The combination of colloidal silver and lobelia is excellent to use in a nebulizer. My experience, and that of Luella's, is that it will frequently result in coughing during the treatment if you have any bronchial gunk that needs to come out, and it will often happen from the very beginning. That could be more a result of the lobelia than the silver, but I rather imagine that inhaling any mist when you are clogged up will have a similar effect. As your lungs clear, the coughing should lessen more and more - but coughing is a good thing when you have congested lungs, provided that it is clearing out the congestion.
Usually, we use about 4 ml of colloidal silver (we use the really potent stuff from Utopia Silver) and 4-5 drops of Dr. Christopher's lobelia extract per treatment. You should be able to use the nebulizer several times a day and I would also suggest taking your silver internally in plentiful amounts too.
All the best,
DQ
Yeah, I have seen and heard of silver beating MRSA too. The trick is getting the silver in contact with the MRSA in plentiful and constant pretty constant amounts. If I had that, or any really tough lung condition, I would be doing a lot of nebulizing. I would also include lobelia - it has great healing powers for the lungs. Haven't heard of using mint, but it should be a pleasant addition at the least.
All the best,
Tony
What you are doing probably works fine. I use a mister too sometimes, especially in the nose. I also use a regular spray pump bottle at times to really irrigate the nasal cavaties.
The thing to keep in mind with sprays that are denser than you get with a nebulizer is that it can be dangerous to get too much liquid into a heavily congested chest. Since the silver I use (Advanced Colloidal Silver) has 150 times the surface area of say Sovereign Silver, I can use a nebulizer and get far more surface area of silver into my lungs than many would with a mister using average commercial products and much more still with most home generated silver.
As an aside, the debate on digestive enzymes becomes moot when inhaling directly into the lungs.
All the best,
DQ