Hi: Silver chloride would qualify as a compound. I make HVAC CS. I did the experiment that was suggested at a web site, that being, putting some salt in the CS and I watched it turn a little milky. Putting salt in distilled water did not produce any milkyness. So even though I know that the CS I produce is a very effective product, I now know that a percentage of it is ionic and that ionic silver will certainly become silver chloride in my blood stream or stomach. If I swish it around in my mouth, most of the ionic silver will go into my blood stream, become silver chloride in the blood and become a load on my kidnies. Is this the load on the kidnies that eventually produces the renal failure he talks about?
If I wolf it down, it will become silver chloride and most of that silver chloride will pass through my bowels because the molecules are mostly too large to go through the intestinal wall. Purchasing the high priced CS that has low ionic content and high particulate content, from what I understand, doesn't seem to produce any better results than the CS I now use. It just looks good on graph paper. So for efficacy I can't really justify the extra expense. Does silver Chloride have any of the same anti bacterial qualities of particulate silver colloid? Just my thoughts on this. In a message dated 2001-11-02 2:21:15 AM Eastern Standard Time, [email protected] writes: > I forgot that plain text would loose a font point size increase. The word > "COMPOUND" is emphasized in the original. > >

