Collodial Silver used to treat Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
January 7, 2008 by laura
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
By now, we have all heard the story of Paul Karason. The man who turned blue because he used collodial silver as an antibiotic. Mr Karason suffers from a skin condition, he rubbed collodial silver on his skin in which to treat the condition. Now he suffers from Argyria.
Because this story has been in the news for a couple of weeks now, I did find out that colldial silver has been “marketed” saying that it can cure almost anything – except Argyria. That would be because collodial silver causes it.
I just read that collodial silver has been marketed as a cure for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. It won’t work. It won’t help at all. It will make you turn blue, though.
Other conditions which collodial silver promoters say will cure are the following:
acne, AIDS, allergies, appendicitis, arthritis, athleteis foot, bites, bladder infections, blood parasites, boils, bronchitis, burns, cancer, Candida, colitis, dandruff, diabetes, diphtheria, gonorrhea, hay fever, head lice, hepatitis, herpes, impetigo, leprosy, leukemia, Lyme disease, malaria, meningitis, pneumonia, rheumatism, ringworm, scarlet fever, shingles, ulcers, viruses, warts, and yeast infections.
As I said before, collodial silver is not going to help you. Although, it will permanently change your skin colour to blue. I don’t think it would be easy to live life looking like a smurf.
Want to know more, go here.















When I started going to the Fibro & Fatigue Centers almost three years ago, they used collodial silver via IV to treat us patients. Then all of a sudden they stopped using it and no one would really give me an answer as to why. Now I know!
Laura, Just an FYI – I tried your link above and it doesn’t go anywhere!
Sandy, thanks for the heads up about the link. It should be all fixed now. Who knew that missing the “h” in http:// would be such a big deal?
I think its a good move, to stop using the collodial silver. I didn’t realize they were still using it as recent as 3 years ago. Here I was thinking it was something they used in the ’80s.