Ivan wrote:

> Hi Frank,
> I did notice your later post and made reference to it in my second
> post on this subject.
>
> My maths is fine:
> 250mls of 20ppm silver contains 20mg/L divided by 4 = 5mg silver.
> Dilute with 5 Litres of plasma.
> 5.250L contains 5mg of silver. 1L contains 5mg/5.250 = 0.952mg which
> is a concentration of 0.952mg/L or 1ppm when rounded up.
> 6.25L would give a concentration of 0.8ppm

Yes, your math is fine. I get the same answer, this time.

My previous calculation was apparently made during a brain fade suffered
after working a 100 hour week.

1 ppm would still be 100 times the detection limit, so it would detectable.

In reviewing the ingestion experiment of a 100% particle silver colloid, I
am reminded that we used 250 mL of 2.9 ppm. Silver in the blood was detected
using atomic absorption which has a lower detection limit than an ISE.

frank key









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