Re: CS performance nebulizer
On Fri, 17 Sep 1999 12:54:46 -0700, "Mary & Gary Christensen" wrote: >Speaking of the nebulizer, could someone give me a quick rundown of the >materials used to make that nebulizer? brand names if necessary. > >Gary Following is a repost of Brook's excellent advice: Subject: CS>Parts List and Comments on CSXO2 Nebulizing System From: "Brooks Bradley" Date: Sat, 24 Apr 1999 17:12:33 -0500 Good Afternoon List Members. Following is a list of the components required for enabling the protocol we used in the experimental researches I outlined last evening. The air-brush kit we used, was obtained from a mail-order concern specializing in myriad hardware/electrical/hand-tool items. Their quality is toward the low-end industrial, but quite adequate for the home/hobby user. Our machine shop/proto-type builders have used them for years. The company is Harbor Freight, located in Camarillo, California. They now have outlets in one or two other cities. We obtained our air-brush kits from the Fort Worth, Texas store (we are located in Fort Worth). The stock number is #6131. Our purchasing person informed me this item cost us less than $10.00 each, and the last 20 purchased cost less than $8.00. As of last Wednesday, this store still had some of these units. Included in the kit are two liquid -supply bottles (one 1/2 and one 1 oz), one air hose which couples between the pressure regulator and the air-brush assembly; one air pressure regulator; and the air-brush assembly itself. The additional parts required are for a hose assembly which facilitates coupling the input side of the air pressure regulator with the external oxygen supply used to power the nebulizer. Note: PURCHASE BRASS FITTINGS ONLY, oxygen is the pre-eminent combustion supporter. All of these components can be obtained from any commercial outlet stocking pneumatic system parts. This hose assembly includes: One 1/4" Compression X 1/8" Male NPT fitting (this is very important, for without it you cannot connect the O2 hose to the air-brush pressure regulator) One 1/4" Barb X 1/8" NPTF Fitting One 1/4" X 9/16 RH Oxygen Fitting (will have a barb fitting on one end and the female coupling on the other) Approximately 4 feet of any good !/4 I.D. 200+ PSI air hose. Tell the clerk you are going to use oxygen in the hose. Assemble the parts by screwing the Compression fitting into the 1/4" Barb X 1/8" Male NPT fitting. Do not worry, only one end of the Compression fitting is compatible with the Barb fitting. Next, insert the barb end of this fitting assemby into the air hose. Push the hose on until it is jam against the shoulder of the fitting. Any small, screw or compression-type clamp may be used to add security to the hose/fitting end. Next, insert the barb end of the Oxygen fitting into the remaining hose end and secure with any satisfactory clamp. Your assembly is now complete. Next, carefully screw the exposed male end of the Compression fitting into the bottom of the air-brush pressure regulator. Now connect the small-diameter air-line between the air-brush assembly and the pressure regulator (it is fool-proof, as there is nowhere else this tiny hose can connect). Select the small fluid-supply bottle and fill approximately 75-80% of capacity with 5-10 ppm Colloidal Silver and insert the angled tip assembly into the bottom of the air-brush assembly. You are now ready to connect to your O2 supply and operate. Obtain a small medical O2 bottle (anywhere around 1/2 to 1 cubic feet capacity) or any size O2 Arc welding system bottle. Be sure to have a Two-stage regulator attached to the O2 bottle. Now, connect the 9/16" Oxygen-fitting to the O2 outlet from the Two-stage regulator (also foo-proof, as there is nowhere else to connect). Now SLOWLY open the O2 control knob on the O2 regulator and set the inlet prssure to your nebulizer assembly to a Maximum of 35 Pounds Per Square Inch (PSI).Next, screw the AIR-BRUSH air pressure regulator control knob (the tiny knob on top of the air pressure regulator) all the way closed.. Now, open the control knob about 2 and one-half turns. Next, trigger the control botton on the Air-brush head until you see a fine fog each time you press down on the button. The mist is so fine, you may have to hold it against a dark back ground to see it. You are now ready to go. Our best results were obtained by the volunteer inserting the discharge nozzle about 1 inch inside their OPEN mouth and breathing deep---an long---on each inhalation; holding the breath for a count of 3 or 4 and then executing a complete exhalation. Ideally, there should be about 1/4" circular clearance around the air-brush head (while inside the mouth), as this provides the optimum venturi action for incorporat
Re: CS performance
