Yes, really, a man has turned blue. He was using a colloidal solver treatment and it’s turned his skin a fetching shade of blue: this is a known consequence of silver poisoning.
A 57-year-old Oregon man has turned the "feeling blue"
cliché to the real deal. The story goes: Paul Karason from
Oregon developed a bad case of dermatitis, caused by stress and
to battle the problem he started drinking a substance called
colloidal silver. This product is made by electrorefining –
extracting the silver from metal using electricity. But the
problems of the poor man turning blue did not start until he
decided to rub the solution on his face, directly on the skin.
As I say, a man turning blue as a result of exposure to silver is a well known possible outcome:
The 57 year old started making the transition from fair skin and freckles to this about 14 years ago.
"The change was so gradual I didn’t notice it. A friend I hadn’t seen
in months saw me when I was at my parents’ house and said, ‘what did
you do to your face.’"
What Paul did was use a substance called colloidal silver.
Made by extracting silver from metal, into water with an electrical
current, and drinking it, it’s billed as something that will cure just
about everything that ails you.
Paul swears by it.
"After it turned your skin blue, your still drinking it?"
"Yeah, but much less," said Paul.
Actually Paul doesn’t believe drinking this potion caused the
discoloration. He believes it happened because he rubbed it on his face
to treat a skin problem.
But a medical condition called
Argyria has been linked to such discoloration since the days when
silver solutions were used as antibiotics.
Here’s the YouTube video of the man who turned blue:
As I say, a man turns blue is a well known possibility. It happened to Stan Jones:
A US Senate hopeful in
the state of Montana has a bad case of the blues after years of
drinking a home-made silver solution for medical reasons.
Libertarian candidate Stan Jones, 63, first discovered his skin was turning blue last year.
Here’s the CDC on the dangers of silver:
Since at least the early part of this
century, doctors have known that silver compounds can cause
some areas of the skin and other body tissues to turn gray
or blue-gray. Doctors call this condition "argyria." Argyria
occurs in people who eat or breathe in silver compounds over
a long period (several months to many years). A single exposure
to a silver compound may also cause silver to be deposited
in the skin and in other parts of the body; however, this
is not known to be harmful. It is likely that many exposures
to silver are necessary to develop argyria. Once you have
argyria, it is permanent. However, the condition is thought
to be only a "cosmetic" problem. Most doctors and scientists
believe that the discoloration of the skin seen in argyria
is the most serious health effect of silver.
And here’s some photos of a serious sufferer.
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