I don't believe so for several reasons.

Taking 15 to 30 mg of the colloid would be only 1-2 drops a day.

Normally when measuring a medicine, solids are measured in mg, and liquids in 
ml.

The article says: "daily dosage of 15 mg of gold ", not "gold colloid" at one 
place
for a prior study.

In the rhumatism article below it says "30 mg of colloidal metallic gold daily",
which I interpret as meaning there is 30 mg of metallic gold.

However I must agree that the report is extremely sloppy, seeming swapping
colloidal gold for gold at random, whereas there is a 1000 to one difference in 
the
concentrations between the two.

I will try contacting the authors for clarification.  They supposedly work for
Optimox Corporation at 800-223-1601.

Marshall

Frank Key wrote:

> After reading the recent posts, it seems there may be some confusion regarding
> how much gold was consumed.
>
> It looks like some are interpreting the 30 mg of colloidal gold to mean 30 mg
> of actual gold content.
>
> I believe a case can be made that the 30 mg refers to the amount of the
> colloidal gold solution (slightly less than 30 mL considering density), not 30
> mg of gold content.
>
> There would seem to be a huge difference in dosage between the two.
>
> >From reports I have gotten from about a dozen people now, 10 mL a day of 5 
> >ppm
> colloidal gold produces the results generally being discussed.
>
> frank key
>
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