Personally, I have no idea.  Marshall says yes, silver citrate will be likely 
to cause argyria.  And government publications say it is awesome as a 
disinfectant.  Possible, or probably, both may be true.

We really need someone to put silver through all the research and testing and 
get it approved by FDA so we can know what to make, how, how much to take, etc.

OK, next email -- got an idea...

Dick




________________________________
From: sol <sol...@sweetwaterhsa.com>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Fri, February 5, 2010 5:25:30 PM
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.
>