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Jacob Fam's avatar

You mention chlorine dioxide can help with localized, but not systemic autoimmune issues. Would it reckon that it could help with localized damage caused by systemic autoimmune issues? From my basic understanding, RA is a systemic autoimmune issue.

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Xuewu Liu's avatar

Theoretically, all autoimmune diseases are systemic since they stem from errors in the immune system. However, some symptoms appear only locally, so we can focus on addressing those specific areas.

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DrJeff's avatar

Wow, 10,000 ppm in the shoulder?! No concerns about (kidney) toxicity at that level? I thought I was pushing the limit at my daily 200-300 ppm injections of CDI.

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Xuewu Liu's avatar

Good question! Chlorine dioxide is a strong oxidizer but has an extremely short half-life in the body — it reacts quickly and doesn’t accumulate, so systemic toxicity (like kidney impact) is minimal, especially with localized injection.

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B1234's avatar

So, if chlorine dioxide only helps with auto immune conditions, it can help with rheumatoid arthritis but not osteoarthritis, as the latter seems to be more of a "wear and tear" condition than the body mistakenly attacking it's own tissues condition. Is that correct?

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Xuewu Liu's avatar

Chlorine dioxide can eliminate inflammation. If the patient's cartilage damage is not severe, cartilage regeneration can occur after the inflammation is eliminated. In this way, chlorine dioxide can also be an effective treatment for osteoarthritis.

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B1234's avatar

Ok thank you!

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