Although the blood brain barrier of horses may be different than that of humans I doubt it. It is quite possible that the blood brain barrier was not functioning due to the penetrations of the protozoa. For them to cross it requires them to drill through it, making it no longer a barrier. Perhaps this is why the CS was able to cross it as well, or perhaps the information on silver and the blood brain barrier is wrong. If it was penetrated because the protozoa had drilled through it, then this would not be the case with viruses. So I guess the question is still open.

Marshall



[email protected] wrote:
From: Marshall Dudley <[email protected]>

But it also usually does not pass through the blood brain barrier from what I can read, and if that is the case, once rabies gets to the brain, the CS will not get to it.

######Sorry -- but I've had just the opposite information and experience.  
Colloidal Silver does pass through the blood brain barrier -- which is exactly 
why we've been successful treating our EPM horses with CS.  By the time that we 
realize that the horse is sick with EPM, the protozoa have crossed the blood 
brain barrier and are populating the neurological cells of the spinal cord.  CS 
does kill these protozoa -- with evidence of a die-off resulting in the horse 
becoming sicker before they get better.  So, perhaps this would be the case 
with rabies as well.  MA


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