Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Nanosilver fad poses 'serious risk to health'

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 23 November 2008
A NEW internet health craze could be putting thousands of people at risk of developing serious, long-term illnesses, scientists warned last night.
Online retailers are selling drinks and tablets containing silver nanoparticles, claiming the products boost health by killing off harmful bacteria.

The revolutionary particles are being safely and effectively used in bandages and other external t
reatments, but experts fear internal use could lead to a build-up inside the body, causing brain damage, liver dysfunction and blood diseases.

'Medicines' containing the nanosilver particles – so tiny that 800 would fit side by side on a human hair – are being sold for as little as £4 online as an alternative to antibiotics. The tablets, drinks and eyedrops are claimed to combat everything from coughs and colds to conjunctivitis.

Nanotechnology, the engineering of tiny particles, has boomed in recent years as scientists find uses in a variety of areas, including medicine, electronics and optics.

Nanosilver is the most widely used of the new particles because silver is naturally toxic to most living things, especially bacteria. Millions of the particles can be created from a gram of the metal – and collectively these have a much greater surface area with which to kill off bugs.

The nano-material's anti-bacterial quality is exploited in a range of products, from medical bandages that prevent wounds from becoming infected to socks that stop feet from smelling and stain-resistant ties.

Online pharmaceutical retailers, both in the UK and United States, have latched on to nanosilver, in one case claiming their products are tasteless and safe to use even on small children, and recommending that people gargle it, drink it, spray it on sore throats or dropper it into eyes and ears.

One seller, UK Colloidal Silver, tells customers a lack of nanosilver in the body causes "many ailments" of modern times, and claims that epidemics such as severe acute respiratory syndrome and bird flu could have been prevented by its widespread use.

The website, which claims to carry out continual research on the product, although not by medical professionals, sells 500ml bottles of "colloidal" silver – nanoparticles of the metal dissolved in water – for £19.95.

Online natural health store Higher Nature sells 15ml of colloidal silver solution in spray bottles for £7.20, and claims it "tastes like water, and is safe, even on small children".

But scientists emphasise there is no clinical research into the ingestion of nanosilver, and Scottish nano-technologists were shocked when they found out about the widespread use of such products.

Professor Vicki Stone of Napier University, who was researching the effects of nanoparticles on the body, was recommended nanosilver by her hairdresser.

Her colleague, Professor Ken Donaldson, said: "She was alarmed to hear this woman and her mother were drinking nanosilver almost every day, even though we knew very little about its effect, positive or negative.

"We bought some nanosilver samples from the internet and found that some had very high levels of toxicity. Others were not even silver, and the particles were not nano-sized, but as there is no regulation, people were selling them anyway."

Donaldson, chairman of respiratory toxicology at the University of Edinburgh, said: "There are entire textbooks written on the toxicity of metals and you don't want to disturb the balance in your body. There are studies where animals have been fed nanosilver and you can detect the harmful effects on their weight and general health.

"I would like to see how these products are testing themselves and claiming to be safe for children. The same dose of silver would be diluted less in a child because they have less body water."

A 2005 study by Dr Max Fung of the University of California suggested that taking nanosilver could cause argyria, a condition that turns the skin bluish-grey, and high doses could lead to comas and anaemia.

Dr Ken Lawton, of the Royal College of General Practitioners, said: "I am very concerned that patients are taking an untried and untested product, particularly a metal, because there is evidence they accumulate and will target organs like the liver, the brain and bone marrow."

But a spokesman for UK Colloidal Silver said: "If we had reason to believe that the mineral solution we sell is in any way hazardous to health, we would not sell it.

"This product is being sold at present in the USA and the Food and Drug Administration has not sought to prevent or restrict its sale on the basis of public health concerns."

A spokesman for Higher Nature admitted they used nanoparticles but said: "We use ionic silver, which has a relationship to the water molecule. That keeps the silver safe."

'Magic spray'

Alexa Bentley, 59, a semi-retired property consultant from north London, has used colloidal silver for 13 years.

She drinks it, gives it to her daughter, feeds it to her eight pet dogs and sprays her whole house with it. "It's magic spray," she said. "I take it whenever I'm starting to feel ill, and now I hardly ever get a cold."

