Hi Tel,

Wow, that's pretty cool! Thanks for sharing that!

Peter
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tel Tofflemire 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2010 5:24 PM
  Subject: Re: CS>RE: LUGO'L 5 % IODINE


  Thanks Peter,
  Their are a few sane and gentle people left on this site.  So Glad!
  It shouldn't matter but Dr. Jenner was Dr. Lugol's partner, they were not 
MD's but were both Dr. of Science , and working very hard on a solution that 
would sterilize their equipment after testing for a cure for several contagious
  ailments.  
  MY Point is Dr. Jenner was my mothers Grate Grandfather, & we used Lugol's  5 
% Iodine Solution, all my life and still do  and I am a few months from 70 yrs 
old. My mother never met Dr. Jenner but  My mother's Dad knew him & talked a 
lot about the German & The Frenchman working night and day together trying to 
solve that days health problems.  (They most likely did not Paten or Register 
the name Lugol's ?)
  Tel Tofflemire
  Dewey, AZ.





------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  From: Peter Converse <pconve...@primus.ca>
  To: Alan Jones <alanmjo...@gmail.com>; silver-list@eskimo.com
  Sent: Sat, March 27, 2010 1:23:44 PM
  Subject: Re: CS>RE: LUGO'L 5 % IODINE


  Hi Folks,


  I agree with Tel Tofflemire.

  It is my understanding that J. G. A. Lugol, the guy who originally came up 
with the formula, made it in a 5% solution, as mentioned below from Wikipedia. 
That being so, it makes sense that "Lugol's Solution", as he made it, is only a 
5% solution. If anyone else wants to make an iodine/iodide solution using 
different amounts of its constituents that too should have benefits but could 
not be rightly called "Lugol's Solution" because he (Lugol) didn't make it that 
way...make sense?? Calling it a 2% iodine/iodide solution, for example, would 
be fine, in my opinion, FWIW.

  Peter

  Lugol's iodine, also known as Lugol's solution, first made in 1829, is a 
solution of elemental iodine and potassium iodide in water, named after the 
French physician J.G.A. Lugol. Lugol's iodine solution is often used as an 
antiseptic and disinfectant, for emergency disinfection of drinking water, and 
as a reagent for starch detection in routine laboratory and medical tests .

  It has been used more rarely to replenish iodine deficiency. [1] However, 
pure potassium iodide, containing the relatively benign iodide ion without the 
more toxic elemental iodine, is preferred for this purpose.

  Formula and manufacture
  Lugol's solution consists of 5 g iodine (I2) and 10 g potassium iodide (KI) 
mixed with 85 ml distilled water, to make a brown solution with a total iodine 
content of 150 mg/mL. Potassium iodide renders the elementary iodine soluble in 
water through the formation of the triiodide (I3−) ion. It is not to be 
confused with tincture of iodine solutions, which consist of elemental iodine, 
and iodide salts dissolved in water and alcohol. Lugol's solution contains no 
alcohol.

  Other names for Lugol's solution are I2KI (Iodine-Potassium Iodide); 
Markodine, Strong solution (Systemic); Aqueous Iodine Solution BCP.

  Formula and manufacture
  Lugol's solution consists of 5 g iodine (I2) and 10 g potassium iodide (KI) 
mixed with 85 ml distilled water, to make a brown solution with a total iodine 
content of 150 mg/mL. Potassium iodide renders the elementary iodine soluble in 
water through the formation of the triiodide (I3−) ion. It is not to be 
confused with tincture of iodine solutions, which consist of elemental iodine, 
and iodide salts dissolved in water and alcohol. Lugol's solution contains no 
alcohol.

  Other names for Lugol's solution are I2KI (Iodine-Potassium Iodide); 
Markodine, Strong solution (Systemic); Aqueous Iodine Solution BCP.