Post has been Discarded
Not yet a member? No problem!
Sign-up just takes a second.
Forgot your password?
Recover it now.
Already signed up?
Log in now.
Forgot your password?
Recover it now.
Not yet a member? No problem!
Sign-up just takes a second.
Remember your password?
Log in now.
6 Comments
persephonesays...I've tried everything to get rid of athlete's foot, to no avail. Since I actually contracted it in Japan, I think I'll go back and book myself in to the Kobe hospital for some acid water treatment. Seriously, when you wear those little plastic slippers each time you go into someone's home, or office space, fungus abounds!
Thylansays...Makes me wonder what the effect of drinking this water on "pro biotic" friendly bacteria in the gut would be. Perhaps, drinking this, and then a course of pro biotic to replace the cultures in the cleaned gut would be good. I'm curious, having had major bowel surgery.
jmzerosays...Vague scientific rationale, lack of proper testing, vague promises of "detoxifying", miraculous anecdotes. The gangs all here!. Oh boy! As to the idea of "acidic water" in general, this seems about right.
persephonesays...Tell that to the hospital staff there in Kobe. They all look pretty convinced. Do hospitals take risks, like not using disinfectant, because they've found something more effective, even though it might only be occasionally/coincidentally so? I'd like to think not.
siftbotsays...Discarding this video. It failed to receive enough votes to get sifted up to the front page within 4 days.
jmzerosays...Read the page I linked to. The stuff is equivalent to a dilute bleach solution in terms of killing bacteria, because that's effectively what it is. It seems like a perfectly reasonable, if very expensive, way to disinfect something.
In terms of how well it cures athlete's foot (or other things), the only way to know whether it's worth caring about is to test it against other remedies - edit: preferably double blind.
Discuss...
Enable JavaScript to submit a comment.