Very helpful John, and just the way I use it and would recommend using it.
dee



From: "Simonsen, John" <[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 21:07:53 +0000
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: CS>Argyrial Blue
Resent-From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Resent-Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 13:07:58 -0800

A recent article describes the mechanism of Argyria. The citation is: ACS
Nano (2012), 6(11), 9887-9899. I¹ve copied the abstract from the article
here:
 
ABSTRACT The widespread use of silver nanoparticles (Ag-NPs) in consumer and
medical products provides strong motivation for a careful assessment of
their environmental and human health risks. Recent studies have shown that
Ag-NPs released to the natural environment undergo profound chemical
transformations that can affect silver bioavailability, toxicity, and risk.
Less is known about Ag-NP chemical transformations in biological systems,
though the medical literature clearly reports that chronic silver ingestion
produces argyrial deposits consisting of silver-, sulfur-, and
selenium-containing particulate phases. Here we show that Ag-NPs undergo a
rich set of biochemical transformations, including accelerated oxidative
dissolution in gastric acid, thiol binding and exchange, photoreduction of
thiol- or protein-bound silver to secondary zerovalent Ag-NPs, and rapid
reactions between silver surfaces and reduced selenium species. Selenide is
also observed to rapidly exchange with sulfide in preformed Ag2S solid
phases. The combined results allow us to propose a conceptual model for
Ag-NP transformation pathways in the human body. In this model, argyrial
silver deposits are not translocated engineered Ag-NPs, but rather secondary
particles formed by partial dissolution in the GI tract followed by ion
uptake, systemic circulation as organo-Ag complexes, and immobilization as
zerovalent Ag-NPs by photoreduction in light-affected skin regions. The
secondary Ag-NPs then undergo detoxifying transformations into sulfides and
further into selenides or Se/S mixed phases through exchange reactions. The
formation of secondary particles in biological environments implies that
Ag-NPs are not only a product of industrial nanotechnology but also have
long been present in the human body following exposure to more traditional
chemical forms of silver.
 
In short, silver, whether ionic or nanoparticles, is absorbed into the blood
as silver ions attached mostly to proteins that contain sulfur. It is then
carried to all parts of the body. Once there it can form nanoparticles once
again upon exposure to light. It will also pull selenium from the blood and
together silver and selenium are extremely insoluble, i.e. they stay there
forever. Sunlight can photo-oxidize these particles and your skin turns gray
to blue. Generally what I have read is it takes about 1 gram of silver
accumulated in the body for the risk of Argyria to become high. If your body
retained 100% of 10 PPM silver, it would take 100 liters to accumulate 1
gram. However, the vast majority of ingested silver passes through the body,
probably much more than 90%. However, how much is absorbed and then
deposited will depend upon the individual¹s body composition, diet, fluid
intake, selenium levels, etc. So the development of argyria is not easily
predicted except in extreme cases. Most of these are people working in
industrial settings where they are exposed to high concentrations of silver
all day. 
 
Just as an example, if a person took 50 mL (about 2 oz) of 10 PPM silver per
day and retained 10% of it, it would take 5 ½ years to accumulate 1 g.
Probably it is more likely that only 1% would be retained. In this case it
would take 55 years to accumulate 1 gram and develop a risk (not a
guarantee) for argyria.
 
In my opinion, silver, like other antibiotics, should only be used when
needed, not as a daily tonic. Then argyria colored skin should not be a
problem.
 
Hope this helps. 
 
John