Two to three tablespoons of H2O2 will make a dog throw up. But small
amounts, drops, will not. Given on an empty stomach it is even less
likely to cause disturbance in the stomach.

Mix CS with DMSO if you are concerned about the sodium / salts issue. It
is thought to be superior to the Gatorade by the man who developed the
protocol anyway. See the recent repost of Brooks Bradley on the list.

No one knows for sure what happens to CS in the stomach or when mixing
with Gatorade. They just know what happens when you do it. So far no
argyria so the consensus is that it is not a risk, but there are no
gurantees. There are no studies and probably never will be as there is
no money in a product you cannot patent or keep secret.

I would not use H2O2 and DMSO together though. They may counter act each
other since DMSO is an anti-oxidant and H2O2 gives off oxygen.

DMSO stinks but you can buy a low odor variety at www.jacoblab.com . One
of them has MSM blended in with the DMSO and is more suited for oral
use. The other is blended with 10% urea, to reduce the odor and is also
medicinal in itself, which helps with the odor when used topically.

There is at least one H2O2 list and many sites where you can find out
more about how others are using it for health. Much to know when using
this product, particularly that you should use an additive free H2O2
when ingesting orally. The stabilizers in the drug store brown bottle
H2O2 are nasty. See below for more info and a supplier I have used to
buy Tech Grade, I chose Tech Grade over Food Grade because Food Grade is
permitted to contain Aluminum (not that all of it does mind you) and
Tech grade has no impurities as the Phosphorous is gone by the time it
is bottled.

Garnet


http://h2o2-4u.com/grades.html

"Food Grade vs Technical Grade Hydrogen Peroxide

Technical Grade Sold Here

Food grade and Technical grade hydrogen peroxide are essentially the
same. However, the FDA regulates among other things the processing of
Food grade hydrogen peroxide.

For Example:

The manufacturer produces 10 drums of technical grade H2O2. He would
test the first and the last drum for quality and purity. The FDA
inspects or test all 10 drums. All 10 drums are now considered to be
food grade H2O2 after the additives added by the manufacturer for
compliance. If the packager pours food grade H2O2 out of one of those
drums into a smaller container, it is no longer a "food grade" unless
that smaller container is also tested for the FDA compliance.

Hydrogen Peroxide Grades

3% Hydrogen Peroxide (Drug/Grocery Store Variety)

Used as antimicrobial agent for treating wounds and sanitizing agent

[Made from 50% Super D Peroxide, Diluted. Contains stabilizers -
phenol, acetanilide, sodium stanate, tetrasodium phosphate among them.]
[This peroxide contains known chemicals do not ingest!]

6% Hydrogen Peroxide

Used by Beauticians for Coloring Hair. Used as sanitizing agent.
Comes in strengths labeled 10,20,40 volume. Must have activator added
to be used as a bleach.

[Contains stabilizers, additives, and impurities dependent on
manufacturing and dilution process. Do not ingest.]

30% Re-Agent Hydrogen Peroxide

Used in medical research.

[Contains stabilizers, additives, and impurities dependent on
manufacturing and dilution process. Do not ingest.]

30-32% Electronic Grade Hydrogen Peroxide

Used for washing transistors and integrated chip parts before assembly.

[Contains stabilizers, additives, and impurities dependent on
manufacturing and dilution process. Do not ingest.]

35% Food Grade Hydrogen Peroxide (Also 50% Food Grade H2O2)

Used in food products like cheese, eggs, whey products. Also used to
spray inside of foil lined containers for food storage - known as the
aseptic packaging system. Used for the disinfection of potable water.
Also used (diluted) to disinfect, kill bacteria, sanitize wounds and
introduce oxygen into the body. Eg. bathing, gargle, toothpaste,
treat drinking water, etc.

[Contains stabilizers, additives, and impurities dependent on
manufacturing and dilution process.
--e.g. This Food Grade Hyrogen Peroxide is Stabilized using tin based
formulations ]

35% Technical Grade Hydrogen Peroxide

Used for waste water treatment and the disinfection of potable water,
cosmetics, and laundry applications. Also used (diluted) to
disinfect, kill bacteria, sanitize wounds and introduce oxygen into
the body. Eg. bathing, gargle, toothpaste, treat drinking water, etc.

[May contain a small amount of phosphorus to neutralize any chlorine
in the water it is combined with.]

MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET & Technical Details: Hydrogen Peroxide (20
to 40%)

35% Standard Grade Hydrogen Peroxide (Also 50%, 60%, 70% Standard
Grades)

Used mainly for bleaching in the pulp and paper industry and in the
textile industry; oxidation reactions in the chemical industry;
environmental processes (detoxification and deodorization). Used for
Waste water treatment.

[Contains stabilizers, additives, and impurities Do not ingest.]

90% Hydrogen Peroxide

Used by the military as a source of Oxygen at Cape Canaveral. Used as
a propulsion source in rocket fuel.

99.6% Hydrogen Peroxide

This was first made in 1954 as an experiment to see how pure a
hydrogen peroxide could be manufactured.



H2O2 is produced to very pure quality standards, however, impurities
are actually added to the product by the manufacturer during the
manufacture of all grades of hydrogen peroxide to inhibit the
catalytic decomposition effect of metals and other impurities that may
accidentally contaminate the chemical during shipment, storage, and
handling.

=====================================================================

Additives:

Purpose

Tin (Stannate) - Stabilizes product against decomposition caused by
heavy metals

Phosphate - Stabilizes product against decomposition caused by
chlorine or heavy metals

Nitrate - Acts as an inhibitor against the corrosion of aluminum

=====================================================================

Impurities:

Source

Carbon - Organic contamination from the "working solution" or
anthraquinone

Aluminum - From contact with metallic process equipment and piping

Chloride - From plant water supply

Sulfate - From plant water supply

Ammonium - From plant water supply or degradation of organic amines


Above are compounds purposely added by manufacturers to stabilize
hydrogen peroxide. Many compounds are also added in dilution process.

This information is for educational purpose only. It is not to be
considered medical advice, diagnostic or prescriptive.

© 2001-2002 Clyde Co-op Co. -All rights reserved

============================================================================









On Wed, 2004-09-15 at 00:09, Dave and Gwlynda Irek wrote:
> So I getting mixed messages.....is it ok to mix CS with Gatorade (store
> brought) even if it contains sodium (salt) and I'm guesting H202 is Hydrogen
> Peroxide which makes dogs throw up. Can someone please clarify this for me.
> 
> Thanks




--
The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.

Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org

To post, address your message to: [email protected]
Silver List archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html

Address Off-Topic messages to: [email protected]
OT Archive: http://escribe.com/health/silverofftopiclist/index.html

List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>