If anyone has access to the full text that would be great.

On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 9:15 PM, D B <mothman...@gmail.com> wrote:

> That some hospital has stated this lady had been using colloidal silver
> should not necessarily be taken to be direct proof of any definite link
> between psychosis, copper deficiency, and colloidal silver. The hospital
> will have asked her what she has been doing, any supplements she has been
> taking that might have caused some changes, and naturally she will have
> mentioned taking silver sol if she has been, and the hospital staff has
> merely noted this fact down, whether it might possibly correlate with the
> incidence of psychosis in any way or not; that is literally the way
> hospital staff note things down, and all of a sudden, wham, 'silver might
> cause psychosis'. Far more likely the copper deficiency is due to something
> entirely different, and in fact the copper deficiency may be nothing at all
> to do with her psychosis.
>
> For instance, a poultry farmer many years ago found that by feeding his
> turkeys large amounts of zinc, their growth rate was massively boosted, but
> a few months later, nearly 100% of the turkeys died with burst hearts and
> burst blood vessels in their brains. What the farmer had not realized, was
> that zinc and copper are antagonistic towards each other in the body, and
> displace each other from the body. Nonetheless, copper and zinc must still
> be taken together, in a ratio of 15mg zinc to 1.5-2 mg copper, as copper
> maintains the elasticity of blood vessels, and without the copper, the
> blood vessels simply rupture and burst wide open. Far more likely that this
> lady has a either a low intake of copper, or an excessive intake of zinc,
> or some similar antagonist, as any amount of silver from taking a sol would
> have been extremely minimal, unless she was an extreme enthusiast who
> drinks a gallon a day, as some people have been known to do. For instance,
> some athletes buy 50 mg tablets of zinc, as do men seeking to enhance their
> sexual potency, and these tablets sometimes have no copper in, and this is
> extremely dangerous and an almost guaranteed way to suffer a heart attack
> or a stroke, like the turkeys, as above 50 mg intake of zinc a day, zinc is
> noted to be toxic to humans in this way, and copper supplementation is
> thoroughly recommended above that level as an absolute must. I myself will
> only take even 10-15mg zinc a day when combined with 1.5-2 mg copper,
> otherwise one is just asking for trouble. Most chemists and doctors tell us
> we get enough copper from copper water pipes, but that is certainly not
> true for all of us, as I only drink distilled water, raw milk and pressed
> fruit and vegetable juice, and some herb teas made with distilled water.
> Chick peas (organic, grown in properly enriched soil, i.e. with rock dust
> such as basalt) provide a good balance of zinc and copper, and can be eaten
> raw, nice and crunchy, but not too hard, after being soaked overnight and
> rinsed a few times to freshen them up, with a little black pepper, lemon
> juice and yoghurt (the yoghurt will protect the teeth from the enamel
> dissolving property of the lemon juice); raw chick peas are very full of
> chi when raw like this, and form a regular part of a typical Indian
> breakfast to provide great vitality at the beginning of the day. I have no
> idea what type of silver she may have been using.
>
>
> On Sun, Mar 11, 2012 at 4:35 AM, David AuBuchon 
> <aubuchon.da...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22375039
>>
>> Can someone find out for us what the type of silver she used was?
>>
>> David
>>
>
>