Trace contaminants, lol. Get out of here!
What my pulmonologist “tried” to put me on.
OFEV (nintedanib)...Myocardial infarction (MI) was the most common arterial thromboembolic event, occurring in 1.5% of OFEV and in less than 1% of placebo patients.
Isn’t Myocardial Infarction just another fancy name for heart attack.
Let’s check out just some of the “common” side effects: diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, liver enzyme elevation, vomiting, decreased appetite, weight decreased, headache, and hypertension.
Let’s not forget pneumonia, lung neoplasm malignant (cancer?), and myocardial infarction.
What kind of bottle is the DMSO stored in?
Plastic? Have you ever opened a fresh, empty plastic bottle and smelled the inside of it. It smells foul. Plasticizers leech from the container into anything stored in it. Bad enough if it's just water and you drink it, at least your liver enzymes will process the contaminants and get them out of your system. But if that is DMSO with plasticizer solids dissolved in it, those chemicals have a straight path directly into your cells. Where they can interfere with cellular processes and even affect your DNA.
If the DMSO is stored in glass, then you are getting whatever was used to wash that glass during manufacture. Plus, whatever is in the cap/cap liner. Plus, whatever chemicals might be dissolved in the water used to dilute the DMSO.
Like I said previously, I used DMSO for years in the lab because it has the property of permeabilizing cell membranes and basically pushing anything you want inside the cell. When I would put DNA into cells for experiments, I used DMSO to push that DNA into the cells, because it otherwise would not have entered.
I used pure DMSO made by chemical companies with strict quality control. DMSO that's sold by some "alternative medicine" practitioner, of unknown purity and quality--you're just asking for trouble.
No, thanks.