CS and saline solutionsCS is an analgesic, an antiseptic, and it aids in the 
healing of damaged cells. It is the positive electrons (cations) that 
accomplish all three of these actions. 
In the case of pain, the (positive) cations inhibit the flow of the pain 
message (negative electrons) across pain junctures. CS stops pain. It does not 
cause pain.
Combining CS with other elements can render the CS ineffective and even 
dangerous. It loses its free cations as they combine with those other elements. 
CS should only be mixed with ultra pure or distilled water. 
One can put CS in an eye cup.  Tilt the head back and open and close the 
affected eye twice. Done a few times each day over the course of a day or two 
and this could make the eye feel and look better as well as counter an 
infection. There has been testimony re this effective method of use of CS on 
this forum.
I am not a doctor and I do not offer medical advice. --- Spiroflex
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lewis Ted (x5710) 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, December 11, 2000 4:33 PM
  Subject: CS and saline solutions


  Hi gang, 

  I seem to remember a discussion quite a while back about whether or not CS 
was effective when added to a saline solution (such as for use in the eyes, 
nose, etc.).  I don't remember the outcome of the thread...was it ok or not ok 
to combine CS and saline?  Does the saline reduce the effectiveness of the CS? 

  The reason: my 5-year old has had an ongoing bout with some type of eye 
infection.  We've given him an antibiotic eye drop, but it keeps coming back.  
I'd like to try CS eye drops to see if we could stop it, but I'm afraid 
straight CS might be too painful.  He's pretty squeamish and might not let me 
do it more than once.  (I'm assuming it would take multiple treatments.)  I'd 
like to prove to my family (and myself) that CS really works.

  Any thoughts or suggestions? 

  -Ted