Thank you -- this is awesome!

Lisa

-----Original Message-----
From: Alchemysa [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, July 12, 2010 3:29 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: CS>8 myths about CS.

Something I saved a while back. Might have appeared here before...  
but worth repeating occassionaly.

David



8 Prevalent Myths and Misconceptions About Colloidal Silver



Myth #1: Children are being harmed by colloidal silver

In June of this year, the Friends of the Earth environmentalist group  
came out with their new position paper calling for a total ban on the  
over-the-counter sales of colloidal silver products as well as EPA  
regulation of all products using silver as an antimicrobial agent.  
And why? Because, they claimed, the proliferation of silver-based  
antimicrobial products is depriving children of coming into contact  
with the requisite number of pathogens needed to stimulate their tiny  
immune systems.

Of course, it's an unbelievable claim at face value. After all,  
little kids eat dirt. They roll around in the grass and dirt all day,  
throw mud balls at each other, play baseball in empty lots, climb  
trees, swim in lakes and rivers, play on dirty floors, climb into  
dumpsters in search of "treasure," and do all of the things needed to  
put them into contact with hundreds of billions of microorganisms  
every single day of their lives. Yet the Friends of the Earth -- with  
a straight face, mind you -- presented as a reason to ban colloidal  
silver and other silver-based products the idea that kids' immune  
systems were being developmentally deprived thanks to the  
proliferation of so many silver-based products. And this new myth is  
now being picked up in forums across the internet, and used as  
"evidence" that colloidal silver is harmful. Clearly, these guys at  
the Friends of the Earth have never had children.

Myth #2: Colloidal silver has been "banned by the FDA"

Recently we also saw an MSNBC news article written by reporter Mike  
Celizic which declared that the FDA had "banned colloidal silver"  
back in 1999. Of course, nothing could be further from the truth.  
What the FDA did was prohibit colloidal silver vendors from labeling  
their product as a "natural antibiotic" and restrict colloidal silver  
advertisers from talking about its powerful antimicrobial qualities  
in advertisements.

This restrictive action, of course, led to more public interest in  
colloidal silver than it had ever enjoyed in its entire 100 year  
history, and propelled colloidal silver into one of the most popular  
nutritional supplements of all times. Celizic's erroneous contention,  
however, has now been picked up by other writers and spread across a  
variety of internet forums where it is being used by opponents of  
natural health to convince people not to use colloidal silver because  
it's been "banned by the FDA."

Myth #3: Colloidal silver causes a "cytokine storm"

Next, we had a famous internet doctor claim that colloidal silver  
could cause a potentially deadly "cytokine storm" (massive  
inflammation) in the lungs of even healthy individuals. The doctor  
presented no evidence whatsoever for his claim. And a quick search of  
the available medical data demonstrated that the only significant  
research done on colloidal silver and cytokines showed that silver  
actually modifies cytokine expression and reduces inflammation. The  
authors of the medical study even stated that colloidal silver should  
be further investigated as a potential treatment for the massive  
inflammation caused by the "cytokine storm" phenomena. The famous  
internet doctor later removed the erroneous statement from his web  
site, but not before other writers spread it all over the internet as  
"evidence" that colloidal silver usage can have potentially "deadly"  
consequences.

Myth #4: Colloidal silver harms human cells

We also recently saw the old "colloidal silver harms human cells"  
myth being dredged up again. Once more, the culprit was the  
environmental group Friends of the Earth, which erroneously  
attributes medical research demonstrating that silver damages  
bacterial cells (i.e., e. coli cells) as evidence that silver damages  
human cells. Of course, they can't explain how Dr. Robert O. Becker  
of Syracuse Medical University was able to conduct all of those now  
famous in vivo (i.e., in the body) medical studies on human subjects,  
in which he used an electronic device to drive billions of tiny  
silver particles deep into the infected tissue and bone of  
"incurable" victims of osteomyelitis, and managed to cure every one  
of them without causing any harm whatsoever to their cells or tissues.

Certain other internet writers have also misinterpreted a recent test  
tube study demonstrating that high levels of silver in the blood  
stream could harm certain human cells. The levels of silver used in  
these lab tests would have been the equivalent of 15 ppm in the human  
blood stream - a level you couldn't reach without drinking gallons of  
a standard colloidal silver solution.

Myth #5: Colloidal silver causes hardening of the arteries

Honestly, I don't know where in the world this one came from. But  
suddenly it's cropping up on web sites all over the place, with no  
documentation whatsoever to back it up. As usual, it appears that one  
writer is simply quoting another, who is then quoted by another and  
another, until a complete fallacy becomes "reality." Several weeks  
ago I googled "colloidal silver and hardening of the arteries" and  
"colloidal silver and arteriosclerosis" and searched for several  
hours. I couldn't find a single solid piece of medical documentation  
for the claim that colloidal silver causes hardening of the arteries,  
except for the regurgitated and unattributed claims in those articles.

