This is not meant as a flame Nancy and I certainly don't want to offend
anyone, but I have a serious question regarding your post.  It strikes me as
funny that one would take something such as silver and then take something
else to counteract it.  If the antioxidant does in fact react or bind with
the silver as if it were a free-radical, why would you take the antioxidant
to begin with?  It seems self defeating, but maybe I am missing something.
For "normal" doses of silver, as I understand it, the body is capable of
naturally eliminating the silver.  If you take a higher dose but then take
the antioxidant to head off the toxic effects, it seems to me that you would
also lose the benefits (if any) of the higher dose.  If I am missing
something here, fill me in.  I'm surely not a biologist or chemist, but this
doesn't sound right somehow.

-----Original Message-----
From: Nancy Berntsen <silverwo...@bigfoot.com>
To: Susan M. Yensen <syen...@clearwater.net>; silver-list@eskimo.com
<silver-list@eskimo.com>
Date: Friday, March 20, 1998 4:17 AM
Subject: Re: OK, ... CS & Antioxidants


>The medical overview of silver research I read (fung, et. al. listed at my
>web page... http://www.freeyellow.com/members2/silver-works ) discussed a
>study of of mice that showed that they could tolerate a much higher
>(normally considered toxic) amount of silver intake if they were given
>antioxidants.
>
>So it makes sense to  take a daily supplement of vit. E or C or some other
>known antioxidant while on colloidal silver.
>
>Nancy



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