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Jon Michael's avatar

Wow! This is an awesome and informative post! Thank you so much for all you time and research! I am so grateful there are people like you who want to educate and inspire others. We are all working towards the same goal and I hope we all will work together to get there.

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John H.'s avatar

Thank you for all your efforts and for making this available to us. We are in your debt.

One of the practical problems I see is that even if citizen investigators wanted to do a controlled clinical trial of various modalities, there is no established (in the public domain) method for determining what nanoparticulate load a given person has. This would need to be assessable prior to commencing any such trial. Live blood analysis appears to provide some information (as nanoparticulates self-organize and self-assemble into larger objects), but it is limited in being able to visualize only microscopic objects (sometimes down to roughly 500 nanometers depending on the optics) or larger. As you point out, nano-particulates are significantly smaller than that. In the absence of EM, mass-spec and micro-Raman equipment, such an undertaking seems to be beyond the ability of citizen investigators but should be discussed in more detail by any interested parties.

Once again, thank you for all you are doing.

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