Speaking of the nebulizer, could someone give me a quick rundown of the materials used to make that nebulizer? brand names if necessary. Gary -Original Message- From: Charles King To: silver-list@eskimo.com Date: Wednesday, September 15, 1999 11:31 AM Subject: Re: CS performance >On Tue, 14 Sep 1999 22:00:45 -0700, "Mary & Gary Christensen" > wrote: > >>Can anyone tell me why the CS did not work? (Or did not work good enough) >> >>I would appreciate any suggestions or comments >> >>Tanks,trying to have faith, Gary > >Wouldn't Brook's nebulizer protocol be appropriate here? >I would think it would get the CS into the sinus area and saturate it. > Chuck >"A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an > invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write > a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort > the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, > solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program > a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die > gallantly. > Specialization is for insects." > Robert Heinlein > > >-- >The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. > >To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: >silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com >with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. > >To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com > >List maintainer: Mike Devour > >
Re: CS performance
In a message dated 9/15/1999 1:06:04 AM Eastern Daylight Time, christens...@earthlink.net writes: << I hate to admit it but he seems to be doing much better after a day on the antibiotics. Can anyone tell me why the CS did not work? (Or did not work good enough) >> Sinus infections are weird! Saw a news release on TV this week implicating fungus and molds in persistant sinus infections. They are some times resistant to CS. Also, my son used to get horrendous sinus infections for years - many Rx for ABX. We finally took him to a chiropractor who used the activator method of adjustment and he adjusted Jonathan's neck. His sinuses drained withing 24 hours. They didn't fill up again until he was at a birthday party and a wooden morocca was broken against his forehead. Went back to the CHiroprator, got readjusted and the same drainage happened again.. Now he still gets some drainage down the back of this throat from time to time but the CS usally controls that. The persistant cough that he got from time to time turned out to be asthma and puffers often provided the only relief. Ian -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com List maintainer: Mike Devour
Re: CS performance -- Gary Christensen
Yes. I do both--antibio's may be for specific bugs, CS is not, it is more encompassing. I couldn't find an antibio working for 1.5 years, started CS too and got great results--my pain is gone and slowly starting to take steps walking (am in wheelchair). So bit by bit. I started in Jan this year and then real serious in April I guess. Had one remission in 94-96. But currently still in a major setback. Susan L Lyme / rheumatoid arth 9 yrs In a message dated 99-09-16 01:22:53 EDT, you write: << But an antibiotic seemed to work,doesn't the CS work like the antibiotic? >> -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com List maintainer: Mike Devour
Re: CS performance -- Gary Christensen
But an antibiotic seemed to work,doesn't the CS work like the antibiotic? -Original Message- From: Henry Reed To: silver-list@eskimo.com Date: Wednesday, September 15, 1999 8:06 PM Subject: Re: CS performance -- Gary Christensen >I heard a couple of days ago that orthodox medicine now thinks that >chronic sinus infections are caused by fungal and not bacterial >infections of the sinus cavities. Maybe cs dropped into the nose and >sniffed into the upper reaches of the nasal cavity can help. The cs has >to come into physical contact with the critters and stay in contact with >them for some minutes before it can kill them. That's probably why it >didn't work before. It wasn't touching the fungus in the sinuses so it >couldn't kill it. > > >-- >The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. > >To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: >silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com >with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. > >To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com > >List maintainer: Mike Devour > >
Re: CS performance -- Gary Christensen
I heard a couple of days ago that orthodox medicine now thinks that chronic sinus infections are caused by fungal and not bacterial infections of the sinus cavities. Maybe cs dropped into the nose and sniffed into the upper reaches of the nasal cavity can help. The cs has to come into physical contact with the critters and stay in contact with them for some minutes before it can kill them. That's probably why it didn't work before. It wasn't touching the fungus in the sinuses so it couldn't kill it. -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com List maintainer: Mike Devour
Re: CS performance -- Gary Christensen
Tea tree and lavendar are both good oils to use for this. Also a combo of tea tree, clove, red thyme and lavendar. Just make sure non of this actually touches the skin, red thyme BURNS!! Sparrow --- Hello. What essential oils did you use for this inhalation? thanks,
Re: CS performance
On Tue, 14 Sep 1999 22:00:45 -0700, "Mary & Gary Christensen" wrote: >Can anyone tell me why the CS did not work? (Or did not work good enough) > >I would appreciate any suggestions or comments > >Tanks,trying to have faith, Gary Wouldn't Brook's nebulizer protocol be appropriate here? I would think it would get the CS into the sinus area and saturate it. Chuck "A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects." Robert Heinlein -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com List maintainer: Mike Devour
