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Matt Cook's avatar

I did just one application of 3000 PPM and it looked like it got worse for a while and now it’s almost gone. I’ll do one more treatment and this eczema that has lasted probably 20 years should be completely gone. Thank you very much for the work you’re doing.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

That's great! You probably can get the same effect by deluding the CDS by half to make it 1500 PPM. It may cause less irritation. I have seen some people with eczema even use as low as 100 PPM spray and get good results.

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Matt Cook's avatar

Super helpful. Thank you.

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Sharon Ray's avatar

I have used MMS undiluted on hard brownish age spots on my face. I mix a couple of drops, add a drop of dmso and use a q tip to dab it firmly. Stings a little. Works in about 3 weeks.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

Do the hard brownish aid spots just go away?

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Sharon Ray's avatar

they dry up and scab off

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Ingrid's avatar

Somewhat unrelated, but I used a generic Walmart cotton ball with DMSO and the “cotton ball” dissolved! Just thought I’d share that so others can be warned about that!!!!….the cotton that wasn’t…..

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Curious Outlier's avatar

Holy mackerel! That tells me that it wasn't cotton.

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Shirley Evans's avatar

Will any of these help with a possible cyst? I have a bump on the back of my knee (size of a large blueberry) that I suddenly found a couple weeks ago?

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Curious Outlier's avatar

It's possible. I have seen people use CDS 3000 protocol D spray And get good effects. Some people use DMSO.

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Shirley Evans's avatar

I’ve been using DMSO..🤞🏻🤞🏻🤞🏻

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Unapologetically Me's avatar

Can't hurt to try?

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misty's avatar

I made some for my mom, and she said that it stung when she sprayed the affected area. I hadn't heard of others mentioning stinging, although I know some are sensitive to DMSO. I will dilute it as you stated.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

Also, you might want to consider following the three golden rules and applying that to the spray protocol by diluting the concentration by half and see how that does with regard to the stinging.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

Did you use Mms1 or CDS? Many people who say that Mms1 stings often do not have a problem with CDS doing that.

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misty's avatar

It is CDS. That's what I thought - people typically have no problem applying CDS. 🤔 I asked her if it was possibly after applying the DMSO, and she said it was definitely after CDS. Her psoriasis has been flaring up off and on for a few years, and she currently has deep cracks in the palm of her hands. Doctors have prescribed creams in the past, and the last doctor wanted her to pick up a very expensive one ($100+!), and she said no, especially since he wouldn't even acknowledge that it's potentially food or stress related. No exploring anything outside of the box ... Just prescriptions. 🙄

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VickieDawn's avatar

I do know some people with Eczema but they won't try chlorine Dioxide

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Unapologetically Me's avatar

Too bad!

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VickieDawn's avatar

Yes it is. I've tried several times to get my daughter to try it for her Autoimmune issues and for my Grandson who has Eczema and a mild form of Autism, or behavior disorder. I've used it for years. My youngest daughter used just the topical, protocol D for Acne and it works better than anything else we had ever tried.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

That's a bummer. They won't have an open mind.

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OKG's avatar

Could you please give me the acne protocol you use? My late teens have been struggling and I have tried everything under the sun and nothing has helped- either stayed the same or got worse…I bought the CDS but have been nervous to use it.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

https://curioushumanproductions.substack.com/p/cds-topical-protocol-for-treating

It's a spray protocol using CDS 3000. You just spray it on and let it air dry two or three times per day. Close your eyes when you spray it on the face. Don't breathe it in because it's pretty strong and can be a little irritating to the mucus membranes if you breathe in deeply while you're missing it on the face. Just kinda hold your breath the way you do if you were spraying on hair spray.

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VickieDawn's avatar

I didn't see your reply for CDS 300, before I gave the CD protocol D

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VickieDawn's avatar

I didn't noticed Curious Outlier gave you the CDS Protocol. We just used the CD Protocol D. It worked and it's easier to make. We've tried both, they both work. You'll want to put it in an Amber Spray bottle, and it will only last for a week, and definitely do not spray in your eyes.

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VickieDawn's avatar

It's 25 activated drops of CD to 60 ml of distilled water in a spray bottle. Apply to affected area twice a day.

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belted radial's avatar

I had a tick bite behind my ear. It was one of those tiny ticks little bigger than a pin head. It swelled up and itched for days, and I scratched.

A sore swollen bump developed below the tick bite about three inches and a rash tracking from the bite to the bump I can see with two mirrors. I made some CDS and have used undiluted on a cotton ball for a couple of days on the bite but the bump is still there. Not much improvement so far, but the itching is subsiding.

I received spray bottles in the mail so I'm going to try spraying straight on it more times a day. And probably internal would be good. Would MMS be better?

Does anyone have experience with tickbites and CDS?

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Dawna Stevens's avatar

Hello belted radial. My experience is somewhat different than yours but I used CDS (internally) for Lyme disease & I have to say I believe that's what cured me or put me in remission (I've noticed no one ever says "cured" with Lyme disease). Because Lyme disease is the fastest growing infectious disease in the U.S., I'd use it on the bite area AND take it internally. I followed Andreas Kalcker's protocol in his book, Forbidden Health.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

That's great! So you used protocol C and protocol D to get rid of your Lyme disease? What were your symptoms?

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james's avatar

one more thing based on your experience... are dropper solutions ever preferred to spray bottle aerosol?

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Curious Outlier's avatar

I have seen people get results with both. I would try the spray protocol first, and if I didn't get the results, I wanted I would do the internal protocol. Heck, I might do both just to get a good cleanse.

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james's avatar

Good point. Regarding dropper, I guess my thought is the aerosol wouldn't "pool" up and saturate so easily, therefore better able to "dry". Thank you so much.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

Yes. The spray would work better for topical than a dropper.

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james's avatar

I got the go ahead from folks to treat wound so will be making a 10% solution. However, they are still insistent on “dressing" it so it doesn't get abraded on pant leg or while sleeping. This led me to two and a half more questions for you: How many times to treat per day if I can convince them to leave it uncovered? If they aren't receptive to not dressing it, is there a wait time to cover it to avoid chemical burns (and would once a day still make a difference)? Thank you for your time.

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james's avatar

Is there a benefit to applying DMSO or ClO2 solution first? Does this vary if DMSO is being a carrier? Lastly, I have read a much lower percentage of DMSO is better for wound healing. What is your experience? The reason I wonder is that if it can be used to breakdown scar tissue at higher concentrations, would it inhibit collagen formation in wound healing. Appreciated.

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Curious Outlier's avatar

I personally do not have any experience using DMSO with wound healing. If it were me and I had a wound and I was going to use DMSO I would use a weak solution like 5 to 10%. I do not think open wounds need DMSO in higher concentrations. If you're spraying it on something that is not an open wound then I would use probably a 50% solution of DMSO and let it sit for approximately five minutes and then I would spray on the CDS. That would give deeper penetration. I would use CDS in this situation because it will be less irritating than MMS1.

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james's avatar

and 1 more… do you dilute with saline or distilled water?

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Curious Outlier's avatar

If using on the skin, you can just dilute with filtered water or distilled water.

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james's avatar

Makes sense. Thank you for your insight. I was originally thinking 20-25% so am glad I inquired your thoughts. It is for a nearly 2 month leg ulcer from a shin injury on my stepdad so have been researching and am working on suggesting this considering every conventional method has been doing minimal at any given time though it is an injury fairly notorious for long healing time. Also, I had been doing the application sequence backward on trial and error for minor things on self and probably not giving enough wait time either.

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