I also searched the various medical science news sites (even the ones  
that are routinely critical of silver) and couldn't find any  
references to it causing artery problems. What's more, I hired a  
pharmaceutical consultant to track down the origin of this growing  
myth. He searched the PubMed database and other key medical study  
databases, and could find absolutely nothing indicating any negative  
connection between colloidal silver and arteriosclerosis, or  
hardening of the arteries. We did find a recent study published in  
the prestigious medical science journal ACS Nano, demonstrating that  
silver stops red blood cells from clumping, which would help prevent  
heart attacks and strokes rather than cause them. So at this point my  
conclusion is that someone just made up the claim out of whole cloth,  
and it is getting passed around the internet by people too lazy to do  
any fact-checking or to demand documentation.

Myth #6: Colloidal silver causes harm to kidneys

This pervasive myth, along with Myth #7 below, is being cited in a  
variety of news articles on the internet, as well as by environmental  
groups like Friends of the Earth that are working to force the EPA to  
regulate colloidal silver products as "pesticides." Both of these  
myths are unfounded. As Dr. Gary Connett wrote in the prestigious  
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine in 2007, "Case reports have  
described possible nephrotoxicity and neurotoxicity, but these have  
not been substantiated by studies in animal models." (See J R Soc Med  
2008: 101: S51-S52. DOI 10.1258/jrsm.2008.s18012.) In other words,  
doctors have speculated that silver usage has caused harm to human  
kidneys and the human nervous system based on individual case  
reports, but that speculation has not been proven to be true when  
silver is actually tested. Silver given to animals during medical  
studies has shown no significant harm to the kidneys, liver or  
nervous system of the animals. Neither could it be definitively  
demonstrated that silver was the actual culprit in the few individual  
human cases that led doctors to speculate that silver may have  
nephrotoxic or neurotoxic properties. In short, there is no  
significant evidence that silver harms the liver or the nervous system.

Myth #7: Colloidal silver causes harm to the nervous system

See Myth #6 above. Again, numerous internet "news" reports cite this  
myth, but there are to date no studies proving it. It is all based  
upon speculation, from a few single cases in which doctors made  
assumptions that later could not be proven to be true in animal studies.

According to a study titled "Critical Observations on the  
Neurotoxicity of Silver," published in Critical Review of Toxicology  
(2007;37:237-50) "Although silver is metabolized throughout the soft  
tissues, available evidence from experimental animal studies and  
human clinical reports has failed to unequivocally establish that it  
enters tissues of the central nervous system or is a cause of  
neurotoxic damage...No evidence is available to demonstrate the toxic  
risk of silver to the peripheral nervous system...Transitory silver  
sulfide deposits seen in the tissues of the blood-brain and blood-CSF  
barriers are mostly lysosomally bound or deposited on basement  
membranes or collagen without toxic effect. Silver is mostly excreted  
from the body in the urine and feces." In other words, in animal  
studies and human clinical reports, there is no evidence that silver  
causes harm to the human nervous system.

Myth #8: Colloidal silver causes cancer

This myth is being promulgated chiefly by one of those fake internet  
"doctors" who is pushing high-dose vitamin C therapy to help prevent  
infections. Now, I'm not against high-dose vitamin C therapy, but I  
am against people pretending to be doctors when they're not. And I'm  
certainly against people who promulgate outright lies, such as the  
lie that colloidal silver causes cancer. This myth originally  
circulated in the 1970's after some scientists surgically implanted  
silver discs under the skin of animals, and saw that sarcomas (soft  
tissue cancer tumors) later developed. So they announced to the world  
that silver causes cancer. Later, when more level-headed researchers  
looked into the situation, they discovered that just about anything  
surgically implanted under the skin would induce sarcomas, i.e.,  
glass, plastic, ivory, wood, etc. This is due to a phenomena called  
"solid state carcinogenesis." In other words, it wasn't the silver at  
all, but the normal effect of just about anything being implanted  
directly under the surface of the skin.

The Environmental Protection Agency later jumped into the fray,  
looking for another reason to regulate silver, but after reviewing  
the existing medical and scientific documentation the agency had to  
conclude, "No evidence of cancer in humans has been reported despite  
frequent therapeutic use of the compound [i.e., silver] over the  
years." In other words, there are no cases of colloidal silver- 
induced cancers reported in the medical or scientific literature.  
Quite the contrary, researchers Furst and Schlauder later conducted  
animal studies designed to avoid the possibility of solid state  
carcinogenesis. They found that even when relatively high amounts of  
silver were injected intramuscularly once a month into rats it did  
not induce cancer.


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