Re: CS performance -- Gary Christensen
Hello. What essential oils did you use for this inhalation? thanks, jnh Spiroflex wrote: > To Gary Christensen, My mother always told me that as a child, 65 years ago, > my life was saved when I had "double pneumonia" by inhaling pungent hot > vapors. I vividly remember the experience. As soon as I inhaled those pungent > fumes my breathing would come easier. They would put a towel over my head and > the crock of hot liquid to form a tent. I would raise "the tent flap" from > time to time to bring in some more oxygen. As an adult I had always assumed > that it was the water vapor that I inhaled that did the trick. But lack of > success with mere water vaporizers with my own son in later life has convinced > me lately that it was not the water vapor but the drops of a pungent oil added > to the surface of the very hot water that did the curing. I have only recently > read of the anitibiotic powers of essential oils and "aromatherapy." Check out > the inhaling of "essential oils" on the Internet. You could start your search > at brunnerbiz.com. I believe Karen Brunner, a nutritional consultant, has had > successful experience with essential oils with her own children. She answers > her email promptly. Apparently there are quality differences when it comes to > finding effective essentail oils in the USA. My infant son had symptoms such > as you describe with your son. But his bronchial tubes would collapse, turning > his face blue. It was explained to us by our physician that it was an > allergic reaction to bacteria from a sinus infection and the post nasal drip > that occurred when he was in a prone position. We learned that immediate > antibiotics was required in his case and an injection of epinefrine to try to > avoid brain damage while the antibiotic was starting to work. He outgrew this > kind of severe crisis by the time he was eight years old. But he needed > special education as a learning challenged student. Where breathing is > impaired to the point that a child is bluish colored in the face, calls for > very urgent action. We learned to take our son to an ER immediately. Since my > wife was a nurse our doctor wisely decided to have us keep the ABx and the > epinefrine at home for more rapid administration. Minutes count. Today I would > have the essential oils in the house for dealing with such a crisis. CS, in my > opinion, is not fast acting enough for this kind of crisis. Our son, now 35, > is still prone to respiratory infections. He uses CS as a preventative of > respiratory infection, rather than a cure once he is infected. I wish that I > had known about the inhaling of essential oils back then when my son was an > infant, but the knowledge of my mother that she brought with her from > Venezuela in 1905 was lost for me when she died. God bless you and your > family, -- Carlos LeClair > > - Ori >
Re: CS performance -- Gary Christensen
To Gary Christensen, My mother always told me that as a child, 65 years ago, my life was saved when I had "double pneumonia" by inhaling pungent hot vapors. I vividly remember the experience. As soon as I inhaled those pungent fumes my breathing would come easier. They would put a towel over my head and the crock of hot liquid to form a tent. I would raise "the tent flap" from time to time to bring in some more oxygen. As an adult I had always assumed that it was the water vapor that I inhaled that did the trick. But lack of success with mere water vaporizers with my own son in later life has convinced me lately that it was not the water vapor but the drops of a pungent oil added to the surface of the very hot water that did the curing. I have only recently read of the anitibiotic powers of essential oils and "aromatherapy." Check out the inhaling of "essential oils" on the Internet. You could start your search at brunnerbiz.com. I believe Karen Brunner, a nutritional consultant, has had successful experience with essential oils with her own children. She answers her email promptly. Apparently there are quality differences when it comes to finding effective essentail oils in the USA. My infant son had symptoms such as you describe with your son. But his bronchial tubes would collapse, turning his face blue. It was explained to us by our physician that it was an allergic reaction to bacteria from a sinus infection and the post nasal drip that occurred when he was in a prone position. We learned that immediate antibiotics was required in his case and an injection of epinefrine to try to avoid brain damage while the antibiotic was starting to work. He outgrew this kind of severe crisis by the time he was eight years old. But he needed special education as a learning challenged student. Where breathing is impaired to the point that a child is bluish colored in the face, calls for very urgent action. We learned to take our son to an ER immediately. Since my wife was a nurse our doctor wisely decided to have us keep the ABx and the epinefrine at home for more rapid administration. Minutes count. Today I would have the essential oils