Hi,

I¹ve read over the years that dry eyes are a Vit. A deficiency.  I take
25,000 IU, natural only.

The active ingredient in Manuka honey is hydrogen peroxide, depending on the
strength/price.  It has even been used in udder infusions to counter
infection.   I also know a lady who had a bovine with mastitis who cut to
the chase and used 1 part food grade hydrogen peroxide to 10 parts distilled
water and said it worked.

There was a most interesting combination of Vit. C and DMSO, not sure of
other ingredients, for cataracts.  It probably worked but the Vit. C
overcame the DMSO after awhile and made the DMSO ineffective.  The solution
surely could have been two bottles with those two ingredients separated
until time to use them.  But, in my opinion, no cures wanted!

Jean

*****************
rom:  Roger Barker <[email protected]>
Reply-To:  <[email protected]>
Date:  Thursday, January 5, 2017 at 10:22 PM
To:  <[email protected]>
Subject:  Re: CS>Eye infection problem
Resent-From:  <[email protected]>
Resent-Date:  Thu,  5 Jan 2017 20:22:35 -0800 (PST)

Hi Léna, Manuka plant and honey is certainly well know around here but as
you say too expensive to put in tea. Useful for may ailments and becoming
very 
popular. Can't say I ever used Optimel but would gladly use Manuka and it's
good to hear of your success. I have a local friend who's coming up for
cataract surgery in the new year so will mention the honey to him along with
the MSM.

Cheers,  Roger B
nz  

>> 
> 
Hi Neville and Roger,

My CS was generated with a SilverPuppy, so it's both CS and Ionic, but I
really think either would do it. You need very little DMSO to carry the CS
where it's needed, and as the infected began on the surface, rather than the
deep, internal issues of uveitis, probably isn't as necessary.

I have Fuch's endothelial dystrophy (genetic) that my ctract surgeon was
concerned would become jeopardized with the energies used to break up
cataracts. the Fuch's cells were affected somewhat and for a very tense
time, I had an appointment for a partial corneal transplant looming if they
didn't settle down. I heard of drops developed in NZ called Optimel, and
because my window of time was too short to even begin to get script, appt.
etc to have that sent me in the states, I again improvised, adding some
Manuka Honey to the mix (that was the chief ingredient in Optimel) after the
prescribed saline didn't help much at all. My mix helped noticeably, within
half an hour. Manuka helps normalize he fluids in the endothlal layer, both
removing excess fluid bogginess in the fuch's cells and also fixing dry-eye.
I'm telling you this because you had nz after your name, so perhaps you
could look into Optimel.

Manuka is a strange and wonderful honey, pricey and intense and not
something you'd squander on tea, but it's even been know to heal serious
wounds like MRSA, and flesh-eating bacteria, so it might be something to
consider. Be warned, the mix stung stung for 20 seconds! But they'd warned
in the article about Optimel, that it stung, so in a way, that was
reassuring. 
Now, when I get cloudy Fuch's days, I use my mix successfully. I make a new
batch whenever the problem arises to avoid contamination, and if it's weak
and doesn't sting, I add a bit more Manuka! My cataract surgeon is
delighted, especially when we both realized that for a person with chronic
Lyme disease, the anti-rejection meds required after a partial corneal
transplant would be impossible: thus NO transplant option for me.

All of this is strictly Lymie lab-rat, set-of-the-pants, desperation-trial
stuff, but it HAS worked in my case. The biggest challenge is the allopathic
docs who are unfamiliar with some remedies found outside the box.

Be well,
Léna