http://www.nenahsylver.com> www.nenahsylver.com 

  _____  

From: Brooks Bradley [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2009 1:51 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [RE]CS>microbes resistant to silver:Comment

 

Dear Nenah, 
We have not evaluated EIS against the bacterial agents referenced by your
colleague.... in any isolated environemnt, specifically designed to measure
toxicity. However, we have found that combining EIS with DMSO, has
demonstrated 
to"greatly increase effectivity"......sometimes by an
order-of-magnitude------against a multiplicity of bacterial pathogens, both
in vitro and in vivo. 
It is my belief that very few, IF ANY, bacteria relying upon protein shields
(or any tissue-based isolation medium) to bind or block the EIS
component...are able to do so in the presence of EIS entrained in a weak
(e.g. 10% ) DMSO solution. In past research evaluations we discovered that
MANY conditions which served to greatly lower or prevent the effective
intervention of EIS against pathogens (mucous isolation, some epithelial
tissue interferences and even dead-tissue debris fields), were easily
overcome through the addition of DMSO as an entrainment/transport medium.
Our first successes with such protocols came circa 1996---- 
when we prosecuted our earliest evaluations of the airbrush system as a
successful intervention against double, bi-lateral, viral pneumonia [at
which time there was NO known treatment of effective nature). 
We DID encounter circumstances in which applying EIS to in vitro colonies of
pathogens were...initially....unsuccessful-----but when the EIS solution was
mixed with a companion DMSO (10% by volume) and reapplied......complete
control resulted in less than 
6 minutes in most cases----and in 10 minutes in 95% of the cases. This
result presented 
against EVERY bacteria we confronted in these evaluations. 
As a postscript I might add that at that time (circa 1996-98) we encountered
only one bacteria which successfully resisted EIS....after experiencing
actual physical contact. The bacteria (which name escapes my memory, but can
be supplied if someone wants to put me "on-the-rack") was one found in
silver mines proper. Interestingly, after 9 generations of isolation from
the silver-impregnated environment of the mines, themselves-----the bacteria
LOST its tolerance against EIS. 
With Warmest Regards, Brooks.