This is one of the most important stories I've read in the last decade.




=z= 
The novelist, journalist and psychologist 
Michael Zangari 
http://zangarijournalism.com

--- On Sun, 7/20/08, trem <t...@silvergen.com> wrote:

From: trem <t...@silvergen.com>
Subject: CS>Silver resistant bacteria
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Sunday, July 20, 2008, 12:04 PM





Saw this on one of lists I'm subscribed to.
 
Trem
 
 
 
 
Hi everyone,

When looking up some information about a bacteria, I came across some 
information at PubMed about silver resistance genes. There were actually 
several bacteria mentioned in article titles - Salmonella, E. coli, Serratia. 
There may be more, especially among enteric (intestinal) bacteria. This 
information does not seem to be common knowledge in the althealth community... 
so if colloidal silver is not working for you or someone you know, resistance 
may be part of the reason why.

Here is information from one article abstract, PubMed number 12829274. There 
are also a number of related articles available.

Bacterial silver resistance: molecular biology and uses and misuses of silver 
compounds.
FEMS Microbiol Rev. 2003 Jun;27(2-3): 341-53

Resistance to silver compounds as determined by bacterial plasmids and genes 
has been defined by molecular genetics. Silver resistance conferred by the 
Salmonella plasmid pMGH100 involves nine genes in three transcription 
units...[snip] ...Of 70 random enteric isolates from a local hospital, isolates 
from catheters and other Ag-exposed sites, and total genomes of enteric 
bacteria, 10 have recognizable sil genes. The centrally located six genes are 
found and functional in the chromosome of Escherichia coli K-12, and also occur 
on the genome of E. coli O157:H7. The use of molecular epidemiological tools 
will establish the range and diversity of such resistance systems in clinical 
and non-clinical sources. Silver compounds are used widely as effective 
antimicrobial agents to combat pathogens (bacteria, viruses and eukaryotic 
microorganisms) in the clinic and for public health hygiene. Silver cations 
(Ag+) are microcidal at low concentrations and used to
 treat burns, wounds and ulcers. Ag is used to coat catheters to retard 
microbial biofilm development. Ag is used in hygiene products including face 
creams, "alternative medicine" health supplements, supermarket products for 
washing vegetables, and water filtration cartridges. Ag is generally without 
adverse effects for humans, and argyria (irreversible discoloration of the skin 
resulting from subepithelial silver deposits) is rare and mostly of cosmetic 
concern.

Best wishes,
Char
www.dnafrequencies. com