There are a few known cases of argyria caused by a high ppm version of Water Qz. In the period of the argyria cases, Water Oz was telling customers that Water Oz could not cause argyria and could be used in unlimited amounts. Any silver supplement can cause argyria if taken in large enough amounts over a long enough time. That includes EIS. We have two list members that are proof of that. If you are refering to my previous comment that it would be better to not take high doses of EIS and instead take much smaller doses of EIS in conjunction of small doses of EIS in Gatorade - my approach, IMO, will provide increased silver effectiveness while greatly lowering the overall amount of silver taken and reducing the possibility of argyria for long term daily users.
- Steve N ________________________________ From: sol <[email protected]> To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Sent: Fri Feb 05 16:25:30 2010 Subject: Re: CS>moon on fingernails? -- how much do you use? What about silver citrate? There have been discussions on this list on how to make it. But I have read that silver citrate is also highly likely to cause argryia? Is that not true? sol At 12:28 PM 2/5/2010, you wrote: That sounds fine. That's what I do as well. I don't think there is any difference between CS and EIS for purposes of this forum. EIS is Electrically Isolated Silver, which is a form of CS, with around 10-20% colloidal silver particles, and 80-90% ionic silver particles, which I understand are AgOH. CS is what most people call EIS. In fact the only place I have heard EIS is on this forum. The rest of the world calls it CS. EIS is more accurate, I believe, only because there are other ways to make CS, such as from nano-silver-powder, which apparently involves no electricity. So I suppose it's good to distinguish them by using the abbrev EIS.

