1) Since Brooks Bradley recommended Gatorade as an electrolyte to carry CS deeper into the tissues than CS can go alone; and 2) since My UFL Gators receive a stipend for every drop of Gatorade purchased; and 3) since my wife had suffered for years with UTI attacks every 3 to 4 weeks not effectively treated by CS alone (usually ending up seeing a doctor and getting an expensive antibiotic with unpleasant side reactions and much discomfort and 4) 2 years ago, since reading Brooks excellent recommendation and following it without seeking to find a substitute She has suffered NO attacks and plans to use the combination as written throughout the hopefully many more years (now age 82)--God uses this combination to do many of His miracles! Praise God! Thank you, Brooks and the other generous Experts on this List who share with "us seekers"!
I would be wary of using Pedialyte--the last time I checked, they used aspartame as sweetener. Sincerely, _______________________________________ Richard Harris, 58 Year FL Pharmacist 448 West Juniata Street Clermont, FL 34711 http://www.rharrisinc.com http://www.seasilver.com/reh http://healthandhealing.blogspot.com -----Original Message----- From: Connie Howard [mailto:craehow...@juno.com] Sent: Saturday, December 10, 2005 11:24 AM To: silver-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: CS>CS/h2o2/Gatorade mixture Would the juice act as an electrolyte? I thought electrolyte was more of a saltine type liquid; but I'm not really that knowledgeable on this subject. connie On Sat, 10 Dec 2005 01:58:33 -0800 Raine <rainelov...@sbcglobal.net> writes: I don't know that I'd use Pedialyte either... Perhaps just adding it to fresh juice, or at least organic store-bought juice, would be good enough? -Raine grace1...@aol.com wrote: Instead of the Gatorade, could one use the electrolyte for children, Pedialyte? If the electrolytes in Gatorade were the essential reason one mixes this with CS, I was hoping to use Pedialyte instead to avoid the sugar and other allergenic ingredients in Gatorade. Jill