Marshall -- I'm probably the least knowledgeable person on this list -- but my 
own experience leads me to believe that colloidal silver does cross the 
blood-brain barrier.  At least in horses it does.  That's how I came to learn 
about CS in the first place -- my horse had EPM, a neurological disease caused 
by protozoa crossing the blood-brain barrier and setting up breeding sites in 
the spinal column, which caused inflammation, swelling and neuro symptoms.  The 
only way to treat the disease was to use a product that also crossed the 
blood-brain barrier, and evidence of this happening was a healing crisis in the 
horse where their symptoms actually worsened for awhile (as the protozoa 
started 
dying) before gradually improving -- sometimes to a complete recovery.  
Colloidal silver caused such a healing crisis in our horses (called a 
*downturn* 
in equine medical reference to this disease) -- so we knew that CS was crossing 
the blood brain barrier.  Otherwise, there would have been no reaction to the 
ingestion of CS -- and no recovery for these horses, many of whom had already 
been treated by standard veterinary treatments/drugs.  I realize that this is 
only word-of-mouth (can't think of the right term for that) evidence -- but you 
would have a hard time convincing a whole bunch of EPM-horse owners that it 
wasn't true.  FWIW.
MA    




________________________________
From: Marshall <mdud...@king-cart.com>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Thu, January 5, 2012 9:07:33 AM
Subject: Re: CS>brain a barrier?

I have read that colloidal silver does not cross the barrier, but that silver 
citrate does.  If that is the case I suspect that silver chloride cross it as 
well, but is very limited due to its lack of solubility. If I wanted to get 
silver to the brain, I will mix with something that has citric acid before 
drinking it, such as gatorade or citric fruit juice.

Marshall

On 1/4/2012 6:36 PM, David AuBuchon wrote: 
Just a few months ago on a lyme forum a lady had fast developing paralysis.  CS 
reversed it very quickly.  This, and many other anecdotes, would suggest that 
CS 
does cross the BBB to a meaningful degree.
>
>David
>
>
>On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 3:13 PM, mgperrault <mgperra...@aol.com> wrote:
>
>Is there information on silver crossing the blood brain barrier?  Informed 
>person says it does.   I witnessed someone putting a poultice of c silver on 
>the 
>arm and this seemed to cause a slightly raised, de pigmented scar tissue like 
>area.
>>
>>If I can vaguely remember, Becker said that silver can de differentiate cells 
>>and that skin mediated voltage fields can sustain a re differentiation and 
>>thus 
>>some regeneration of limb and bone, even cancerous.  I may not have it right, 
>>but I dont have the book anymore.  Another part of the conundrum is that when 
>>the silver forms brown stains on the colloidal making apparatus, this is very 
>>difficult to clean.  So I imagine the silver staining the brain and causing 
>>dedifferentiation and this seems totally frightening.  What is uncontrolled 
>>de-differentiation?  Perhaps almost a cancer, perhaps a scar tissue, but 
>>anyway, 
>>not good I can imagine.   Sorry if this has been covered, I looked at the 
>>archives but didnt find anything....
>>
>>thanks
>>
>>mg
>>
>>
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>