in the house for dealing with such a crisis. CS, in my opinion, is not fast acting enough for this kind of crisis. Our son, now 35, is still prone to respiratory infections. He uses CS as a preventative of respiratory infection, rather than a cure once he is infected. I wish that I had known about the inhaling of essential oils back then when my son was an infant, but the knowledge of my mother that she brought with her from Venezuela in 1905 was lost for me when she died. God bless you and your family, -- Carlos LeClair - Original Message - From: Mary & Gary Christensen To: silver-list@eskimo.com Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 1999 1:00 AM Subject: CS performance OK everyone I'm looking for some wisdom and knowledge in the CS field. I am now generating my own CS with a high voltage transformer, I am very confident that my CS is good. The problem I'm having is that I don't feel that I am getting the results from using the CS that I should be getting. For example; I have a sixteen month old son, an he had a very bad dry cough at night and in the daytime seemed OK. We started using a warm air vaporizer overnight, it helped him from having such a dry cough but he was still very congested. I was giving him CS, and it seemed to help a little, but it just wasn't getting him better. We think he might have had ear infection(s) so I was dropping CS in his ears. Finally we gave up and took him to the doctor, his ears were clear of any infections, but he said that he had an infection in his nose (or sinus) and prescribed an antibiotic. I hate to admit it but he seems to be doing much better after a day on the antibiotics. Can anyone tell me why the CS did not work? (Or did not work good enough) I would appreciate any suggestions or comments Tanks,trying to have faith, Gary performance
Re: CS performance, child's infection
Gary, During the 15 years I have been testing and working with people, I have repeatedly seen children with symptoms such as you describe experience relief when they omitted milk-fat from their diet. It has been my experience that children have trouble metabolising milk-fat containing products such as cheese, ice cream, whole milk and even 2% or 1% milk. Buy a bag or box of non-fat powdered milk and make it stronger than the instructions suggest (provides extra calcium and makes it "creamier"). I have seen the disappearance of runny noses, ear infections, coughs, stomach aches, constipation and diarrhea, bad breath and eczema after omitting milk fat. I know some people feel that cows milk is bad, but I have seen very few children (or adults) who have had trouble with non-fat milk. It's worth a try. Terry Wayne --- Mary & Gary Christensen wrote: > OK everyone I'm looking for some wisdom and > knowledge in the CS field. I am now generating my > own CS with a high voltage transformer, I am very > confident that my CS is good. The problem I'm having > is that I don't feel that I am getting the results > from using the CS that I should be getting. For > example; I have a sixteen month old son, an he had a > very bad dry cough at night and in the daytime > seemed OK. We started using a warm air vaporizer > overnight, it helped him from having such a dry > cough but he was still very congested. I was giving > him CS, and it seemed to help a little, but it just > wasn't getting him better. We think he might have > had ear infection(s) so I was dropping CS in his > ears. Finally we gave up and took him to the doctor, > his ears were clear of any infections, but he said > that he had an infection in his nose (or sinus) and > prescribed an antibiotic. I hate to admit it but he > seems to be doing much better after a day on the > antibiotics. Can anyone tell me why the CS did not > work? (Or did not work good enough) > > I would appreciate any suggestions or comments > > Tanks,trying to have faith, Gary > > performance > > __ Do You Yahoo!? Bid and sell for free at http://auctions.yahoo.com -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com -or- silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com List maintainer: Mike Devour
CS performance
OK everyone I'm looking for some wisdom and knowledge in the CS field. I am now generating my own CS with a high voltage transformer, I am very confident that my CS is good. The problem I'm having is that I don't feel that I am getting the results from using the CS that I should be getting. For example; I have a sixteen month old son, an he had a very bad dry cough at night and in the daytime seemed OK. We started using a warm air vaporizer overnight, it helped him from having such a dry cough but he was still very congested. I was giving him CS, and it seemed to help a little, but it just wasn't getting him better. We think he might have had ear infection(s) so I was dropping CS in his ears. Finally we gave up and took him to the doctor, his ears were clear of any infections, but he said that he had an infection in his nose (or sinus) and prescribed an antibiotic. I hate to admit it but he seems to be doing much better after a day on the antibiotics. Can anyone tell me why the CS did not work? (Or did not work good enough) I would appreciate any suggestions or comments Tanks,trying to have faith, Gary performance