CAN ACTIVATED STABILIZED OXYGEN AFFECT EITHER BENEFICIAL OR DETRIMENTAL MICROBES IN THE BODY?
Our solution has been clearly shown to have extensive anti-microbial properties in direct proportion to concentration and time. It appears to inhibit the growth or to reduce the colony count of the following general categories of anaerobic (non-air tolerant) organisms: bacterium, virus, yeast, mould, fungus and parasite. There are both beneficial aerobic and detrimental anaerobic bacteria in the body. For example, the “good” E. Coli exists in both an anaerobic and aerobic states. But these beneficial intestinal flora have sufficient safeguards in their cellular structures to protect themselves in oxygen environments. All pathogenic microbes give up electrons and die when introduced to oxygen-rich environments. This has to do with the cellular structure of these organisms. In the body, invading pathogens are normally attacked by specialized white blood cells (neutrophils and macrophages). These cells—forming a critical part of the immune system—attack the surface of the bacteria in a pr