It is accurate down to "Why is this important":. .

 It is an insoluble compound which means once it is formed in the human
body, it does not dissolve.

This line is false, silver chloride does dissolve, it has a solubility
of .8 ppm in cold water.

Silver chloride is an insoluble salt that does not dissolve inside the
body once it has formed.

Repitition of a false statement.

Silver chloride is mostly a useless waste product eliminated by the
kidneys and expelled through the urine, but it also has its dangers.

It may be eliminated by the kidneys, but most would never make it that
far, it reacts with the traces of ammonia in the blood producing
fulminating silver, which is very soluble.  Then that reduces with
glucose in the blood producing - extremely small colloidal silver
particles.

Not only does it fail to provide the benefits that colloidal silver is
known for, but more importantly, ingestion of  highly concentrated forms
of ionic silver can cause argyria, a permanent discoloration of the
skin.

Half true, it does provide the benefits of colloidal silver, since it
becomes colloidal silver in the blood stream, but ingestion of highly
concentrated forms of ionic silver (meaning all silver salts like silver
nitrate) can cause argyria. But we are not talking about highly
concentrated salts of silver, so this appears to be misdirection to
confuse the issue.

A typical so-called colloidal silver product that is 10 ppm (parts per
million) of total silver has 90% of the silver in ionic form and only
10% in particle form.

This is true although some go as high as 20% particle.

Since it is particles, not ions,that determine a product's
effectiveness, consumers need to be educated to look for silver content
in the form of particles not ions.

What experimental evidence do they have to back that up?  The tests I
ran a few weeks ago showed that ionic silver was much more effective in
preventing spoiling of milk than the particulate portion.

Marshall

bailar wrote:

> Someone posted a bunch of info on a yahoo group I'm on, a site with
> information about colloidal silver here's what it says about
> ionic: http://silver-colloids.com/Pubs/AboutIonic.html Can anybody
> address this for me? Sorry if this has been asked before, when I tried
> to search "ionic" thru the archives I didn't find an answer, thx.