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Staph is the shortened name for Staphylococcus (pronounced: staf-uh-low-kah-kus), a type of bacteria. These bacteria can live harmlessly on many skin surfaces, especially around the nose, mouth, genitals, and anus. But when the skin is punctured or broken for any reason, staph bacteria can enter the wound and cause an infection.
There are more than 30 species in the staph family of bacteria, and they can cause different kinds of illnesses — for example, one kind of staph can cause urinary tract infections. But most staph infections are caused by the species Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus).
S. aureus most commonly causes skin infections like folliculitis, boils, impetigo, and cellulitis that are limited to a small area of a person’s skin. S. aureus can also release toxins (poisons) that may lead to illnesses like food poisoning or toxic shock syndrome.
Staph infection is all around us and getting much worse. Many of you have heard of MRSA, a deviant of staph infection, this kind of staph is not only rampant in hospitals, prisons and schools, but it is completely impervious to any antibiotic since it has mutated over the years.
Although rare, infections caused by S. aureus can occasionally become very serious. This happens when the bacteria move from a break in the skin into the bloodstream. This can lead to infections in other parts of the body, such as the lungs, bones, joints, heart, blood, and central nervous system.
Staph infections in other parts of the body are less common than staph skin infections. They are more likely in people whose immune systems have been weakened by another disease — or by certain medications, like chemotherapy for cancer.
Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 25923) The major habitats of the bacterium S. aureus include the nasal membranes and skin and to a somewhat lesser extent the perineum, gastrointestinal tract, and genital tract of warmblooded animals. This species may also be isolated from the nares in less than 10% to more than 40% of non-hospitalized human adults. S. aureus is a potential pathogen causing a wide range of infections. Some of the major infections include boils, carbuncles, impetigo, toxic epidermal necrolysis, pneumonia, osteomyelitis, meningitis, endocarditis, mastitis, bacteremia, food poisoning via enterotoxin), enterocolitis, urogenital infections, and toxic shock syndrome.
In FDA-certified laboratory tests, 5.76 BILLION Staphylococcus aureus bacteria cells were killed in 24 hours at a rate of 99.99% with one drop of NutraSilver.
Don’t pay danser $37 dollars for just one ounce of colloidal silver, take that same 37 dollars and you can make 100 gallons of colloidal silver at home!
The Most Expensive Colloidal Silver Actually Saves You $100s Comparatively
You’ll be shocked at how awesome this is. It truly is an innovation you can feel in your wallet, right where it counts.
At 3600 ppm, NutraSilver is potent enough to kill the worst viral, fungal and bacterial infections, so you’ve got that covered and you won’t be forced to compromise potency to save a little money.
That’s great, but coming in at a whopping 30 mL per bottle, an entire ounce, it seems like this powerful solution is expensive drop for drop. Well, if you were comparing one bottle of NutraSilver to one bottle of the leading colloidal silver, it sure would be. It would be three times as expensive in some cases.
If you’ve used colloidal silver before, chances are you’re used to a 10 ppm or 20 ppm colloidal silver. That’s pretty typical. An 8 ounce bottle of the ionic silver costs between $12 and $25.
But you can do much better with NutraSilver. Here’s how:
JUST ONE BOTTLE OF NUTRASILVER…
MAKES 46 EIGHT OUNCE BOTTLES OF 10 PPM COLLOIDAL SILVER
Buy one bottle of NutraSilver and add just 13 drops to an 8 ounce bottle of distilled or filtered water and you have a very powerful 10 ppm solution. The cool thing is that there are 600 drops in one 30 mL bottle of NutraSilver. Which means that you can make 46 different 8 ounce bottles of 10 ppm colloidal silver with one bottle of NutraSilver.
If you like that 10 ppm dilution, then with your 46 bottles packed into a single one ounce bottle of NutraSilver, how long will that last you? That might mean you could technically have a 4-year supply in just one bottle of NutraSilver… and you’d pay less than $1 for each bottle. That’s budget conscious right there.
So what’s the magic number? How much could one bottle of NutraSilver save you if you’re an avid user of colloidal silver?
Let’s be conservative and say you could get an 8-ounce bottle of 10 ppm colloidal silver for $12 bottle. In that case:
NutraSilver Saves You At Least $552 Comparatively
He claims his colloidal silver has 3,600 ppm , I’ve been after him to post a certified lab report he CLAIMS to have that proves 3,600 ppm..
HE CAN’T POST WHAT HE DOESN’T HAVE!