Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
Will Colloidal Silver really turn you Blue? Well some colloidal silver might turn
you blue if you take a lot of it and go out in the sun. Have you ever developed
pictures? It is the silver that reacts to the light. When the particle size of the
colloidal silver is too large in your skin, you become like photo paper and it
could turn you blue. But the big question is Why?
Silver is a trace mineral. It is known to help fight disease and kill bacteria. It
reacts to light an lets us develop pictures. It also helps our bodies to maintain
health. Now that we understand the silver part, what about the colloidal part.
The Flu
Fungus
Common Cold
Cavities
Colloidal silver is a large molecule of silver and other “stuff”. It is the other
stuff that might hurt you. Colloidal silver cannot pass through the cells walls
with out being broken down to a smaller state. It must be digested and then it can
pass through the cells.
Angstrom is a measurement to illustrate how small the particles are in the mono-
atomic form. Mono=One and Atomic=atom, therefore meaning one atom . One type of
mineral Like Silver atoms. Not like calcium Carbonate which is calcium and carbon
atoms bonded together into molecules of that mineral and that mineral only. You
should have silver sticking to silver to make a silver molecule, not a silver
colloid in water.
Colloids (like colloidal silver) and complex minerals are all in particle size of
approximately a micron and can carry excess baggage in the colloid which is bad
for your health. Calcium Carbonate is a colloid. Why would you need all of that
carbon in calcium carbonate? 3 atoms of carbon for every atom of calcium.
Let’s put the sizes in perspective. One human hair is about 50 microns wide. An
angstrom is 10,000 times smaller than a micron.