And in my case it gets even *more* complicated because when I got yellow
CS it wasn't the CS or the DW which caused this, but the actual plastic
bottles I put it in. So the particle size would be bigger, but it
wouldn't have been silver that made it so. Would it? dee
Norton, Steve wrote:
Ok, I am responding to my own query. If I have something wrong, let me
know. This may only be an exercise without use except as my attempt to
understand CS and it's limits as best as I can. What I have found:
* Nothing on the permeability limits of sublingual although I
expect it to be less than the intestinal permeability.
* The permeability of the intestines allows the passing of
molecules up to 9200 Daltons, typically.
* While Daltons is a measure of molecular weight, 9200 Daltons
roughly equates to 13 Angstroms.
* As a sanity test, NaEDTA is used to measure intestinal
permeability. Being a relatively large molecule (approximately
11 Angstroms) it has roughly a 5% (to maybe 18%) absorption
rate. One can measure the levels of NaEDTA in the blood stream
against the expected amount that should have been absorbed and
determine if the permeability of the intestines is to high or
too low. This correlates well with the previous statement.
* CS with a yellow color has particle sizes in the .01 to .001
micron (10 to 100 Angstroms).
* This would mean that most if not nearly all the CS particles in
a yellow batch is not absorbable by the digestive system.
(assuming a symmetrical distribution such as an even or Gaussian
distribution)
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