IV was the original route when CS was first introduced.

Perhaps adding 10% DMSO and using ear drops...

Jim
james-osbourne: holmes II
Red Pill Media

On Fri, Apr 22, 2016 at 4:03 PM, cassidy <[email protected]> wrote:

> I don't know the answer to that but .. when you can -  go to
> www.silverpuppy.com   their silver machine is awesome and you can make
> your own silver to have when you need it.  In the meantime .. try a few
> drops of hydrogen peroxide in each ear.  Put the drops in - let it bubble
> for 5-10 min .. then go to other ear.  Also might try oil of oregano behind
> the ear.  and as always lots of vitamin C.  good luck.
>
> On 4/22/2016 4:58 PM, evelyn wrote:
>
> Hello -
>
> Has anyone heard of silver intraveneously?
>
> Does anyone know any doctors that do that?
>
> Does anyone know a good commercial brand of colloidal ilver that is not
> expensive?
>
> Thanks.  I still have the ear infection, which I think is mastoiditis.
> The pathogens have been identified as Klebsiells oxytoca, and citrobacter
> freundii complex.--- both anamolous for the ear (mid-ear.)
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 7, 2016 at 1:20 PM, Bill Kingsbury <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> FDA National Center for Toxicological Research
>> NCTR Publications > NCTR Research Highlights
>>
>> Current Highlight from April 1, 2016
>>
>>
>> http://www.fda.gov/AboutFDA/CentersOffices/OC/OfficeofScientificandMedicalPrograms/NCTR/WhatWeDo/NCTRPublications/ucm076767.htm
>>
>> Size- and Dose-Dependent Antiviral Effects of Silver Nanoparticles
>>
>> NCTR scientists have demonstrated both size- and dose-dependent antiviral
>> effects of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) in in vitro assays using feline
>> calicivirus (FCV) as a surrogate for human norovirus.  Treatment of
>> cultures with 10 nanometer (nm)-sized AgNPs (at doses of 50 and 100
>> micrograms per milliliter [µg/mL]) completely inactivated FCV within 2-4
>> hours of exposure, resulting in a decrease in the viral titer, an absence
>> of cytopathic effects in Crandell-Rees Feline Kidney cells, and a reduction
>> in viral capsid protein levels; whereas no effect was observed with 75 and
>> 110 nm-sized AgNPs.  The use of AgNPs as antibacterial agents has increased
>> in consumer-use products; however, its use as an antiviral agent is still
>> an area of active research.  This study is now available online at
>> Foodborne Pathogens and Disease:
>>
>> http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/fpd.2015.2054
>>
>> For additional information, please contact Sangeeta Khare, Ph.D.,
>> Division of Microbiology, FDA/NCTR.
>>
>> >>>
>>
>> Foodborne Pathogens and Disease - March 2016, ahead of print.
>>
>> Dose and Size-Dependent Antiviral Effects of Silver Nanoparticles on
>> Feline Calicivirus, a Human Norovirus Surrogate
>>
>> Aschalew Z. Bekele, Kuppan Gokulan, Katherine M. Williams, and Sangeeta
>> Khare
>>
>> ABSTRACT
>>
>> Objectives: Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) as antibacterial agents are
>> incorporated in many consumer products, while the use as antiviral agents
>> is an ongoing area of research. We evaluated the antiviral properties of
>> AgNPs of variable sizes (10, 75, and 110 nm) and doses (25, 50, and 100
>> µg/mL) at different contact time points against feline calicivirus (FCV), a
>> surrogate for norovirus.
>>
>> Materials and Methods: Antiviral effects of the AgNPs were determined by
>> comparing the infectivity of FCV, the appearance of cytopathic effects
>> (CPEs), and the integrity of the viral capsid protein in viral suspension
>> treated with AgNPs with the untreated controls.
>>
>> Results: The 10 nm AgNPs at 50 and 100 µg/mL concentrations inactivated
>> the FCV beyond the limit of detection, resulting in a decrease of up to 6.5
>> log10 viral titer, prevented development of CPEs, and reduction in the
>> western blot band signal of the viral capsid protein. No significant
>> antiviral effect was observed for the 75 and 110 nm AgNPs.
>>
>> Conclusions and Applications: These results demonstrate that the
>> antiviral effects of AgNPs are both size and dose dependent, thus potential
>> applications of AgNPs as antiviral agents to prevent contamination of
>> foodborne viruses need to consider size and dose effects.
>>
>> Copyright©2012 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. publishers.  All rights reserved,
>> USA and worldwide.
>>
>> http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/fpd.2015.2054
>>
>> >>>
>>
>> http://sci-hub.io/
>>
>> Download the PDF:
>>
>> "Dose and Size-Dependent Antiviral Effects of Silver Nanoparticles on
>> Feline Calicivirus"
>>
>> http://moscow.sci-hub.io/89110c87b9fd1021ebae66d5b3d4f000/bekele2016.pdf
>>
>> ( Link may expire - if so, reenter the search. )
>>
>>
>> Bill
>>
>>
>> ..
>>
>>
>> --
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>>
>>
>>
>
>