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I need to address this food-grade H2O2 vs 3% store bought.
It is my opinion that the 35% FG H2O2 vs. 3% Brown bottle debate is complete BULLS***! 3% can be found at any store. 35% FG has only been aroud for 15 years. 3% brown bottle the last 200+ years. See my point.
If you can put it in your mouth, it is safe to use internally. Manufacturers of hydrogen peroxide would not put toxins (or stabilizers) in their products without listing them on the product. Doing so would open up lawsuits, which would be stupid on their part.
I read a lot of “well, I heard they place stabilizers in it,” but there is no proof that they do. I personally have the recipe for making my own hydrogen peroxide, and nowhere does it list a stabilizer.
Your body makes hydrogen peroxide to fight infection which must be present for our immune system to function correctly. White blood cells are known as Leukocytes. A sub-class of Leukocytes called Neutrophils produce hydrogen peroxide as the first line of defense against toxins, parasites, bacteria, viruses and yeast.
HISTORY OF HYDROGEN PEROXIDE USE
1818 - Hydrogen peroxide was discovered in 1818 by Louis Jacques Thénard, professor at the Collège de France. He was examining the action of various acids on barium peroxide and at first thought that he had made modified forms of the acids. Eventually he concluded that the “eau oxygènée” was a new compound that contained more oxygen than water. The addition of various substances, including blood, caused the new compound to decompose, with evolution of oxygen.
1863 - Messner proves that hydrogen peroxide is present in rain water. This fact is important in the history of mankind because much of the water early mankind drank was from rain, leading some researchers to wonder if small amounts added to drinking water would be advantageous today. (Other researchers strongly disagree with this conclusion;)
1888 - The Journal of the American Medical Association reinforces the fact that hydrogen peroxide had been proven, nearly.25 years previously, to be an ingredient in the rain water earliest man used for drinking, bathing and washing.
1904 - Charles Marchand publishes the last of ~is series of 18 books on hydrogen peroxide as a treatment for typhoid fever, gastric ulcers, bronchitis and tuberculosis. See that section.
1904 - Edmund Nacht proclaims that a 6% solution of hydrogen peroxide is a good disinfectant for the throat. He also suggests its use as a mouth rinse.
1913 - The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that hydrogen peroxide is good for killing germs in milk. It goes on to note that the effectiveness of this method of sterilization is dependant on the quality of the milk. For example, the higher the butter fat content, the less ·effective a set amount of hydrogen peroxide will be.
It is also recognized as a germicide for drinking water. Generally, hydrogen peroxide is considered an emergency treatment for drinking water, as other methods are preferred. (One advantage to hydrogen peroxide may be the fact that with vigorous agitation and exposure to sunlight, it will kill germs and then most of it will decompose.)
1920 - The Lancet, England's most respected medical journal, opens the discussion on the value of using hydrogen peroxide as an intravenous infusion.
Breaking with orthodox medical opinion, some doctors suggest that harmful free radicals in the body are not the result of the normal breakdown of food, but are the product of incomplete oxidation during the process. They go on to reason that adding the extra oxygen that makes up hydrogen peroxide will prevent free radicals from building up and causing cells to age rapidly.
Recorded medicinal use of Hydrogen Peroxide dates back to the 1920 edition of the medical journal Lancet which described the successful use of H2O2 during World War 1 for pulmonary related conditions (often from chemicals used in war). Since then, over 7,000 publications have been produced highlighting the health benefits of Hydrogen Peroxide.
1957 - Nature magazine reports that replacing the water of cancerous rats with an extremely diluted hydrogen peroxide solution results in about half of their tumors shrinking.
1983 - Medical researchers begin work on testing the oral ingestion of hydrogen peroxide to fight disease.
1985 - Tests of hydrogen peroxide as both an oral treatment and as an intravenous infusion to fight disease and tissue degeneration continue. Some work is also beginning on using it as an intra-artery infusion.
All this before the FGHP came along...
Hydrogen Peroxide Inhalation Method
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This “general recipe” is for internal use. You can use 3% brown bottle hydrogen peroxide. I load this into my medicine cup on my nebulizer.
-As a preventative to keep infections at bay / promote healing – add 0.5 ml (cc)(or ~12 drops if using a dropper) to a nebulizer filled with 5 ml (cc) distilled saline water. Use once a day or as often as you feel the need.
–To fight a lung, bronchial or sinus infection or to get hydrogen peroxide into the body for a systemic treatment – add an amount (see below) of 3% hydrogen peroxide to a nebulizer filled with 5ml (cc) distilled saline water. Use several times. Repeat this process 4 -6 times a day and more often when fighting a virus.
✔The lowest effective dose is ~0.5 ml (cc) or ~ 12 drops (if using a dropper) in 5 ml (cc) distilled water for about 3 minutes. (As a guideline: 1 ml usually contains about 25 drops, but obviously varies with different droppers). If this is your first time using this therapy, use this dose (or even less) to test your reaction. Use this treatment every 2-4 hours.
✔Increase dose as tolerated up to a maximum ½ tsp = 2.0 ml (cc) in Nebulized 3% H2O2 will not only contact the lungs, it will also enter the bloodstream, where it will oxidize pathogens and toxins. For a maximum of 10 minutes per breathing session. Use this treatment every 2-4 hours.
Caution must be exercised by smokers and individuals who have used prescription and nonprescription drugs in their lungs, and those who are very sick. If H2O2 solution is too strong, the H2O2 reaction with a heavy contaminant or microbial presence could promote tissue-damaging inflammation in the lungs and a potentially dangerous systemic “die-off” effect, called the Herxheimer Reaction.
Warning: The following symptoms after nebulizing indicate that you are using too strong a solution - flu-like symptoms, headache, fever, diarrhea, fatigue. Consult your physician before using peroxide in a nebulizer.
Hydrogen Peroxide Inhalation Method
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