Zinc and copper kills germs just like silver does, but both are also
micro-nutrients that become toxic in too high amounts, whereas silver has
no nutritional function in the body and is therefore not toxic.

Ode

On Sun, Apr 5, 2020 at 12:13 AM Dan Nave <[email protected]> wrote:

> "A South Korean research paper has demonstrated in Vitro that by
> increasing the Zinc concentration in cellular cytoplasm, that viral
> replication is inhibited. As intracellular levels of Zinc are increased the
> inhibition of viral replication can reach 100% according to charts within
> the paper. The researchers used two antimalarial drugs which are
> Ionophores. Ionophores are molecules that can carry a charged ion like Zinc
> across a cellular membrane. South Korea has been treating high risk,
> Critically I’ll COVID-19 patients with the drug Hydroxychloroquine. It is
> likely the single clinical reason that South Korea has the lowest death
> rate in the world for COVID-19 victims of 0.6% Hydroxychloroquine is a
> pharmaceutical drug that requires a prescription. However there is a
> nutritional supplement called Quercetin that is a Zinc Chelator and
> Ionophore and requires no prescription. It’s interesting that there has
> been a great deal of research done on the ability of Elderberries as and
> antiviral agent. And Elderberries, Red Wine and Blueberries all three have
> high amounts of Quercetin. It may be likely that the high Quercetin content
> of these foods is the reason for their measurable anti-viral properties. So
> what would be better than supplementing Zinc and Quercetin together to
> elevate intracellular Zinc levels in order to inhibit viral replication?
> Since there have been no Clinical Trials of this supplement regimen then
> dosages are your best guess. But even increasing Zinc to levels that result
> in a thirty percent inhibition seems like a major advantage to the patient,
> and may be enough to tip the struggle in your favour."
>
> https://nutritionalpharmacology.wordpress.com/2020/03/21/combating-covid-19-with-zinc-and-quercetin/
>
>
> Although they recommend taking some zinc to get your levels up, they don't
> recommend taking the quercetin along with it until you feel you have some
> symptoms of, or exposure to, COVID-19.
>
>