Re: h202 3%
First off Happy Birthday. Hope you had a good one. ![Smile Smile](../tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-smile.gif)
Secondly, what I was eventually going to say before certain people chimed in with non-constructive comments was I wouldn't recommend going down the path you are thinking about in regards to oral ingestion of Hydrogen Peroxide. First off it can be dangerous if not done correctly (as you already mentioned).
http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2006/08/29/hydrogen-peroxide.html
http://tinyurl.com/29qklg9
Secondly, I have never seen any research articles that show oral ingestion of hydrogen peroxide has any effect on systemic candida infections (by all means if you have found any please link them for me so I can take a look). The only thing I've ever found have been opinion pieces.
Finally, you should take a look at this link and subsequent article:
http://tinyurl.com/28kjutr
Analysis of the adaptive oxidative stress response of Candida albicans
Derek J. Jamieson
,
, Duncan W. S. Stephen and Emma C. Terrière
Biomedical Research Centre, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, Unirersity of Dundee, Dundee DD1 9SY, UK
Received 7 February 1996;
revised 5 March 1996;
accepted 5 March 1996. ;
Available online 3 March 1999.
Abstract
Treatment of Candida albicans with low concentrations of either hydrogen peroxide or menadione (a Superoxide generating agent) induces an adaptive response which protects cells from the lethal effects of a subsequent challenge with higher concentrations of these oxidants. Pre-treatment with either menadione or hydrogen peroxide is protective against cell killing by either oxidant. This suggests that the pathogenic yeast C. albicans (unlike the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae which has separate responses) possesses an adaptive response that responds to both these oxidants. In addition, we found that C. albicans showed a greater level of resistance to oxidants, both H2O2 and redox-cycling agents, compared to that observed with S. cerevisiae. In an attempt to characterise the oxidative stress response in more detail we have analysed the effect of oxidants on the activities of a number of enzymes with known antioxidant activity.
Author Keywords: Candida albicans; Oxidative stress; Superoxide dismutase; Aldehyde reductase; Catalase
The above research was done in a lab environment of course, not within the human body, but it shows that if you subject Candida to low levels of hydrogen peroxide it will cause it to adapt which means subsequent treatments will be useless. Even if swallowing Hydrogen peroxide were A) safe and B) effective, how would you know that you've got the concentration right to kill it off the first time around so it doesn't become resistant?
Bottom line, oral ingestion of Hydrogen peroxide is not the way to go.