Bentley heard about colloidal silver through a friend who had used it on her dog. She said: "The vet was about to operate on the dog because antibiotics had failed to clear up an infection, but they put colloidal silver on and it cleared up literally overnight.

"I got really interested when I had an ulcer in my mouth. I sprayed the stuff in my mouth and the next morning it was gone. It's comforting at first, and then it repairs. It's completely natural.

"We started using it and I sprayed it on everything that moved. My daughter, who was seven, called it magic spray, and we now drink the solution whenever we feel unwell."

There is little scientific information on colloidal silver's safety or effectiveness, but Bentley said: "It's 100% safe, as long as you take it in moderation. I have been doing it for 13 years, so it can't be that wrong. All these natural remedies are safer than the drugs we get from the doctors, and my experience is it works. I have never had side-effects."





Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 22 November 2008 7:30 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

Fifi la Bonbon,

23/11/2008 01:47:47
I think stories like this are just put into the paper to attract comments from loons, vegetarians, and Americans.

Why do Americans read Scotland on Sunday anyway?
2

Fifi la Bonbon,

23/11/2008 01:49:40
Alexa Bentley, 59, a semi-retired property consultant from north London, has used colloidal silver for 13 years She drinks it, gives it to her daughter, feeds it to her eight pet dogs and sprays her whole house with it. "It's magic spray," she said.


Loony. Eight dogs, in London. Sprays her house with magic dust.

Complete loony.
3

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 23/11/2008 03:39:42


GOT IT NOW!!

NOW I KNOW WHAT IS WRONG!!

I need "Nanosilver" to stop me from posting, in the,..

'Scotsman News'! :))

4

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 23/11/2008 03:57:29

As 'Adults' We have the right to choice, albeit if the "choice" is wrong, that is for us to find out!, advice is OK!

But it is the right, to make our own "Choices"

Just,..'Lay-Off'! Internet Health-care, supply of drugs and medication, give us all choice!, that our NHS do not!

If we are stupid enough, not to research a treatment, before purchasing it of the Internet, yes!, 'fools we are'!

Leave us alone! we are NOT Children"!, the "choice is ours!

Anything less is a Big!,,

'STICK IT WHERE THE, SUN DON'T SHINE'!!

FULL-STOP!



5

jarmon,

houston 23/11/2008 06:43:17
fifi la bonbon-i can't speak but for myself as an american,but i like reading scotland on sunday because much of my dad's family came out of scotland,but mostly because i really like the reader's comments.There are a lot of smart,observant and witty people that post here.And even if they look down on americans i like reading what they think.
6

John Cameron,

St Andrews 23/11/2008 08:46:24
The world must be populated by complete nutters. Next we will be hearing that people believe Obama will change America, Brown is the Economic Saviour of the World, Gore's hallucinations have a scientific basis, Scotland will win the World Cup, and we can defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan. Anybody else out there with other dreams and nightmares?
7

Douglas,

Bathgate 23/11/2008 10:40:31
Charles #4: Of course you have the right to buy, use and insert anything you like. Unfortunately the NHS doesn't have the same right to say "you brought it on yourself so get on with it".
8

Fifi la Bonbon,

23/11/2008 13:12:38
5 - fair enough. The loonies, vegetarians and bossy Americans have kept away, which is unusual.
9

is it me?,

23/11/2008 16:06:23
I was brought up on a diet of lead shot and rabbits.
Never did me any harrumph !
10

scuirle,

Derry 23/11/2008 16:21:25
Fifi la Bonbon

Another American checking in. Contrary to public beliefs, there are many Americans that appreciate hearing different views. I check out several newspapers around the world in the hopes of remaining broad minded.

Like Jarmon, I find the postings very interesting - the very reason why I spend more time reading the Scotsman than any other newspaper.

(Though claiming a Scottish heritage doesn't hurt either!)

