At 11:26 AM 6/8/2006 -0400, you wrote:

Ode Coyote wrote:

> If an ion selective probe is used to find ionic silver in the blood and
> none is found...and AgCl is at least partially ionic...what IS in there vs
> the assertion of what's not?
>   "The rest of the story" has never been told.
>
> Ode

AgCl will move into the blood stream where it is reduced to silver particles. If you have any colloidal component in the blood, then it plates out on them, if you do not, then it photoreduces in the skin, and plates out on them, in some cases causing argyria (which is why AgCl alone causes argyria, but when part of EIS in the stomach does not). It is completely expected that little or no ionic silver will be found in the blood, any more than ionic silver will be found in a developed
photograph.

Marshall


 ## I'm familiar with the theory and it sounds reasonable.
 Has this ever been "tested"?

Then, so many mainstream scientific types concentrate and focus on getting silver particles to release ions...for some reason. Could a pathogen act something like an ion exchange resin and provide such a short pathway so as to make ions undetectable?

If particles provide the means, ions form particles, particle are particles, particles release ions and ions do the job, then both sides of the issue are correct...with bits and ions of story missing in order to provide us all with something to argue about.

Ode




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