Antibacterial Drugs Through Time
- Silver Living Tech
- May 2, 2015
- 2 min read

For more than 70 years, antibacterial drugs have been regarded as the silver bullet to cure infections. In his Nobel Prize speech in 1945, Alexander Fleming, the man who discovered penicillin, warned us that bacteria could become resistant to these drugs. Resistance has followed each new drug development. Since 1987 the world has not seen the coming forth of any new drugs to fight against resistant microorganisms.
Before the development of antibiotics, the world had a silver bullet which became lost (you may want to read Why Did Colloidal Silver Disappear? click here to read the post). However, In the last 20 years, we have seen it coming back. Today colloidal (charged) nanoparticles of silver or silver ions, are broadly studied and used in many industries (you may want to read in our Research page about modern uses and research).
The FDA, under the grandfather exemption, authorizes the manufacturing and selling of colloidal silver for the same uses it had before 1938 and/or 1962, as long as the product has remained unchanged from it composition and labeling, before those dates. Current colloidal silver products in the market Do Not fit the description nor the composition of such products according to the FDA’s final ruling of 1999.
The following description of the colloidal silver of that time should clarify how colloidal silver should look like (you may want to read about colloidal silver characteristics to learn more, click here).

"Sherry-coloured liquid...is a solution containing the metal -silver in a colloid form"

Colloidal Silver Super Tyndall Effect is the same colloidal silver it was used before 1962. It is manufactured following old research. One only needs to test it using the Tyndall effect test to determine it is a true colloid of silver. Click here to buy a bottle and try it for yourself.
Comentários