Well, just as I expected, they have no idea what they are talking about:

 -- He ingested approximately 16 ounces (~ 450 ml) of 450 ppm colloidal
silver three times a day for 10 months. --

That is impossible, colloidal silver cannot be made in strenths anywhere
near that high.  It is obvious that he did not take colloidal silver as
indicated by the article, but silver salts.  The absence of the protocol
used to make it supports that they did not research this in a reasonable
manner.

Then later on he writes:

-- Some of the silver in plasma is carried as a salt and may be deposited
in various tissues after being reduced to its metallic form. --

So he apparently does not know the difference between a colloid and a salt,
now admitting that it was a salt that caused the argyria, despite claiming
otherwise in the title.

Also upon examination it is obvious that they have doctored the photos. The
eyes have been edited to be black, and can be easily verified by
examination of the pictures blown up!  Argyria will darken the eyes, but
never like he shows.

It's too bad they have lost credibility with such loose and erroneous
writing, because there is some good information in there if the source had
actually been credible.

Marshall

jrowland wrote:

> "Systemic argyria associated with ingestion of colloidal silver"
> http://dermatology.cdlib.org/111/case_reports/argyria/wadhera.html
> jr
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