Hi David:

On 2/20/2015 7:24 PM, Debra & David wrote:

Me...
Silvernitrate in trace quantities is no problem. Even in strong doses it has 
been used in medicine.
Look up silvernitrate on Wikipedia. Anyway, my lack of concern was with compounds likely to be formed in filtered domestic tap water. (People have already been doing that for decades by the way, with no problems, argyria aside).


You also mentioned that silver compounds are still effective. While this is true, many of them have toxicity indices. However, there is one silver compound that does not have the same toxicity levels, and is far more effective than MSP, silver nitrate or silver chloride: silver citrate, which is very easy to make.

Regarding using salts: When you add salt to the water, the reason the solution can hold more silver is that salt changes the solubility. Seawater has about 35,000 PPM of salts, so you can easily (for example) create a silver solution in the hundreds.

I personally have no interest in silver compounds outside of EIS, but if I were going to take mega doses of concentrated silver, it wouldn't be unknown compounds with limited effectiveness made from tap water, it would most certainly be silver citrate.

~Jason


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