"I think it's reasonable to speculate that if you swamp your body's 
ability to excrete silver by taking in too much at once, and do it for 
long enough, argyria can happen."

Question is....how much is too much....for each individual.  What  I've read as 
a general recommendation with regard to dosage is usually from long term users 
who have worked their way up to "quarts".  They seemingly have developed a 
avant-garde attitude and others, newbies, inexperienced will follow suite. 

 I can tell you that when I first became familiar with CS I had no ideal as to 
dosage other than drops and tsps suggested from store  bought product labels.  
Then I come upon CS forums and read testimonials about ingesting quarts.  Such 
advice were I not a cautious individual might well lead me to believe that more 
is better, lots and lots more,  when in fact, that may not be the case, 
especially when home prepared, and  by those with less production experience. 

Who is to say, prove or disprove that an ounce of CS is not as effective as a 
quart.  My questions are not designed to  instigate dissension  or to cause  
doubt as to CS  effectiveness... I am a firm believer in  its health 
properties, make my own and use it in small amts regularily.  My concern  is  
centered around  reasonable dosages  to avoid  over taxing systems already 
burdened by  overwhelming  illness. 

Although the thought of Intestines with silver linings sounds wonderfully like 
the invincible bionic human, were we meant to ingest large quantities of 
silver,  since it is considered a noble metal, and not a heavy metal, I think 
nature would have made it more readily available to us in  food substances as 
it does copper, iron, zinc, etc.  Such is  my reasoning. 


"M. G. Devour" <[email protected]> wrote: Carol Ann writes:
> Your statement about senior members bluish nails beg the question.....
> and in a way contradicts previous statements (not necessarily your) that
> Silver does not stay in the body for great lengths of time. Such a
> statement implies also a consistent build up, with not enough exiting in
> proportion to what is being taken in.
> 
> Any thoughts?

Thank you, Carol Ann. Good questions.

We've had a small handful of cases of generalized argyria reported here 
in the last eight years. In every one, as with Bob Medwith's recent 
report, it turned out they were using high concentration silver salts 
in significant amounts.

Anybody else remember Water Oz?

We've now had several reports of nail beds turning blue as well, in 
folks that have been at this for a long time, it seems.

If there's a case of argyria, we want to know about it, and analyze why 
it happened, as we have in Bob's case. We're here to learn the truth, 
good, bad, or indifferent. We've decided to study this material and 
share the information freely with whoever is interested, and let them 
make an informed decision.

A past member, Roger Altman, performed a study several years ago. He 
had the silver content of his urine and feces monitored for a few weeks 
during and after a course of silver intake. If I remember correctly, 
the measurements of silver excreted during the period matched the 
amount ingested, within reasonable error bars, and correlated with 
something like a 2 to 3 week period to excrete it all. 

(Anybody have a link handy?)

Though the work was carefully done, it is only a sample of one 
individual at one point in time. We know that variations in health, 
nutritional status, and genetics, at least, can influence the results. 
That said, it pretty clearly demonstrates that the human body is 
capable of excreting a meaningful amount of silver.  

I think it's reasonable to speculate that if you swamp your body's 
ability to excrete silver by taking in too much at once, and do it for 
long enough, argyria can happen. 

At 5 to 15 parts-per-million it takes a whole lot of *water* to deliver 
enough silver to do that. A lot more, in fact, than you'd be 
comfortable consuming. That's why for a long time now our consensus has 
been to use lower concentrations, made at low current with distilled 
water only. The result is still highly effective, while risks should be 
much reduced if not eliminated.

Since nobody here has tens of millions of dollars to invest in research 
and the people who do are more eager to suppress alternative therapies 
than study them properly, the only way we have to learn more is by 
doing our own experiments and sharing the results. There are risks in 
that, just as there are in all forms of health care.

Learn all you can, then decide.

Be well,

Mike D.

[Mike Devour, Citizen, Patriot, Libertarian]
[[email protected]                        ]
[Speaking only for myself...               ]


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  Carol Ann
   
     _______________________________
  The Pessimist complains about the Wind;  
  The Optimist expects it to change;  
  The Realist adjusts the Sails.   - The world needs more sailors.  
    




                
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