Katarina Wittich wrote:

> Hey Marshall,
> This is very interesting.
> But how do you explain Brooks Bradley's work with dogs which showed that 75
> percent of their beneficial flora was wiped out by daily doses of CS -- I
> think equivalent to 2 ounces a day for humans?
> His is the only actual testing I've heard of of the effect of CS on
> beneficial flora in living beings.
> Do you know of any other?
> Thanks,
> Katarina

When the silver particles contact bacteria they are killed.  So we are looking 
at
the probability they will come in contact. 2 oz a day equivalent would likely 
kill
+99.99% of the bacteria in the blood stream, so if it killed 75% in the 
intestinal
tract then that would indicate that it was more than 2500 times less effective 
in
the intestinal tract (as a first order approximation).  Of course this also 
includes
the different concentrations between the two, which I do not have a handle on.  
So
this is consistant with our analyzis.

The point is this.  The bacteria in the intestines are not killed as easily as 
those
in the blood stream for some reason.  We have lots of people taking CS daily,
including everyone in my family without any intestinal or digestion problems.  
Why
is this so?  There are three theories I am aware of:

1. Good bacteria are not killed by CS.  I know this is false because the 
testing we
had done at UT indicates that they are killed by CS.
2. All or most of the CS is absorbed into the blood stream before reaching the
intestines.  This may well be true, I know of no actual tests that have been
preformed to test this.  We have not done any tests on this theory and it may 
or may
not be a significant factor.
3. That CS is less effective if in a solid or semisolid nutrient, instead of a
liquid.  This theory came out of our testing when one of the methods used a gel
instead of a broth for incubation, and we found very little inhibitatation of 
the
growth.  At first we thought that something was wrong with the experiment, and 
did
it several times over until we suddenly realize that this could explain why the
intestinal flora is not killed out.  Going back to how the positively charge 
silver
must move around (or the bacteria must move around) so they come in contact then
made it obvious why the effectiveness is reduced (but not completely to 0) for
colloidal silver in non-liquid mediums.

Marshall


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