11

Hamish Scott,

23/11/2008 18:15:56
#5 #10

And some of us Scots read American newspapers online, isn't that one of the great things about the internet?
12

todd w,

usa 23/11/2008 18:34:00
this writer REALLY needs to do his or her homework. a little research would bring up the FACT that UCLA university conducted medical studies in 1995 on colloidial silver. colloidial silver was introduced to 256 pathogens and viruses, and killed all of them in 5 minutes or less. that was at 8-15 parts per million. the studies were never published on the front pages of newspapers, but if you are a doctor, you are allowed to look it up in the medical journals. if you do further research, you will find very very few people have ever turned "blue", and those that did ate pieces of silver coins and silver compounds. basically they took anywhere from 80 to 800 times the recommended dose. lets be practical for a moment, what would happen if we drink 80-800 cups of coffee at a sitting? could we accurately and with a straight face determine coffee is dangerous? it could be, but for almost everyone, its not dangerous. same applies to nano silver. I am very concerned by people thinking its ok to drink it every day though. same rule could apply to nano silver as antibiotics, over prescribing will lead to superbugs. according to the JAMA, 3 times as many people die every year, at the mistakes of pharma medicine as all highway traffic fatalities nationwide in the USA, every year. thats public medical knowledge. you can look it up. so before we get all emotional about nano silver, and begin our witch trials, perhaps we should be dumping millions of dollars into research before our time runs out in the race against superbugs and the effectiveness of antibiotics against them. mankind has used silver for thousands of years for numerous different uses. and for those using nano silver DAILY, please do further research yourselves as well, having you drink it everyday like orange juice ruins credibility for the rest of us who desire the truth about nano silver and its "magic" qualities. if you are going to use it, dont be so damn uneducated about it. and for those of y
13

Hanz,

23/11/2008 19:01:12
Indeed, why do we Americans read the Scotsman at all?

-Perhaps that is due to the fact that not all Americans are the same; and we broaden our horizons by reading items posted around the World.
14

is it me?,

Edinburgh 23/11/2008 20:50:43
When I was growing up, as a special treat our parents would let us eat our gold teeth. Now of course, thanks to our grasping non-NHS dentists we haven't got any teeth. Not like you lucky Americans.

(How is it that all the trash guests on day-time American shows have such great teeth compared to British trash on our British trash shows?)
15

drahcir,

pittsburgh, pa, usa 23/11/2008 22:57:33
i just drank one ounce of coliodal silver yesterday to ward off a cold. i generally drink about 5 ounces a year. i know a man who drank too much and his skin color is grey (literally).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8fgAS0w9Q8

goldieshouse.piczo.com
16

eamo,

dublin 24/11/2008 14:46:51
Hi,

I recently began drinking small amounts of coliodal silver but it has gotten out of hand. I have a 'drinking problem' and am now consuming up to
three pints of coliodal silver a day just to feel normal. The problem with this is twofold. Firstly it is becoming an expensive habit for which i will soon have to steal or beg to fund, secondly, everytime i walk past a fridge my whole body spins to face north and then all the magnets fly off the fridge door and attach themselves to my face.
17

,

25/11/2008 04:03:19
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
18

Spencer Jones,

Nevada USA 26/11/2008 01:50:44
Colloidal silver has been available since the early 1900's, shortly after Thomas Edison first harnessed electricity.

The medical alarmists have simply attempted to re-cast it as "nanosilver" in an attempt to capitalize on current environmentalist concerns about nano-sized ingredients in products (i.e., anything from one nanometer to 100 nanometers in size is now considered a "nano" product).

Back in the early 1900's, scientists were acutely aware of silver’s broad-spectrum infection-fighting qualities. And they quickly learned how to sinter off small microscopic particles of silver into water using electricity. The end product – which they called colloidal silver – rapidly became one of the most popular natural infection-fighting agents in the world of medicine.

Indeed, numerous medical studies have been conducted on colloidal silver throughout the early 1900's, and the substance was widely used in hospitals and laboratories around the world, in a wide variety of forms, to help fight infection and disease.

Studies documenting its phenomenal infection-fighting qualities were written up in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), the British medical journal Lancet, and many others.

Indeed, as far back as 1919, Alfred Searle, founder of the giant Searle Pharmaceuticals firm, had written, "Applying colloidal silver to human subjects has been done in a large number of cases with astonishingly successful results...it has the advantage of being rapidly fatal to parasites without toxic action on its host. It is quite stable. It protects rabbits from ten times the lethal dose of tetanus or diphtheria toxin."

The current medical alarmism over "nanosilver" is simply based upon the fact that colloidal silver is now widely available to the public through health food stores and online sources, and the medical community doesn't like people treating their own health conditions.

Even drinking a safe, simple mineral supplement like colloi

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.